1k Mtfrligan &tt Eighty-Seven Years of Editorial Freedom 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Ml 48109 Tuesday, April 12, 1977 News Phone: 764-0552 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan New studentrecordsaspolicy fals uaccptalyhor Black Salvation - s Black Elements Seen as Renewing Jaded Faith THE NEW student records policy passed by the Regents last month falls far short of our expectations. While it will facilitate the processing of record requests and clearly defines how and by whom requests can be made, it fails to include the right of students to see everything in their files. Anything less than complete ac- cess is unacceptable. Students still may not inspect or challenge medical and professional counseling records, financial informa- tion, letters of recommendation from counselors and teachers received be- fore January 1, 1975, and personal notes and comments put in by teach- ers and counselors. It is argued that if these type of records were made available for stu- dent perusal, they would lose much of their objective value. Further, ad- ministrators and faculty fear that students who read recommendations written about them that they don't like, may seek retribution. These are valid arguments. But they place the focus of student rec- ords in the wrong places. These files are compiled for the student's bene- fit, not for faculty administrators. Students have a right to see every- thing contained in their record. In- accurate files can be terribly. dam- aging throughout one's life. Without the right to challenge damaging and inaccurate information, students are at the mercy of the arbitrary whims of people that wield tremendous pow- er over their future. PUT TEACHER and counselor con- fidentiality, as well as students' rights must be protected. Since teach- ers and counselors who wrote notes for students' files prior to January 1, 1975 did so under the assump- tion that students would not be per- mitted to see those files, students should not be given access to this in- formation. However, any such notes should be removed from the record and destroyed, since they could have a damaging effect on the student's futurg. It is clear that the new policy was compiled with the sole intention of complying with the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. It does nothing to improve student's rights to see their files. Under these conditions we condemn the Regents for failing to secure vital 'student rights, and hope that they will re- consider their poor decision. EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fifth and last installment of a five-part Easter series on black religion, regarded by some as a "saving remnant." By GEORGE W. CORNELL AP Religion Writer Somehow, by an odd chem- istry of life, strength is wrought on the anvil of difficulties, and wisdom sharpened in the coils of pain. Tears clear the eye. Hard times can toughen. Those who have been tried, buffeted and tested take on the surer stride and richer spirit. They've plumbed the depth. They've got "soul." It's a quality often ascribed to blacks and it's not just in style but in content, an essence weightily regarded as needed by whites as a bracer to faith, as the quickening, curing force to a vitiated humanity. "It is only in extreme situ- ations that man becomes aware of what he is," says philoso- pher Karl Jaspers. It deflates pretenses and arrogance. It ex- alts simple survival. It height- ens gratitude for life. And blacks have traveled those "ex- treme situations," felt that re- fining fire. Through their tempered in- stincts, "the world might be saved from the selfishness, greed and subjugation" which blight it, says the National Committee of Black Church- men. The thesis holds that blacks, through their adver- sities, may be a special in- strument of God - a contempo- rary "saving remnant" to re- new a jaded white society. The concept has arisen not only in religious thought, both among some whites and blacks, but it takes on added relevance in a world whose shrinking re- sources demand a shift away from the affluent pattern of white consumerism, and the view also shows up in reflective historical analysis. "American blacks have re- discovered in Christianity cer- tain original meanings and val- ues which Western Christendom has long ignored," writes noted world historian Arnold J. Toy- nbee. They found that Jesus "camne into the world not to confirm the mighty in their seats but to exalt the humble and meek." With "their genius for giving spontaneous aesthetic ex- pression to emotional religious experience, they may perhaps be capable of kindling the cold grey ashes of , Christian- ity. . .until the divine fire glows again" and becomes once more "the living faith of a dying civ- ilization." However, the concept lies not just in black intuition for wor- ship, but the profoundest reli- g i o u s insights. Somehow, strangely, help is rendered through the helpless, recovery through the disabled. It's a paradoxical thing, but it's the Biblical vision. The highest truths emerge through the low- liest victims, the enslaved, the persecuted. Out of the Egyptian bondage rose the banner of freedom. Through the slain prophets and /- t.%: 13 ... t r v' 14 .-refL ~ Let city know how you feel about new zoning plans ALL TOO OFTEN, decisions which affect our lives are made with- out our approval-or even our knowl- edge. Politicians and bureaucrats, cer- tain that they alone know what is, best for us, tend to disregard the voices of their constituencies unless forced to listen by political pressure. The Ann Arbor City Planning De- partment has just announced several proposed amendments to the city zon- ing ordinance which, if approved, will have far-reaching consequences for almost every resident of the city -- students and longtimers alike. Among the proposed changes are: a measure to restrict the living den- sity of rental properties in student areas, a proposal to create several new zoning categories which would provide for alternative life styles, and a number of changes which will de- termine the extent and direction of growth both in the downtown area and the surrounding neighborhoods. The Planning Department has al- ready made use of suggestions, criti- cisms and information from a num- ber of citizen groups and community leaders before drawing up its recom- mendations. But before it presents those recommendations to the city Planning Commission, the depart- ment is making another bid for citi- zen input. A SERIES OF public meetings and hearings on the proposed ordi- nance changes will be scheduled dur- ing the months of May and June, and Gene Katz of the Planning staff - who supervised the drafting of the proposals - has made a public request for more citizens' options. The Daily strongly urges every stu- dent who rents or owns property -in Ann Arbor to become acquainted with the proposed changes (an explanatory article appears on Page One of to- day's Daily) and to make his or her opinion known to city officials. It is rare indeed that we are ask- ed for our suggestions in any matter so important to the future of our community; to waste the opportunity would be shameful.' Bwsiness Staff DE13ORAH DREYFUSS ...... Business Manager COLLEEN HOGAN ......... Operations Manager ROD KOSANN .................... Sales Manager ROBERT CARPENTER ........ Finance Manager NANCY GRAU .. . .............. Display Manager CASSIE ST. CLAIR . . ...Circulation Manager BETH STRATFORD ... ..... Circulation Director Phoiegraphy Staff ALAN BIMINSKY ANDY FREEBERG Co-Photographers-in-Chief BRAD BENJAMIN ...... ... Staff Photographer JOHN KNOX.......... Staff Photographer CHRISTINA SCHNEIDER .. Staff Photographer martyrs rang the courage of conscience and caring. Through the crucified broke the light of a redeemed humanity. "For the Lord. . .adorns the humble with victory," says Psalms 149:4. Jesus, in Mat- thew 20:16, puts it: "The last will be first, and the first last." It's a puzzling equation, an upsidedown process. But it in- timates the possibility that through the rugged pilgrimage of black people, out of the cries and needs of the dark-skinned, have-not hosts of the earth, stems a key to an enlivened faith, to harmony among the races, to that longed-fortrecon- ciliation of humanity, the be- loved community. "He was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities,"the ancient Jewish prophet put it in his mysterious "suffering servant" passage of Isaiah 53. "Upon him was the chastisement that mnade us whole, and with his stripes we are healed." Not that blacks are super- faithful, a notion their scholars firmly repudiate. They affirm that religion at its core has no coloration, neither black, white, red nor yellow, but they main- tain that through the harrowing black experience has sprung a particular refreshening in- gredient necessary to the age, a "new wine" that is dis- tinctively black. "The gift of Negritude," Pope Paul VI termed it, saying the church needs it. "God is calling us to be mis- sionaries to today's white gen- eration," says black theologian Gilbert Caldwell. "They need us more than we need them."' Indeed, worries were wide- spread in the predominantly white churches that their vital- ity had waned, that the Chris- tian ardor had cooled and gone pale in an atmosphere whipped by secularizing winds and a sterilizing rationalism that shrinks reality to mere for- mulas and techniques, that the poetry, the wonder, the flame of conviction had run low, It was also increasingly rec- ognized that the industrialized white societies of the world were caught in a get-more, con- sume-more vertigo that saps psychic strength, that chases hollow idols of more wealth and power, that deepens the chasm between mainly white Western technocracies and the poor, mainly black and brown two- thirds of the world, that threat- ens the very capacity of earth to sustain its people and casts a shadow over the human future. It was an enfeebling com- oination, a gaping wound. "A spiritual poverty," Mother Teresa of India said in reaction to conditons of affluent Ameri- can whites. However, greater black inter- action with whites was devel- oping not only in the churches but in American culture gener- ally and in the closer U.S. con- cern with the striving of Afri- can people for their rights. Also, the realization grew that spiraling Western consumption was not the answer, that sim- pler, sparer habits were neces- sary and healthier. "We may be entering a timne when white illusions of economic in- vulnerability are radically eroded and wnen that happens, what whites have seen as the experience of others will also become their experience, which is the black experience," says black religious historian Law- rence Jones. In other ways, convergences were expanding in the mainly w h i t e U.S. denominations, which have hung on to an aver- age 2 per cent black member- ship, more than 2 million among 110 million white mem- bers. Most black members were in predominantly black congrega- tions, but a growing sprinkling of blacks participated in mainly white congregations. Also, the white denominations now had vigorous black caucuses and black affairs units injecting black influence into denomina- tional processes, Blacks have increased exten- sively among executives, staffs and delegations of the mainly white denominations, including the interdenominational Nation- al Council of Churches, often through "affirmative action" programs. Any absence of blacks has become a white em- barrassment. Most of the largely white, major Protestant denomina- tions also in recent years have elected blacks to their top posts. Even greater cross-fertiliza- tion came in ecumenical set- tings where blacks have be- come a rising force. Churches of the dark-skinned under- developed "third world" in 1975 moved into a narrow majority in the assembly of the World Council of Churches, whose chief executive officer, the Rev. Dr. Philip Potter, is a black American. Indeed, statistical projections indicate the surging growth of Christianity in Africa will shift the numerical center of gravity of the faith from its mainly white European-American sec- tor to the mainly black conti- nent by the end of the century. Just what are the special qualities blacks have to contrib- ute? Scholars cited these val- ues, among others: -A lived sense of suffering and tragedy which in Biblical perspective is inherent in the struggle for righteous ends, a hard reality which a pampered white generation tends to reject but which black theology vi- vifies. -A greater independence from society's class pressures and status obsessions because of prolonged black exclusion from such trivializing pre- occupations that trap many white church people. -A more concentrated, God- centered emphasis, character- istic ofblack churches, in which God is not a mere in- tellectual abstraction as he tends to be among whites, but a mnighty, acting, caring force in human events and history. -The proved skill of the black church in organizing and mounting strategies for social reform and of developing lead- ers for it, a risky work which middle-class white churches are inclined to shun. -A heightened appreciation of freedom because of black suffering for it. -A help to whites in freeing them from uneasiness in com- pany with the poor and socially deprived, enabling congrega- tions to become more lovingly inclusive of various classes in accord with the Christian ideal. -A strengthened apprecia- tion in preaching of the emo- tional, intuitive elements that, at bottom, control human deci- sion-making in contrast to the intellectual rationalizing domi- nant in white churches. .-An open, freer, participato- ry spontaneity in worship that could add dynamism to the generally sterile formality of white services, a seeming se- renity that sometimes masks empty detachment. -The broadened under- standing and capability that comes of shared differences in background,experiencesweak- nesses and strengths, deepening awareness that none find full- ness in isolation, that each is enlarged by the other. -The black church's tenacity in holding on to ancient moral values amid modern fluidity about them among whites, such as the strong black rejection of abortion and homosexuality. Chiefly and distinctively, however, the black religious ex- perience offered a direct, im- mediate identification with a 1 o n g-oppressed people, ex- emplifying the exploited and downtrodden on whom the Jew- ish-Christian Scriptures focus the story of salvation, thus pro- viding a closer intimately felt kinship with it. Black people are "the con- munity through which the Op- pressed One (Christ) has cho- sen to make his will known to the world," says black theo- logian Jamnes H. Cone. The implication was that somehow, out of the baffling, enigmatic yet powerful process- es of deepest reality, only the broken could make humanity whole. Reaching the objective came hard, yet it urgently beckoned. Three demons against it strode the modern world - poverty, racism and violence. Yet the dividing line of all three was race, the impover- ished dark masses alongside the wealthier white few, togeth- er with the potentials to vio- lence sown by that harsh imba- lance of enough. Since all three ills bore the stamp of race, the corollary loomed that the way out, the amelioration of the distresses of the age, depended somehow on a new, reciprocating fellow- ship of the races. That was the underlying need, the resuscitating direc- tion. Whatever its mneans, blacks would have to contribute to it, and also whites. Both would have to provision it. For both it was the high goal. It was the vision of that "be- loved city" toward which the Book of Revelation points, the blessed society in which God's creatures, black,red, yellow, white, 'tan, pink and freckled, all loosed from the chains of bigotry, share alike in a rain- bow of felicity, graced with mu- tual enhancement and enlarged life. It was a drea, yet ot just a dream.aFor God "has mnade known to us in all wisdom and insight the mystery of his will," says Ephesians 1:9-10, ". ..his purpose which he set ,forth in Christ as a plan for the fullness of time, to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth." It was a plan for black and white together in which the Op- pressed One does, indeed, carry out the decisive work. "For he is our peace, who has broken down the dividing wall of hostility," says Eph- esians 2:14-19. "So then you are no longer strangers and sojour- ners, but you are fellow citi- zens. . .of the household of God." i Letters to the FIORE O Akee ": Q EVlv 1 ME B *wv 46EZ.-t;,1Rr "t'- To The Daily: Kevin Switzer warn us that crusade is a se human freedom a joke. The Vil the gay press reported some consequences of On March 15, activist, Ovidio( committed suicid er appearing on guage radio shoe ant's propagan show, Ramosi saying, "It'si these Christians tred for us." Tf watched Anita Phil Donahue S talked to his par down on him ft Police think he the next day. gay rights In the midst of this se tragedies, Dade County C sioners are reportedly is correct to second thoughts about sp Anita Bryant's taxpayers' money to he rious threat to referendum on the gay , and not just ordinance. The influenti lage Voice and ami Herald editorialize have recently "Gay Rights is not a5 of the tragic issue," and urged that th her hysterics. nance be rescinded p a Cuban gay further study. In respon (Herbie) Ramos Gay Coalition has vov le in Miami aft- raise the $400,000 need a Spanish-lan- the June 7 referendum, a w to rebut Bry- sent out a nation-wide da. After the for funds to pay not of was depressed, the referendum but also fi incredible that licity to counteract B hold such ha- ravings. he next day he Checks to underwrite th Bryant on the tion should be made out Show, and also "Dade County Board of rents who came Commissioners," with ch or his gayness. publicity made out to the killed himself tion. All money can be Dade County Coalitionf en active in set- Humanistic Rights of division of the P.O. Box 414, Miami, FL oalition for the At the U-M, where w hts of Gays. A Just overwhelmingly pa nual Gomez, al- gay rights referendum e Latin group, student election, those of rebombed after believe in civil rights f s conference a people have the respon Ramos' death. to speak out and act ;ued a statement Anita's holy war. -ries of To add to Ford's own useless- ommis- ness, he threatened to veto all having Veterans Administration educa- pending tional benefits if veterans, who )ld the were graduate students were in- rights cluded in the 1974 package al Mi- wherein benefits were extended d that from 36 to 45 months. This, of $400,000 course, is discrimination by edu- ie ordi- cation - not rewarding veter- pending ans who had their B.A.'s and se, the B.S.'s before they served on ac- wed to tive duty while at the same time ted for rewarding those who did not and nd has who served in positions of les- appeal ser responsibility. nly for The mere idea that an Ameri- or pub- can president could make such ryant's a bizarre judgment is bad enough, but Mr. Ford then re- he elec- versed his stance of graduate to the veterans just a few weeks be- County fore Election Day, 1976 when ecks for he was trailing in the polls and Coali- needed to drum up a few votes sent to among veterans. Fortunately, it for the didn't work. Lucky Michigan, Gays, now he's all yours. 33133. Timothy Whalen e have ssed a correction in the To The Daily: us who . I want to correct a statement or gay attributed to Dean Gronvall of isibility the Medical School in an arti- against cle which appeared in the Mich- i an Daily on March 30, 1977. ang The statement is taken from a Dail Pathology and Audiology (AB- ESPA) rather than being provi- sionally restored. As stated in a November 30, 1976 letter from the Chairman of ABESTA, the primary basis for extending ac- creditation rather than reaccre- diting the program was "to al- low time for clarification of the administrative picture at your institution.'" Since the future certification status of our students is affect- ed by the accreditation of our program, it is important for them to be assured that at no time was our accreditation lost. As stated in a May 27, 1976 let- ter from the Chairman of AB- ESPA, "as long as the appeal procedures are in progress your program will still be considered as accredited." Donald J. Sharf, Ph.D. Acting Director Section of Speech and Hearing Sciences AFSCME To The Daily: We have been informed that the University Administration is refusing to recognize Joel Block, the President of AFSCME 1583, as the representative of his members and is forbidding him to meet with his members while they are on the job. The mem- Hash Rash To The Daily: Bart Plantenga's letter scorn- ing the hypocrisy of those criti- cal of the Hash Bash is absurd. Absurd not because those he says are hypocrites are in fact saints, but rather absurd be- cause he could see so much re- deeming social value in 5,000 pre-pubescent potheads. Can Mr. Plantenga seriously believe that this assemblage of middle-class, suburban youth came here to make a political statement? Or that their social awareness extends much beyond .the latest Kiss album? The sad fact is that most Hash Bashers are very much like the "athletes, frats (and) cheerlead- ers "Mr. Plantenga derides. They all do their own thing. Just how oppressed can some- one be who cruises into Ann Ar- bor in a late model car, any- way? Lee Kirk SYlL To The Daily: I wish to address this letter to the Spartacus Youth league in response to their letter in the Sunday edition of The Daily: Whv don't vou find- anotherP I Ramos had be ting up a Latin Dade County C Humanistic Rig] close friend Man so active in *th had his car fir holding a press short time after The Coalition iss denouncing the1 bombing as "a -Dan Ts ' Rks, -i ' a