The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 10, 1981-Page 7 ' ,New 'U' Hospital building approved H ' By LOU FINTOR As the University embarks on its massive Hospital Replacement Project, a number of concerns have been raised by health professionals concerning the justification of such an all-encompassing facility. The $285 million complex will replace the old University Hospital, built in 1923 and now in need of extensive repair.0 Although state officials and University Regents agreed at last June's Regents meeting that am- bulatory care would be the new University Hospital's highest priority, teaching and research may continue to be the facility's central mission. ACCORDING TO University Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline), the new facility's purpose will be three-fold: "teaching, research, and medical care for the people of this state. "One must keep in mind that every patient at University Hospital is potentially a teaching case," Roach added. Not all health professionals, however, share the University officials' optimistic goals for this new facility. "It's (the new hospital) a palace of half-way technology," according to one health care planner involved with the Hospital Replacement Project. "It was our impression that the new University Hospital is. unnecessary, inappropriate, and the world's most expensive hospital," the planner said. The new hospital will be the largest state expen- diture for a health care facility, second only to the Mackinac Bridge in construction costs in Michigan's history. In a 1979 statement of position, the Comprehensive Health Planning Commission of Southeastern Michigan responded to the University's demon- stration of need application. CHPC-SEM makes the final recommendation to the state concerning the viability of a new medical facility. THE PAPER STATES, "Of course, the final justification offered (by the University) for the new hospital is the need for high standard institutions for purposes of teaching and research . . . one or two points must be noted: one is the absolute lack of evidence for the claim that. $400 per day hospital facilities are necessary for good teaching and resear- ch and, further, that this particular type of good teaching and research leads to good health care. "Given the narrow overspecialization in much of today's medical profession ... the proposed hospital may in fact be moving in a direction that is diametrically opposed to our greatest current, and, especially future needs in health care." But, according to University Hospital Director Jep- tha Dalston, "That's why the University is in the hospital business-to provide a high-quality learning See HOSPITAL, Page 15 WE, BIUY * Watches " Diamonds " Class Rings M'~~ ...'.., 4 S Ai . CO~O."h#sAiSK ' 5 '#O 4PP'GC.4 R Cash oon 4s. coin e c ange COLONIAL LANES SHOPPING CENTER BUILDING C 1960 S. Industrial Hwy. (' Mile South of E. Stadium) (313) 995-3766 1' ..J! . iAS 2' I J* I Building continues on Alumni Center By GREGOR MEYER Construction of the new Michigan Alumni Center, being built just north of the Michigan League, is well underway and should be completed by summer of: 1982, according to University Alumni Association officials. The center will provide a meeting place. and headquarters for the organization, and will give it needed vacant northeastern corner-which is where the new center is now being built. Bay said the design of the Alumni Center will feature a pedestrian walk- way leading toward Burton Bell Tower. The center's architectural style will blend with the surrounding structures. The architect, Hugh Newell Facobsen, is renowned for his renovation of the rotunda of the Smithsonian Institution The new Alumni Center will complete a rec- tangular master plan. visibility among students and alumni, the officials said. The construction, which will cost about $3.1 million, is being funded by donations from alumni, according to Rick Bay, Assistant Executive Director of the association. THE SITE, DONATED to the association by the University, is one of the last parcels of choice land left on central campus. The officials said the new alumni cen- ter will complete a rectangular master plan for buildings on central campus. The buildings in the plan-including the Rackham School of Graduate Studies, the Michigan League, the Modern Language Building and Mill Auditorium-will all sit on the perimeter of a rectangular pedestrian mall, officials said. This rectangular master plan is complete except for the in Washington. According to Bay, Jacobsen was selected to design the Alumni Center because of his proven ability to construct a contemporary building in a traditional setting in a "collegiate gothic motif." THE ALUMNI Association, which is independent of the University, provides scholarship services, educational enrichment programs and a variety of social events at more than 140 alumni clubs nationwide. Bay stressed the Association's need for visibility among today's University students in order to maintain alumni involvement and enhance University quality in the future. The organization, presently located in the basement of the Michigan Union-in an area originally designed for storage-is eagerly awaiting moving day, Bay said. d BREATHE EASY... Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM Construction is progressing rapidly on the new Alumni Center next to the Michigan League. Completion is scheduled for next summer. UNDER GR OUND STA CKS READY FOR USE: Basement law addition finished Ulrich's now stocks medical texts, Diagnosis: overworked, tired medical student Recommended Treatment: courteous assistance in obtaining required texts at reasonable prices. Prognosis: one less frazzled nerve. Stop in and make your own examination. MORE THAN A BOOKSTORE 549 E. University at the corner of East U. and South U. 662-3201 I, By PAM FICKINGER the Law Quadrangle, located at the corner of South State Street and South University, is an awe-inspiring, for- midable cluster of buildings. Many non- Wlaw students wonder just what goes on inside the massive structure, which almost seems to be an isolated fortress. j ne of the more aesthetically pleasing sights on campus, the Law Quad was built 50 years ago. And it has hardly changed since then . . . until recently. SINCE 1978, the Law Quad has had a 55foot-deep hole beside it. By the end of this year, that hole will have metamor- phosized into, a strikingly airy un- derground library. But how, one might rightly ask, can an underground library be striking, much- less airy? The answer isn't as dif- ficult as it may first seem. In response to a need for more library space, the Law School began to look for an architect to build an addition that would be compatible with the treasured buildings donated by 'William Cook during the 20s and 30s. But how could a modern design be compatible with the existing Oxford structures? AN IDEA THAT would be both fun- ctional and aesthetically pleasing was needed. Some of the original ideas did not meet the enthusiasm necessary to raise money from private funds. But finally, a plan was agreed upon, and the resulting addition will be almost in- visible. The underground annex is being built by Gunnar Brikerts and Associates of Birmingham, Mich. It will be three levels deep and will have a V-shaped window well between the addition and the law building. The new addition will have room for shelving, carrels, study space, and offices for the Michigan Law Review, the Journal of Law Reform, and the library staff. ,One of the better features of the ad- dition is that it is 15,000 square feet of open, empty, as-yet-unplanned-for space. The attraction of this is that the law school can .finish the space in limitless ways. Things such as carrels, tables, open or closed stacks, microfilm storage and use space, can be placed in the most strategic and space-efficient ways. AS WITH ALL construction, however, there are some drawbacks. One of these is the noise factor in- volved. The sound of demolition can be deafening, particularly for someone who is trying to study. And there is a certain amount of dust and debris that filters its way into the buildings surrounding the construction site. But, students and staff have adjusted to the temporary inconveniences. But there is a problem encountered in the old library that will doubtless recur in the new addition: the problem of non- law students studying in the law library. In January of this year, a Law School Student subcommittee came up with a list of possible solutions to keep un- dergraduates from using the library facilities. Included were proposals for checking student IDs, posting signs at the door of the reading room, and sen- ding law students through the reading room to ask non-law students to leave. As yet, there is no official comment about whether the new addition will be off-limits to non-law students, but some such implementation seems likely. Students who get the chance should walk by the Law Quad to see how the best of the present can be combined with the best of the past, in an aesthetically pleasing library. r --- I -r 1?coc POSTERS POSTERS POSTERS POSTERS Df'1CTCC 'i Ili t 7//////."/r, . 111/1