Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 6, 1973 Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, September 6, 1973 . y.o_.._,._.. FHITHERE ! I AM AM APTERYX, A WINGLESS IR=D WITH HAIRY FEATHERS. Hove/AB~OUT A r LITTLE ACTO ,j ? - p ACTION is a growing movement of volunteers out to help people help themselves. It's the Peace Corps and VISTA, helping people overseas and right down the street. Please don't crawl under a rock. Get into ACTION today TOLL FREE. Student organ izations transferred from SAB I By DIANE LEVICK and REBECCA WARNER Although its construction was financed with a student fee as- sessment, the Student Activities Bldg (SAB) was taken over in July by University administra- tive offices despite protests. By fall the large majority of the 20 to 30 student organiza- tions originally located in the SAB will be relocated on the fourth floor of the Michigan Un- ion. Advocates of the switch predict that eventually the old SAB will be completely empty of student groups, and claim that relocation in the Union will foster a spirit of "togetherness." However, Tenants Union (TU) member David Raaflaub has called the student fee funding of the SAB "misrepresentation or even fraud." He says the University "touted the building as for students and student activities and got the money on that pretext." But since the completion of a finance plan for the SAB, which used a 15-year student fee assess- ment to pay back a $1.7 million construction loan, University of- ficials have been negotiating the conversion of the building to ad- ministrative use. "Grave errors have been made by students based on the idea that because the word 'student' preceeds the word 'fee,' that im- plies student control," remarks Housing Director John Feld- kamp. The Housing, Admissions, Ca- reer Planning and Placement, Academic Affairs, and Gift Re- ceiving and Development offices have taken over the SAB space once used by student groups. The TU and several other or- ganizations once housed on the first floor of the SAB say they consulted two local law firms re- garding possible legal resistance to the relocation. They found no way, however, to stop the move. Instead, they plan to circulate a petition demanding the Univer- sity provide "a complete listing of special assessments fees, and subsidies in every student fee statement." The petition is still in the rough draft stages. Raaflaub thinks the University should also set up a special fund for all student organizations as a sort of reimbursement for tak- ing away use of the SAB. He sees the SAB controversy as just one part of the issue of student control over student-fi- nanced University property, which includes Crisler Arena and North Campus Commons. Raaflaub hopes to have state representative Perry Bullard (D- Ann Arbor) work out legislation which would "reduce the prob- lem" of who controls what. Explaining that even in the SAB there was always a shortage of space for student groups, Raaflaub contends that student organizations should have the SAB space as well as the Union rooms. I i St. Joseph Mercy Hospital --- ----- --- ----- ---- - J\ Big George's SUPERMARKET OF APPLIANCES -TV STEREO-CAMERAS Home Appliance Mart - - --------------------- - ------- ---- ---- WHAI f1 ja y 2i , I; P PROTESTS FIRED: Local hospital move gets final approval AIMNL on ABOUT BIG I, By REBECCA WARNER A plan to move Ann Arbor's St. Joseph Mercy Hospital to a new site in Superior Township got final official approval June 6 from the southeastern Michigan Comprehensive Health Planning Council (CHPC) despite protests. The St. Joseph's move propos- al, which city health advocates have termed "hazardous to your health," has raised serious cri- ticism from city health consumer spokespersons. Many citizens claim the relocation means the hospital is abandoning its re- sponsibility to serve as a com- munity health facility. After heated debate between opponents and proponents, the Board of Trustees of the 200- member council voted 13 to 10 to approve a report on the St. Joseph's proposal prepared by the Greater Detroit Area Hos- pital Council (GDAHC). The Pelican and other Paperback Books are 2O PRICE AT THE WOODEN SPOON USEDBOOK STORE 200 N. 4th AVE. open noon-6 wed. thru sun. 769-4775 GDAHC overwhelmingly recom- mended approval of the move. The June 6 meeting marked the CPHC's third deliberation on the St. Joseph's proposal. In December, the council specified conditions the hospital should meet to obtain its vote of approv- al. The conditions required SJ- MH to show sincere attempts to implement community participa- tion in the decision-making pro- cess. The hospital's Community Ad- visory Board (CAB) has been criticized for failure to represent the community, since it is made up of predominately white, up- per middle class business and professional people. The council also asked that the hospital show a plan "describing the role of St. Joseph Mercy Hos- pital in the provision of com- prehensive ambulatory .health care in and around Washtenaw County." Planners have expressed con- cern that since St. Joseph's is the major provider of basic emer- gency and walk-in health serv- ices in the area, its move would make those services inacces- sible to those who need them. Kathy Biersak of the Free Peo- ple's Clinic in Ann Arbor pre- sented evidence to show that St. Joseph's does not serve as a community hospital. She, cited the clinic's experience with the hospital, claiming St. Joseph's often turns away referred pa- tients who cannot pay. Biersak also charged the hos- pital has tried to pretend it offers community - oriented services which it does not offer. -A PERFECT-, PUT THE LIFE OUT OF YOUR MATCHES BEFORE THEY PUT THE UFE 4 TI OUT OF YOUR FORESTS. I; 11 J I r i GedtiPigat +aip g Great Paper!, i UI1VUs iIt______I