Tuesday, May 17, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page ThreeI S.Joe's gets new site(_______ By LORI CARRUTHERS on River Drive. St. Joseph Mercy Hospital THE NEW 558 bed, $57.6 packed up its 96 patients and million hospital eventually will 240 vanloads of beds, test replace the existing . facility. tubes, chairs and bedpans and Full occupancy in the new hos- moved into its modern new pital will not be attained for home Saturday. several weeks. The hospital has changed its The building includes a six address from 326 North In- story tower containing 520 sin- galls Street to 5301 East Hur- gle patient rooms. The remain- A.rab speaker, raps Zionism as racist By DENISE FOX Detroit attorney Abdeen Jabara fired off at the Israeli govern- ment Saturday as "exclusionary," and called the practice of zionism "racist." Jabara's remarks came in a speech entitled "Is Zionism a Form of Racism Under Law?" The lawyer was the guest speaker at the first meeting of the Michigan Conference on Zionism, Racism and Human Rights. JABARA SAID the "exclusion" part of his charge was evident in the fact that non-Jews can only serve in the Israeli Parliament "within the context of Jewish majority parties." The conference, sponsored by the American-Arab organization of Ann Arbor, and held in the Michigan Union, featured speeches on the "colonist" and "racist" practices of Israeli Zionism and the alleged violations of Arab rights. He also referred to exclusion in the legal system and in the education system. He claimed that an Arab may not purchase or rent,94.5 per cent of all agricultural land in Israel under the law, and he called all secondary schools in Israel "segregated by law." JABARA COMPARED Jewish exclusion of- non-Jews to the early west of the United States "where we formed a circle of wagon trains to keep the natives out." The speaker then attacked zionism as a form of racism by referring to the findings of the Racial Discrimination Convention. There racism was defined as "any distinction, exclusion, restric- tion or preference based on race, color, descent or national origin..". When asked for the solution to the problem, Jabara answered: "The return of all Palestinians kicked out in 1948 by force or fear." He also advocated "equality before the law" that could be challenged in court. der of the hospital beds are de- -voted to special care units, sur- gical, medical, and coronary in- tensive care. A skeleton crew of employes will remain at the old facility along with physicians who still have their offices at the old lo- cation until July. THE OUTSTANDING feature of this hospital relocation was the efficiency with which the move was run and also the in- dividual attention each patient received during the move. The closely knit staff of nurses, doctors and administrators knew many of the patients per- sonally. The move was necessary be- cause the old location lacked growing space. The new loca- tion is on a 213 acre site, over 60 acres of which are occupied by the new building and its parking lots.. The rest will be devoted to future building of healthe- hospital related facili- ties. The new hospital includes many modern electronic fea- hires, but the hospital will not lose the personal touch. ROBERT LAVERTY, Execu- tive Director, stressed that the 66 year old philosophy of the Sisters of Mercy and the hos- pital would always remain the same - personal, dedicated pa- tient care. More space and im- provements will mean only that the needs of the patients can be met in a more efficient way, he said. "This extraordinary activity has necessitated the organiza- tion of 19 specialized task forc- es and many other subcommit- tees," said Spencer Maidlow, Hospital Administrative Assist- ant and Move Project Manager. Two years of careful plan- ning ensured the smooth trans- See ST. JOE'S, Page 14 Hersh urges honest law grads AUTHOR WILLIAM WHYTE speaks on "The Open City: Potentials in Urban Space" at Rackham Auditorium last night. The speech was part of a three-day symposium on land and its use. Whyte* discusses future urban space probleAms By EILEEN DALEY William Whyte, author of The Last Landscape, last night presented at Rackham Auditorium what he called a "some- what disjointed moving record" of his study of the problems and potentials of urban space usage. Whyte presented a film of street activity which focused primarily on New York City, which helped Whyte to reach conclusions about space usage in urban centers. Whyte found that the biggest problem in cities is the underuse and inefficient use of space. He also found that the recent trend of builders to construct huge megastructures is perhaps a mistake. WHYTE CONTENDED that "people like the street and prefer being outdoors. The streets of the city are a much more social place than people realize." He said that megastructures shut out the street and its activities. He noted that people prefer stores to be on ground level and that they dislike going up or down unless they have a good reason to do so. He cautioned that megastructures ire liable to date quickly and cited the Detroit Renaissance Center as one such structure. Whyte's study focused primarily on the plazas which pepper many downtown areas. He was curious about what made some plazas popular gathering places while others were. ignored. le found a strong correlation between the popular- ity of certain plazas and the amount of sitable space they offer. "People tend to sit where there are places to sit," he remarked. See WHYTE, Page 14 By GREGG KRUPA the p share "I am one of those who believes that if law- "I yers did their job, our society would undergo meet a massive cleansing process." So spoke New Berns York Times investigative reporter Seymour gate, Hersh, at Senior Day ceremonies for the Univer- Her sity of Michigan Law School, Saturday at Rack- Racki ham Auditorium. Watei Hersh, who won a Pulitzer Prize for interna- nal a tional reporting in 1970 for his stories on the My HE Lai massacre, was the keynote speaker at. the this c Law School graduation ceremony. 332 seniors lion d received the juris doctor degree and 38 students by th received degrees for advanced master of laws de's f or master of comparative law degrees. paign HERSH'S address included a rambling survey memo of the crimes of the Nixon administration. He hersc pointed to the "complete breakdown of the jus- offens tice system," as a source of the cancer within Her the Nixon administration. But he also indicted High-rise high Even though the police are denying it, it seems likely that the lavish new Renaissance Center really does come complete with everything - barber shops, restaurants, bowling alleys and even some good old home grown dope. Michael Schneider, head of the natural science department at the University's Dearborn campus, said he's "99.9 per cent sure" the plants that have popped up in front of the Cadillac Room in the Ren Cen are marijuana, but he couldn't be certain because the plants are still too young. The somewhat embarrassed Detroit police say it isn't marijuana because the leaves aren't pointed enough. Until they can be sure, the plants will stay. So next time you're in De- troit for a concert, and you're all out of mind altering substances-..., ress, saying his cohorts deserved a fair of the blame for the scandalous-actions. think you could make a very good argu- that, with the exclusion of Woodward and tein, we (the media) brought you Water- we were the apologists," said Hersh. sh told the standing room only audience at ham Lecture Hald that he considered the agate break-in a mere footnote to the crimi- ctivity of the Nixon years. COUNTED the covert wars conducted by ountry in Laos and Cambodia; the $19 mil- destabilization program perpetrated in Chile e Central Intelligence Agency befgre Allen- fall; and the 21 month illegal wiretap cam- waged by the Nixon administration against bers of the media, the military, and mem- of his own staff, as the most impeachable es of the Nixon White House. sh implored the audience to conduct their See LAW, Page 12 Happenings ...happenings begin and end today with a ference at Rackham and the league entitled Face of-America: This Land in the Year 2000. program, which began yesterday, and runs thr tomorrow, is sponsored by the extension ser That's the end of the happenings, but not the of the announcements. Architecture Prof. U Fader is offering a summer term course wor credits in camera snaking. The course is the one of its kind, and Fader promises "even kl will have a four by five view camera when finish the course ..."' con- The The ough vice. end ester rth 2 only utzes they istration (VA) murder trial resumer in Detroit yes- terday ... for a full thirty seconds. Federal Judge Philip Pratt held court long enough to tell the six- teen-member jury that court was recessed until Tuesday morning. Of course the judge didn't stick around to -see their explainably hostile reaction: Pratt was back in his chambers before the court crier could shout "all rise!" On the outside Tomorrow would be an excellent day to go out to Briarwood and browse, while soaking up that free air conditioning. That's right, it's going to. be another sticky one, with a high in the upper 80's. Skies will be partly cloudy, and there is a chance of some afternoon thundershowers. The low tonight will be in the upper 50's. In and out/ / After a week long recess, the Veterans Admin-