Thursday, June 7, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three FINAL GO-AHEAD St. Joseph's move gets OK By REBECCA WARNER special To The Daily SOUTFIIELD- A lan to move St. Joseph Mercy Hospital to a new site in Superior Township got final official ap- prosal yesterday from the southeastern Michigan Comprehensive Health Planning Coancil (CIIPC). The St. Joseph's move proposal, which city health advocates have termed "haz- ardous to your health," has raised serious criticism from city h e a l t h consumer spokespersons. Many citizens claim the re- location means the hospital is abandoning its responsibiity to serve as a community health facility. AFTER HEATED debate between op- ponents and proponents, the B o a r J 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 Hospital Council (GlDAHC). The GDAHC overwhelmingly recomm-nd- ed approval of the move. Yesterday marked the CPlC's third de- liberation on the St. Jiseph's proposal. In December the council spec ified ten condi- tions the hospital shwild meet to obtain its vote of approv s The conditions re- quired SJ Pitl Iit)shots sincere attimpts Ito implement community participation it its decision-making process. The hospital's Conmunity A d v i s o r y Board (CAB) has b e e n criticized for failure to represent the community, since it is made up of predominantly white, upper middle class business and profes- sional people. THE COUNCIL also asked that the hos- pital show a plan "describing the role of See ST. JOSEPH'S, Page 9 Tricky space walk This artist's conception shows how Skylab Astronauts Charles Conrad and Joseph Kerwin will free and then try to deploy the damaged solar wing that is held down by a metal strap. The astronauts yesterday staged a rehearsal of today's tricky space walk salvage job which may save their troubled mission. Speaking to mission control, Conrad commented, "I'm not as optimistic as you are, but we'll give it a go." Bottle law delay Circuit Court Judge Edward 1Deake yesterday continued a temporary restrain- ing order preventing enforcement of the city's controversial non-returnable bottle ordinance. The order will remain in effect at least through today, pending the out- come of a preliminary hearing scheduled for this afternoon. Several local mer- chants have filed a lawsuit against the city -tainting the ordinance would "irre- parably damage" their businesses by eliminating beer and pop sold in non- returnable bottles and cans. The hear- ing will be the first legal step in deciding the suit. A clarification Yesterday's story on local cable TV manager Lawry D o 1 p h inadvertently omitted the source of a statement read- ing: "He also plans to buy a mobile TV unit that the station cannot presently af- ford." The statement should have been attributed to Marcia Domurat, former program director at Cable 3. Dolph, how- ever, denies that the station is not able to afford the knit. Happenings.,.. . . . are highlighted tonight by a talk on "Society and Health Care" by pediatri- cian and peace activist Dr. Benjamin Spock. The speech, sponsored by UAC and the senior medical school class, is at 7:30 p.m. in the League Ballroom . . . in Mendelssohn Theater at 8:00 p.m., Oscar Wilde's play "The Importance of Being Earnest" will be presented in benefit per- formance . . . and at 7:30 p.m. in the An- derson Room of the Union, the Human Rights Party will hold a mass meeting to discuss the probable repeal of the city's $5 marijuana law. A2's weather Sunny with clear skies and a few-scat- tered clouds in the afternoon. High tem- peratures will be between 77-82 with lows in the range of 84-59. FUTURE THREATENED: Antioch ciasses begin but dispute unresolve By SUSAN SOMMER financial aid cuts, students demanded a specil To The Daily written guarantee from the college to cnn- YEtLfOW SPRINGS, Ohio - The police tinue their present level of aid until gradu- are gone now and classrooms have re- ation. The college has a five year pro opened. Faculty and students are settling gram. into the business of college as usual. On April 20 buildings were seized in But the Antioch College community here order to bring attention to striker de- continues to be hounded by questions and mands. Since then, students, teachers and speculation. How well has this institution administrators attempting to hold classes survived a six week lock-out strike staged or conduct business within college build- by 311 financial aid students? And has the ings have been forcibly ejected. crisis really passed? Many classes have continued in faculty homes and community schools and church- A MEETING on April 19 set the strike es, although they have been disrupted into motion. Spurred by threats of federal occasionally by strikers. A series of fire- Sae Police snare two arema residents t " In major LSD bust By GORDON ATCHESON The State Police, assisted by city and Two area residents were arraigned yes- county law officers, arrested the duo terday on charges of possession and sale Tuesday night at the Maple Village of 50,000 pills of LSD, worth nearly $50,000. Shopping Center. They were caught while The two were arrested following an ex- removing the LSD from a car trunk. tensive investigation by State Police in- Undercover agents have been investigat- telligence agents. ing the operation since March. Assistant Diane Stoffer, a Lodi resident, and County Prosecutor Lynwood Noah said Gregory Small of Chelsea are being held Stoffer and Small supplied a large portion on $60,000 and $35,000 bond respectively. of the LSD sold within Washtenaw county. The police have charged Stoffer with six City Police Chief Walter Krasny in- counts of selling LSD. She appeared before dicated Ann Arbor police officers had 14th District Court Judge Robert Fink. been directly involved in the investigation. bombings on campus, renounced by the strikers, served to raise the tension even higher. MANY OF TlHE strikers were low in- come and minority students who had been recruited in an Antioch affirmative action program called New Directions. They also demanded that New Direc- tions services be protected from dispro- portionate budget cuts and that incoming students enter into contracts. "They pulled poor people off the street, promised them the world and threw them into an experiment," charged Larry Ste- ward, a member of the Strike Steering Committee. EDUCATION SHOULD be a right, not a privilege dependent on students fight- ing each year for renewed aid, the strikers maintain. But the administration has refused to offer strikers more than a two year guar- antee. Without knowledge of sources or amounts of funds beyond 1974-75, they argue that a further contract would be fraudulent. "The strike seems like a kind of fan- tasy-they are asking the institution to do whatrthe federal government cannot do," claimed Antioch President James Dixon. EVEN DURING the second year, the administration said, it may be necessary to increase the loan base and direct stu- dents to private loan firms which demand higher interest. Negotiations on these terms reached an impasse after the second week of the strike when neither the administration nor the strikers would move from their positions. See ANTIOCH, Page 9 SMALL IS CHARGED with possession of LSD. He was arraigned in the Ann Arbor District Court. Both could receive up to seven years in prison and a heavy fine it convicted. Krasny said he did not believe the bust would have a permanent effect on local drug trafficking. "THE ARRESTS will curb the trade for See STATE, Page 9