MICHIGAMUA See editorial page V' Ninety Years of Editorial Freedom 3 a t1V SUNNY SIDE UP High-48° Low-48* See Today for details * Vol. LXXXX. No. 18 Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, September 26, 1979 Ten Cents Ten Pages Is your ID card bent, spindled, Fidgeting with it causes damage, Registrar says By HOWARD WITT d ,iari i. . d ..i.- oiv th d and mutilated? b0cih American Express will not get you registered at CRISP. Visa will not get you books at the Graduate Library. And Master Charge can't get you into the Central Campus Recreation Building. Only one bright yellow, plastic card can do this and more: your University of Michigan Identification Card. Yet,uthis all-important card-you do not exist at the University without it-may be crumbling in your pocket at this very moment. EACH YEAR, ABOUT 3500 students shuffle into the University Registrar's office with bent, mutilated, and often bandaged ID cards. After payment of a $1 replacement fee, they stride out 24 hours later with shiny, new cards, carefully placed into wallets and purses. Within months, however, many return, ten- aering injurea caras once again. Why does it seem that the cards break so easily? Associate Registrar Harris Olson, who administers the issuance and replacement of ID cards, said there are several reasons. The cards are designed to fit into book check-out machines in University libraries. Consequently, they are slightly larger than standard- size credit cards, and contain square holes which correspond to a student's ID number. Because many students place the ID card next to the smaller standard credit cards in their wallets, the ID cards can crack when pressure is exerted on them, Olson said. ALSO, THE SQUARE holes in the cards (which are necessary for library use) have sharp corners which tend to start cracks and tears easily, Olson said. rinany, uisons aid e neUieves e car s are su- jected to excessive abuse when students stand in long registration and bank lines and fidget with them. "I can make any standard credit card fail if I flex it enough," Olson said. Despite his theories .on why cards which are in- tended to last for years sometimes crumble within months, Olson said he has "no idea what material we could use to make them stronger." THE PLASTIC USED to make ID cards is of the same quality as that used in credit cards, Olson said. "There are two suppliers of plastic cards in the coun- try, and the quality is probably the same for both." Further, the thickness of the cards was increased by 25 per cent several years ago, but the cards See ID, Page 7 Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSIROM THREE TYPICAL STAGES in an ID card's life: Shiny and new, damaged and patched, and crumbled and useless. Normal use is not supposed to cause the card to deteriorate, but 3500 students each year must purchase replacements. State OKs $210 million hospital By JOHN GOYER cluding Blue Cross and Blue S Special to The Daily cost ceiling on the hospital. LANSING - The Michigan Department of Public Health THE REVIEW process i yesterday gave final approval to plans for a new University hospital construction does not Hospital, to cost an estimated $210 million, ending a stormy health care. nine-month review of the hospital project. Besides criticizing the co The department's approval means the University can planning agency questioned move ahead with the plans to replace major portions of its patient care beds, operating r medical complex, including the antiquated 586-bed Old Main as laboratory space requested Hospital. During the review.of the THE UNIVERSITY expects to break ground on the new ficials argued that while Del hospital in the summer of 1980, provided the state legislature beds, Washtenaw County does backs funding for the project. THEY ALSO ARGUED, While the department of Public Health approved a new hospital provides specializedc University Hospital yesterday, it stipulated that the hospital should cost no more than $210 million. The University had requested a cost ceiling of $241 million. "We have a challenge, as we see it, to implement the 'We are going to fot agreed-upon project within the dollar constraints that have been put upon it, but we expect to do so," Interim University an.v $210 million plus,I President Allan Smith said yesterday. $210 inillion.' THE DEPARTMENT of Public Health is prepared to allow -. .terimUni'ersit the University 15 per cent above $210 million for- cost overruns, which means the University legally could build a $241.5 million project. But, according to Smith, "We are going to focus our not a community or regionalr planning not on any $210 million plus, I can assure you, but on The University and the $210 million." this summer on a list of con Department of Public Health Director Dr. Maurice agreed to recommend approN Reizen emphasized yesterday in response to questioning that tment of Public Health. the state could stop construction of the hospital at any time if The list of conditions for a costs exceeded $241.5 million. number of patient care beds The $210 MILLION figure is the result of a nine-month rooms to 30, and the number review by the state and the regional planning agency, the new hospital. In addition, the Comprehensive Health Planning Council of Southeastern increasing the number of f Michigan. County General Hospital in or The cost of the project was a sore point in the review, IN SPITE OF the some with the regional planners asking that the project be limited hospital plans, during which to $200 million, and the University claiming the hospital could mer threatened to sue the not be built for less than $241 million. Health Director Reizen yest The $210 million figure is a compromise decided upon by "workable." the Department of Public Health, which has the final say on Furthermore, he rejecte approving hospital projects. Several outside sources, in- See $21 plan Shield, called for a $200 million' s designed to ensure that new t add excessively to the cost of ist of the project, the regional the need for the number of ooms and other facilities, such by the University. hospital plans, University of- troit suffers a glut of hospital not. , more importantly, that the care, making it a statewide and ,us our planning not on I can assure you, but on ty President Allan Smith resource. regional council compromised editions under which the council val of the hospital to the Depar- approving the hospital limits the to 888, the number of operating r of private rooms to 232 in the University must look at ways of acilities it shares with) Wayne rder to cut costs. times emotional review of the, the regional agency last sum- state over the hospital, Public erday called the review process# d the notion that the University 10, Page 10 B ud ding Daily Phot by PAUL ENGSTROM Stabled- behind Yost Ice Arena, Budweiser's World Famous Clydesdales are resting up for this weekend's Slippery Rock-Shippensburg football classic. They will appear at Friday's Pep Rally and a Sunday Stable Showing as well as the big game. EXISTING BUILDING VENTILATION HAZARD: Chem. construction waits By MARYEM RAFANI The controversy-as well as the spot it began on-has turned tranquil. In early 1977, the h storic Barbour- Waterman gymnasiums stood proudly on a corner lot across from the Dental School on North University. The buildings may have looked peaceful, but in fact were the source of a one-year battle between administrators and various campus and community groups over whether the aged buildings should be razed. THE ADMINISTRATORS won, and by the summer of 1977 a flat bed of mud served as the only visible memorial to what had been campus landmarks sin- ce 1894.. But now, 2/2 years later, the site of the old gyms is noticeably bare. That is the case even though in 1977 University officials promised that a new $40 million Chemistry building would be built on the site within two years. Despite the promises, the now-grassy piece of land may remain quiet for a number of years-until ground is broken for a new chemistry building. BUT BEFORE the University can even seek construction bids for a new structure, it must submit a feasibility statement to the state. If that is ap- proved, the building would have to be designed and several other bureaucratic steps would have to be completed before construction begins. University Vice-President for State Relations Richard Kennedy said that process could take two years. But Chemistry Department Chair- man Tom Dunn isn't so optimistic. He said since the state has several building requests on which it must take action before a decision on the Chemistry building can be made, his department may be in for a long wait. A WAIT, Dunn said, which could be long and dangerous. The chairman said the ventilation system in the building which currently houses the Chemistry Department cannot replace fumes in- side the structure quickly enough with fresh air. See NEW, Page 7 Church urges SALT delay until Soviet troop issue is resolved MSA moves another step closer to regainingunds budget or expenditures of funded By TOM MIRGA groups were also added. The Michigan Student Assembly LAST WEEK, MSA approved (MSA) moved closer to regaining con- changes in the composition of its trol over its administrative finances Budget Priorities Committeee (BPC), last night by approving revisions to its, guaranteeing four non-Assembly mem- allocations guidelines. ber seats on the body. Vice-President The major provisions in the approved for Student Services Henry Johnson, changes introduce an appeals who has controlled the Assembly's procedure for student organizations finances since April, required the dissatisfied with Assembly allocations. revisions be approved before returning Procedures for the investigation of financial control back to MSA. From AP and Reuter WASHINGTON - Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, recom- mended yesterday that the panel delay sending the SALT II treaty to the Senate until something is done about Soviet troops in Cuba. Church was reacting to a speech to the U.N. by Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko in which he called reports of a Soviet combat brigade in Cuba a propaganda campaign "based on falsehoods." Gromyko's statement underscored what U.S. sources said was a lack of progress in Secretary of State Cyrus Vance's negotiations with Gromyko about the troops. The Soviet Union wants "normal and, what is more, friendly relations with the United States," Gromyko said. But he added this requires observance of "the principles of peaceful coexistence and non-interference in the affairs of others," Gromyko did not specifically mention the troops issue in his speech to the assembly. But it seemed clearly on his mind as he lamented that "all sorts of falsehoods are being piled up concer- ning the policies of Cuba and the Soviet Union." The veteran diplomat said the two communist allies were the targets of a propaganda campaign. "Our advice on this score is simple," he said. "It is high time that you honestly ad- mit that this whole matter is artificial and proclaim it to be closed." Gromyko's remarks appeared to represent a Soviet rejection of U.S. charges that the troops impinge on U.S. security interests. "The Soviet Union and other coun- tries of .the socialist community have never threatened anybody, nor are they threatening anybody now," he said. Church said that "as far as I am con- cerned the matter can be 'closed' only when President Carter is able to certify to the Senate his conclusion based on our independent intelligence assessment, that these Soviet combat forces are no longer present in Cuba." The Idaho senator added that "I do not want to see the SALT II treaty rejected by the Senate. For this reason, I am of the opinion that the Senate Foreign Relations Committee should defer reporting the treaty to the Senate until the current negotiations have been completed and the results are known." When the presence of Soviet troops in Cuba was first disclosed by the Carter administration, Church said he did not believe the Senate would approve the See CHURCH, Page 2 violations or irregularities in the Tiyler ... allocations by October See MSA, Page 3 I 1. erg Ns opp r see tit y° ($6,000-$12,000); Manager ($12,000-$45,000); and Elite ($45,000 and up). Each division will play for a champion and a wild card team and a three-round playoff series will lead them to the Marxist Bowl - the ultimate class conflict. Tryouts and sign-ups will be held Oct. 1 at 3 p.m. at CCRB. You have nothing to lose but your chains. QI M ore passing up The publicity over a University student being injured - possibly permanently- after being "passed up" the stands Bibliophiles take note Library lovers, fall hours at the UGLI are as follows: 8 a.m. to 2 a.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 12 mid- night Saturday, and 10 a.m. to 2 a.m. Sunday. For more ad- vanced types, Graduate Library hours are 8 a.m. to 12 mid- night Monday through Thursday, 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, and 1 p.m. to 12 midnight Sun- day. officials, and was asked last January to explain his relationship with a group of them who were touring the U.S. Billy also visited Libya a year ago and returned there in August to take part in the country's celebration of the tenth anniversary of the Libyan revolution. No word yet on the president's reaction to this latest development. o On the inside A ook at the nrAblems Ann ArbAr tenants fae in dalning I i