I OPINION Friday, May 25, 1984 Page 6 01 be fitichtgan 9atily Vol. XCIV, No. 10-S 94 Years of Editorial Freedom Managed and Edited by Students at The University of Michigan Editorials represent a majority opinion of the Daily Editorial Board Sinclair T< FIRST Y lEMIPIE j3EW.NtI,1 ..0 Limit development T HE DOWNTOWN Neighbors Association paints a scene of Ann Arbor in 20 years which sounds something like a ghoulish southern California nightmare: mile after mile of boutiques and offices, landscaped parking lots, deserted and unsafe nighttime city streets, outrageously high- rents for outrageously few apartments. What's scary is that the DNA's prediction might be right. The current boom in downtown develop- ment, if allowed to proceed without careful regulation, could permanently scar Ann Ar- bor. Through inadvertance and greed, the very qualities which have made Ann Arbor at- - tractive could disappear in the next few years. Perhaps unfortunately, the latest con- troversy over Ann Arbor development has not focused on city development as a whole, but on proposed changes to Braun Court, a small residential area near Kerrytown. The DNA, in response to a developer's announced intention - to convert at least part of the area into retail shops and office space, is trying to have the r Braun Court area rezoned to exclude all non- g residential use. The DNA's proposal to rezone Braun Court s to strictly residential-while backed by the A noblest intentions-misses the mark. What is o needed is a comprehensive and enforceable a plan to preserve Ann Arbor's unique charac- P ter. The Braun Court struggle has demon- g strated that such a plan does not exist. The a rezoning of a small area would only serve to s selectively destroy the investment-backed ex- e pectations of the owners of Braun Court g without solving the more serious problems of s unacceptable office space and retail develop- c ment. Members of the DNA argue that rezoning c Braun Court is necessary both to protect the s character of the Kerrytown district and to g preserve the city's supply of low income: r housing stock. These are important con- g siderations-indeed, they should be guiding Y principles for a general effort to regulate s future city development-but their application c should be limited in the case of Braun Court. V The owners purchased the Braun Court o property with an eye toward developing its c retail potential. Since at the time of purchaset the land is zoning classification permitted cer-v tain retail development, the price the current s owners paid undoubtedly reflected the higher a potential value. The owners - out of simple fairness-should not be arbitrarily deprived ofF their investment merely because the at- tempted to make legal improvements in their c property. The problem is not with the owners d of Braun Court; the problem is with the city'sc polic toward development.t IWIP PEWlOMCNT Eat AS WA~ZONE NWNO~5o rIOr 1 (4)- ;X ONO 41 tr 4 I Hacky-sacking to happiness I By Andy Weine President Shapiro and the egents badly need to play a game of hacky-sack. In essence, hacky-sack is a ooperative game. Players, who stand in a circle reminiscent of Arthur's Round Table), rely on ne another to kick the sack among them. There is no com- petition between players, only a group goal to keep the sack going at long as possible, with every player kicking it. If the sack tays in action long enough for very person to touch it, then the group achieves a "cycle." If everyone touches it twice in the same play, then it's a double~ ycle. UNFORTUNATELY, similar ycles are rarely achieved in ociety because not. everyone gets the opportunity to kick the political sack. Last summer, the regents rejected the proposed guidelines for military research, which had been endorsed by both tudent and faculty governments. Now the regents are seriously considering revoking bylaw 702, which requires student approval of the proposed nonacademic code of student conduct. Both of hese actions are analgous to talking into a hacky-sack circle, etting others kick the sack, then uddenly grabbing it and walking away. Even on the national level, Reagan bypasses Congress when giving aid to El Salvador and proposes oppressive constraints on the First Amendment. He sen- ds missiles to Europe and just . can't seem to cooperate with hem Russians, them Russians, them Russians. According to him, they are simply "the focus of evil in the world today." The solution I propose is hacky-sack. If Reagan and his cabinet played hacky-sack on the White House lawn, of if the regen- ts played in People's Plaza beside the administration building, they would begin to learn what cooperation is all about. They would see that it's better when you hack with people than when you do it alone because then everyone shares the fun and everyone helps each other. And they might begin to see that, just as more players help you achieve that elusive goal of continual hacking, more public, input (or greater attention payed to public interest) helps to achieve another elusive goal: peace. I'VE SEEN it work with children. I've introduced hacky- sack and other cooperative games to lots of kids who are used to nothing but football, baseball, and other competitive games. They find cooperative games refreshing and exciting beacuse the games don't put you face to facedwithean opposing player. In- stead, they promote a sense of trust and cooperation because the players work with each other to achieve a common goal. If it works with kids, why shouldn't it work with adults? Further, why shouldn't it work with society's leaders, who are supposedly its most accom- plished members? What stands in the way, of course,it social conditioning. Authority, once achieved, becomes a license to do as you please, despite what your subor- dinates wish. As citizens we learn to besatisfied with political im- potence, with flicking a lever every four years or with standing by while the regents revoke our right for input. THERE WOULD be potential danger to high-level hacky- sacking. I think we might see a lot of officials who "hackstur- bate"-that is, monopolize the game by keeping the sack to themselves and not kicking it to others in the circle. And we would probably seea lot of aristocratic, segregated hacky-sack. Signs would section off some circlessfor "9 to 5'ers" or "White Males in Power" (suit and tie required): The rest of us would hacky-sack in an area designated "All Others." And the grand dream of hacky-sack would have failed. But who knows? Maybe I'll see some regents or President Shapiro or Billy Frye in the next hacky-sack circle I join. I can picture it now. Regent Roach lunges for an outside kick with his left leg, flicking the sack high to Regent Baker,awho lets the sack plop on his head and drop off to his foot; he kicks it to me. "Hack in, Andy!" they all exclaim hap- pily. We play for hours together. Then we go to the Administration Building, where they gather input from students, faculty, and community members. Regent Roach does not read his papers while members of the public speak, and Regent Baker does not leave early. Afterwards, we all work cooperatively on solutions that suit the public in- terest, not just the regents' in- terests. And we live happily ever after. All because of hacky-sack. Weine is a Daily Arts writer. I I a I