' Adiligau Bal Seventy-Fifth Year ErrED AND MANAGED ET STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSrrY OF M C n UNDER AUTHORITY OF BOARD IN CONTROL OF STUDENT PUBLCKThIAn Each Time I Chanced To See Franklin D. Higher Education: Tradition Out of Focus by H. Neil Berkson Wh" OpinionPrcva~m420 MAYNARD 5?., ANN ARBOR, MicH. NEWS PHONE: 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1964 NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID BLOCK End the Ostrich Approach To High-Rise Housing AS THE PERCENTAGE of American college graduates begins to move from elite proportions toward 50 per cent of the population, universities will take on more and more of the attributes of such social institutions as the church and state. The ramifications of such an event are multifold, but above all, the university will become increasingly embedded in the crust of its traditions. Practices and concepts which originated when the uni- versity was a far different institution will keep their momentum, sacrificing the realities and exigencies of the present to the false security of the past. THE MOST immediate parallel to this situation lies in American politics. Dismissing the Goldwater move- ment, which calls on a past that never was to produce a future that never could be, even the so-called prag- matic politics of the center deals in cliches and slogans from another era. In that same era, and before, the university was an institution for the intellectual elite. Both intellectual, and elite are important words, for while they are the anchors of higher education, they are no longer definitive. The minute proportion of a population which used to receive a university education was very much apart from society. The university functioned in an idealistic atmosphere. Philosophy reigned; every subject from the sciences to the arts was studied in a philosophical con- text. Liberal education defied the concept of breadth and depth: the Renaissance Man. BY MAKING education at lower levels possible for virtually everyone, the United States created the founda- tion for the influx of numbers into the colleges and uni- versities, a phenomenon which has been picking up speed for a generation. This trend has thoroughly destroyed the foundations of the elite. While it is perfectly possible that the "com- munity of scholars" might have broadened to accommo- date the new numbers, this has not happened in fact. Only a very small percentage of the University's 29,000 students is faithful to the tradition of liberal education. In short, there is now an elite within the elite. A large majority of students are here simply because higher edu- cation has become a prerequisite for middle-class life. At the same time, knowledge has accumulated at such a fantastic rate that most men have forsaken any com- prehensive grasp of its boundaries. This has led to a rigid compartimentalization. The specialist dominates while links between fields continually grow weaker. A new field begins by crossing departmental- lines; it ends by becoming an entity in and of itself. I AM TALKING about two separate groups of people, both divorced from the traditions of university educa- tion. The first is anti-intellectual. Its followers move automatically from high school to college to $200,000 more per lifetime. The second is a-intellectual. Its fol- lowers are scholarly, but they have lost touch with the philosophical base of education and consequently have narrow concerns. The University bemoans the lack of values of its stu- dents, but it shouldn't be surprised. The so-called com- munity is so fragmented that there are few shared values. In theory, the University remains true to the historical principles of education; in practice, it cannot communicate these principles. Education is a status symbol or a vocation; it is no longer the means to a better society. MONDAY, THE EFFORTS of a local group of businessmen known as the Ann Arbor Property-Owners Association succeeded in pressuring the city's De- partment of Building and Engineering Safety into temporarily suspending the building permit for South University's controversial apartment building. In do- ing so they have unearthed several needs and undercurrents in the city and Uni- versity communities. First, it must be realized that tempor- ary suspension of this building permit cannot affect the eventual construction of the building. Robert E. Weaver, Ann Arbor co-owner of the building project, has explained that present work is con- tinuing under a "foundations permit." When this permit will be insufficient for continued construction it is difficult to say; it seems reasonable to assume, how- ever, that it will be at least several weeks before the work requires a full building permit. And will Weaver or Towne Realty, Weaver's partner in the enterprise, be inactive in those several weeks? Hardly. It will be only a matter of days before the Weaver-Towne Realty deferment is ap- pealed. IF, AS WEAVER BELIEVES, the matter is merely a technicality, it will be only a short time until his building permit is reinstated. If, on the other hand, some- thing involving modification of the build- ing is involved, it may be a matter of tsev- eral weeks before the permit is rein- stated. The important thing is that even- tually the permit will indeed be rein- stated. Weaver and Towne Realty will not fill up their South 'U' hole and go away as some Ann Arbor merchants ap- parently would like to believe. Certainly the Property-Owners Associa- tion, businessmen all, must realize this. The question then changes from one of whether or not POA will be able to stop the building to one of what POA could possibly have hoped to gain from their action; why was this step, which at the very most will merely inconvenience Wea- ver and his associates, taken in the first place? Consideration of this question indicates that the deferment action is merely the hasty, ill-considered action of some Ann Arbor businessmen-citizens who wanted to "do something about the apartment building."And these people are not lim- ited to the POA. THE FEELING that "something should be done" is as old as the city's and the University's knowledge that such a build- ing was going to be built. Ann Arbor businessmen, at first enthusiastic about the influx of new trade, rapidly cooled to the project when they realized that the introduction of out-of-town money into Ann Arbor, is concommitant with the introduction of out-of-town competi- tion-competition that could provide services for less than the exorbitant rates which many of the city merchants cur- rently charge. Competition equals loss of customers equals loss of money equals something to be resisted. H. NEIL BERKSON, Editor KENNETH WINTER EDWARD HERSTEIN Managing Editor Editorial Director ANN GWIRTZMAN .............. Personnel Director BILL BULLARD ..................... sports Editor MICHAEL SATTINGER .... Associate Managing Editor JOHN KENNY ............. Assistant Managing Editor DEBORAH BEATTIE ...... Associate Editorial Director LOUISE LIND ........ Assistant Editorial Director in Charge of the Magazine TOM ROWLAND ........... Associate Sports Editor GARY WYNER ............... Associate Sports Editor STEVEN HALLER .............Contributing Editor MARY LOU BUTCHER .....Contributing Editor CHARLES TOWLE ........ Contributing Sports Editor NIGHT EDITORS: David Block, John Bryant, Jeffrey Goodman, Robert Hippler, Laurence Kirshbaum. ASSISTANT NIGHT EDITORS: Gail Blumberg, Rob- ert Johnston, John Meredith, Leonard Pratt, Bar- bara Seyfried, Karen Weinhouse. Business Staff JONATHON R. WHITE, Business Manager JAY GAMPFL .......... Associate Business Manager SYDNEY PAUKER............. Advertising Manager JUDITH GOLDSTEIN ............. Finance Manager BARBARA JOHNSTON ............ Personnel Manager RUTH SCHEMNITZ ..............Systems Manager JUNIOR MANAGERS: Bonnie Cowan, Susan Craw- ford, Joyce Feinber, Judith Fields, Judith. Grohne, Judith Popovits, Patricia Termini, Cy Welman. Even unofficial assurances that the new building's prices would be compar- able to local prices could not allay com- munity fears that even if Towne Realty didn't undersell local prices, letting Towne Realty in would open the way for other out-of-town businessmen. The University had no official com- plaint, but there were rumblings of dis- content from individuals. The fears ex- pressed were endless in their variety and imaginativeness: the .building would ruin the campus skyline; it would disrupt cam- pus expansion plans; there would be in- sufficient parking-even if tenants could park their cars they would have no room to drive them; there aren't enough res- taurants on South 'U' to feed 800 people. BUT GRADUALLY talk has subsided. Whether the University community has resigned itself to the building, become convinced that its fears were groundless or has simply grown tired of talking with no one listening, is impossible to say. But through all objections, the build- ing has continued, and will continue, to rise. Perhaps it should not have been so, perhaps it would have been better if the project had been zoned out of existence when it first originated; right now it is impossible to say. The final responsibility must be shared by both the University and the city. Both were caught entirely unaware by the building; neither was prepared to deal with the problem in a unified co- herent manner. Hence the community was treated to the confused diversity of un- informed, individual opinions which rose against the project. FUTURE STUDY of the problem does not require any new committee or of- fices. But what the city's Department of Building and Engineering Safety, city councilmen and the University's housing office must realize is that this building easily may not be the last of high-risej student apartments in Ann Arbor. If it is successful, and it may well be, the University's rising enrollment cannot help but attract more apartment investments of this type. And what should these investors find when they arrive here? Should they find a city that is not even sure they exist? Should they find a University which, co- operative as it is, pretends that the hous- ing of almost a thousand of its students is of no interest to it and, moreover, that it has no means of controlling that hous- ing? Should they find a business com- munity which,uncertain of whether or not it favors such investment, throws ar- bitrary and useless blocks into the path of reasonable and honest investors? FUTURE INVESTORS in Ann Arbor should find a city government which is informed about the problems which they will have and which they will create. Investors should find a University which has enough faith in its housing office to let that office act as policy spokesman in the area of high-rise housing. With the South 'U' building as a prototype, enough experience can be gained to permit the formulation of a realistic and unified University policy on high-rise housing. Out-of-town businessment should find a chamber of commerce, representative of the city's business community, and able to present a factual picture of what can be expected in the way of aid and resist- ance in Ann Arbor. The business com- munity cannot be expected to provide a unified front to large investment proj- ects; but it does not seem unreasonable to expect that community to have enough faith in its chamber of commerce to en- trust to it the job of providing out-of- town businessmen with- the most com- plete information possible. AT LEAST ONE high-rise apartment is in Ann Arbor to stay; more can easily follow. If they do, the problems associat- ed with their construction and operation will be eased only if the groups connected with housing take a realistic, helpful approach to their construction. For it is conceivable that everyone con- nected with high-rise apartments could profit from them. The city will gain 'I I MURV SHINER: Efforts To Sing Ballad .Form Fail at Preent OF ALL THE FORMS of folk music the hardest to sing is the ballad form. Ironically, this is precisely because the ballad must be sung in a clear, spare, absolutely simple style. Its power comes from its understatement. An example of the difficulties of ballad-singing can be seen in the performance of Murv Shiner, currently singing at Ann Arbor's lone coffee-house, the Golden Vanity. Shiner, after 15 years in "show business' and country-western singing, sounds affected rather than expressive. He relies on singing and playing techniques rather than the emotional content of the songs. He has a very pleasant gruff middle-range voice, well-controlled, capable of much . variety. His guitar playing also is quite good, especially for up-tempo blues and work-songs. Despite his skill, he has a manufactured cheerfulness, mild in- sincerity and pleasant commetcialism. This is quite unfortunate, since Shiner doesn't feel that way about the music at all. * * * * "I'M TRYING to work toward the ballad style," he says; and he's having trouble getting ther. He is best at songs like Libba Cotten's "This Life I'm Living," in which the witty disinterest of Shiner's solidified style and the wry dispassion of the blues happily coincide. Another type of song that fits Shiner's witty, urbane, not-too- deep style is the naughty neo-folk song "Zulayka." When he moves into ballads, he still has some success. Songs like "Paddy Works on the Railway" and "Springhill" will carry themselves without any help from the singer, as long as he keeps himself in the background. BUT SHINER still can't get down to the lean, intense steel-edged simplicity of voice needed to support more subtle ballads, "Cotton- Eyed Joe," although it's sung without accompaniment, instead of sounding tender and sad sounds merely pleasant and not very throught- provoking. The eerie balancing of beauty and horror in "Red Were the Flowers" hardly gets through at all (even though Shiner particu- larly likes the song) thanks to the soft-toned style +which suggests that Shiner is singing it less out of concern for the threat of war or the beauty of the song than because it's fashionable to sing Protest Songs. The general effect is about that of a good commercial folk singer; easy to listen to, not too stirring or deep, a pleasant introduc- tion for newcomers to folk music-ideal for a fraternity-party hoot- enanny. Murv Shiner seems to be trying for more than this. He should stick to blues and work-songs until he's managed to reach, the bare, simple style of the ballad form. He may yet make it. -Leslie Fish 5pSYSW HAK6~E. Nt40\PAPJ4S 4O RC - 1** \4 LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: Republican Attacks Account of Governorship Debate To the Editor: MR. GUDWIN'S description of the debate between myself and Mr. Killingsworth was totally er- roneous and slanted. To illustrate a few points: I never alleged the nuisance taxes were passed under the Rom- ney administration. What I did say was that they were passed by a Republican Legislature prior to the Romney administration. I noted that the taxes would not have brought in the revenue if it were not for the money people had to spend on the items taxed. Un- der the Romney administration, Michigan is leading the states in the nation in rate of growth of personal income, the dollars people put into their pocket, whereas under Democratic admin- istrations in the '50's Michigan was 47th. I did not say that the surplus would "be used up in a couple of years." What I did say was that it would all be allocated by next year for essential services and education. Contrary to Mr. Gudwin's as- sertion, reapportionment was not a major topic. Furthermore, Mr. Killingsworth himself said that the apportionment plan under the new state constitution was de- signed by Mr. Hannah of Michigan State, not Governor Romney. * * * AS FOR education, my "claim" that the Romney administration has provided more funds than the previous Democratic administra- tions, both in absolute dollars and in per cent of the state aid, is a fact not a claim. What Mr. Gudwin failed to note. and which is far more significant, is that opposite Mr. Killings- gram, increasing state aid to local schools so as to reverse the decline that had been occurring under the Democratic administrations, increasing state funds to com- munity colleges to 4 million dol- lars-triple the amount of two years ago, strengthening local special education programs for mentally and physically handi- capped by 21/2 million dollars in state funds, and many others. AS FOR economic growth, Mr. Killingsworth passed over the question by asserting that the growth in this state is due to "national growth and increased productivity in the auto industry." I pointed out that in the 1950's Michigan did not keep pace with the national economy and in fact its economic growth was 47th in the country where under the Romney administration it is num- ber one. Furthermore until the Romney administration, the auto companies were moving out of Michigan; in the two years under t h e R o m n e y administration, though less than half the facilities are here, more than half of the domestic economic expansion of the auto companies has been in Michigan. Finally Mr. Gudwin could have noted for each alleged failure I pointed out 10 or more new crea- tive programs implemented and planned under the leadership of Governor Romney. -Alan M. Sager, '65L Chairman, Students for Romney So Does Democrat To the Editor: 2) Reapportionment. Sager had absolutely no reply when I point- ed out that many Democrats had warned Romney on numerous oc- casions that his apportionment plans were unconstitutional. They were later declared unconstitution- al (which, obviously, Sager agreed with). This did not appear in the account of the debate. 3) Tax reform. Sager made ab- solutely no attempt to dispute my statement that Romney and only Romney was responsible for the defeat of his own tax program in his Republican-dominated Legis- lature. This whole issue was elim- inated completely from the Daily's account. 4) Leadership. I attacked Rom- ney for failing to pass his open- occupancy bill and said that he traded an effective FEPC for a largely inoperative Civil Rights Commission whose budget was cut $100,000 by Romney's Republican "team" in the Legislature. Mr. Sager could only say that the commission had helped prevent riots and disorder. A listener ask- ed him to indicate how (through meetings, programs, etc) it had done this. Mr. Sager "could not remember" a single example. This "lapse of memory" was not re- ported. ALSO ON LEADERSHIP: I at- tacked Romney for presenting an aid to dependent children bill which state and federal officers had previously told Romney was not up to federal standards. Sager charged the federal ADC laws were "changed after the governor's plan was submitted," a charge Romney made - though these warnings occurred before Rom- ney's bill was submitted for ap- Poor Sports To the Editor: IN THE SUNDAY ISSUE of the Michigan Daily appeared an editorial entitled "Poor Sports," by C. Towle, who claimed that the football roster distributed by the UniversityChapter Citizens for Johnson-Humphrey "revealed all the gory details of the Jenkins case." He further charged that the spectators were "continually pest- ered" by the people distributing the lineup. These are rather serious charges, both of which are without founda- tion. The "lineups" were free to any who wished them; no one was in any way coerced or "pestered." * * * BUT more importantly, it seems clear to us that Mr. Towle did not even bother to read what he de- scribed as the "seamier side" of the Presidential race. In reality, the roster presented no details, gory or otherwise, of the Jenkins case. Rather the article was an editorial written by Robert Spi- vack of the New York Herald Tribune (Oct. 18, 1964). In it Mr. Spivack described the "mean and senselessly vicious attacks on Mr. Jenkins and President Johnson. It was a plea for an end to "dirty politics." If, indeed, Mr. Towle did not read the article, then he is guilty of the worst form of journalistic irresponsibility.. -Arthur J. Vander Asst. Prof. of Physiology -Richard Malvin Associate Prof. of Physiology Inaccuracies sure my own memory is accurate. THE MOST IMPORTANT error occurs insthe statement of Ti- lich's first criterion' of ethical, decision: "the ultimate norm or principle is the quality of love which I prefer to call agape or Eros." At no time did Tillich 'use these two Greek equivalents of "love" as synonyms. He was me- ticulous about using "agape" to designate his ultimate norm, ex- plaining that in intellectual dis- courses he preferred to express the various meanings of "love" by more explicit terms, such as "agape," "eros," and "friendship." The statement that "love with- out justice is like a body without warmth" should read "without bones." The sentence "Tillich defined a singularistic ethical system as one in which all was accepted with- out question" is too 'vague, though partly clarified by the context. The point was that in a singularis- tic society there is a body of moral laws. and traditions, the validity of which is not questioned. Where- as, in a pluralistic society, the universal ethical problem of apply- ing abstract moral standards to continually changing concrete sit- uations is compounded by the fact that there are competing' sets of standards, none' of which is acknowledged as valid by the en- tire society. * * *, ONE MORE POINT, a minor one: instead of "Stay in your own tradition and go into its. steps," what I heard was "its depths," which seems to me more meaning- ful. Finally, may I take the liberty of pointing out a small recurrent problem in Tillich's own text which may havenuzzler1 nm