Ninety- Two Years of Editorial .Freedom E t43t.U1 tIai t MAGICAL Mostly sunny today with a high of 60. Vol. XCII, No. 32 Copyright 1981, The Michigen Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, October 16, 1981 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages Hospital contract method displeases Regent By BARRY WITT As the University broke ground yesterday for its new hospital, one Regent said he was displeased with the method of contracting the University has used managing the project. Regent Deane Baker (R-Ann Arbor) said at yesterday's meeting that awar- ding the contract for construction management without asking for com- petitive bids "represents a significant compromise of the University's policy." The Regents voted yesterday to give the $8.2 million \construction management contract to Barton-Malow of Detroit and CM Inc. of Houston, Texas-the same group that has served as consultant to the project thus far-despite Baker's objections. BAKER SAID that a resolution passed by the Regents in April, 1979, forbade the project's consultant from becoming its contractor. Baker quoted parst of the resolution See CONTRACT, Page 8 $285 million 'U' hospital gets off the By JENNIFER MILLER State With a chrome-plated, maize and project blue be-ribboned shovel, University Buildih President Harold Shapiro and various million University, state and hospital officials CHIE yesterday broke ground for the $285 CIcEJ million replacement hospital. cost to Shapiro called the hospital "a joint "much project of the University of Michigan, be payi the citizens of Michigan, and the city of benpai Ann Arbor." Medical School Dean John B ink Gronvall said, "I view (the new Arbori hospital) as an act of faith on the part of hike the the people of Michigan." REFERRING TO 10 years of plan- "very ning obstacles and controversy, "I ca Shapiro said, "It was a bit of a saga made y reaching this stage."ade to Replacing the deteriorating, 55-year- have to old main hospital, the project will be have no the largest single capital project in THE state history, and opponents have hospital called it the most expensive university- $20 mill owned hospital in the country.$m to groi taxpayers are financing the to the tune of $173 million, of $140 million is through State .g Authority bonds and $33 through state appropriations. F UNIVERSITY Financial Of-1 ames Brinkerhoff said the total the state will eventually be higher" because the state will ng the interest costs on all the sues. erhoff called a report in the Ann News that interest costs could total project cost to $780 million nisleading." r't believe it," Brinkerhoff said. ed that no estimates have been et as to how much the state will pay, because the interest rates t been determined. UNIVERSITY'S share of the i cost will be funded by $102 in hospital revenue bonds and ion in gifts, Brinkerhoff said. Shapiro has vowed that project costs' will not exceed the $285 million budget. Under state guidelines, the University could spend a 15 percent inflation' allowance, or an additional $43 million; but Shapiro said the University does not intend to exercise that option. Hospital planners estimate that the patient cost per day will be $1,408 in 1987, a year after the new hospital opens. WITHOUT THE cost of the new hospital, that figure only would be $100 less per day, Brinkerhoff said, because "inflation will nearly double the present average cost of hospital care." * In the past, strong opponents of the replacement hospital, Blue Cross/Blue Shield and the regional Comprehensive Health Planning Council, have criticized the project as too expensive and elaborate. See GROUND, Page 9 Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM MEDICAL SCHOOL Dean John Gronvall digs one of the first spadefuls of the tons of earth which will ultimately be moved to complete construction of the new University Hospital U-Cellar, Union still negotiating; final decision possible today By JANET RAE Lease negotiations between representatives of the University Cellar, student bookstore and the Michigan Union continued yesterday as the deadline passed for the bookstore to commit itself to remakn in the Union. U-Cellar directors, in' a meeting last night, agreed to discuss today a. possible decision regarding the bookstore's lease with Michigan Union Director Frank Cianciola. CIANCIOLA, WHO had declared cer- tain key points in the lease "not negoMable," informed U-Cellar direc- tors last week that they would have to make an agreement by Oct. 15 in order for the $5.3 million Michigan Union renovation project-scheduled to begin in January or February-to stay on schedule. Economic considerations are at the heart of the dispute between the two sides. Upon signing the new lease proposed by Cianciola, the U-Cellar would have to pay $9.07 per square foot of rental space-a 65 percent increase over the current $5.48 per square foot. UNDER THE lease, the U-Cellar also would have to foot the bill for ap- proximately $250,000 in Union renovation costs. U-Cellar Board of Directors representatives had said they deter- mined that provisions mandated by Cianciola would make it financially im- possible for the bookstore to remain in the Michigan Union without substan- tially increasing prices. U-Cellar directors had requested a number of changes in the lease before they would agree to remain 'in the Union. Among the requests singled out at last night's board meeting were a deferment of the rent hike until the bookstore moved into a new location in the Union, a reduced rate per square foot for space used for storage and a defined formula for future rent in- creases. IN A NEW proposal yesterday, Cian- ciola reaffirmed the $9.07 rate, calling it "fair and competitive." He also agreed to charge half that rate for the U-Cellar's present storage space, with the full rate charged for storage space after the move. Cianciola also agreed not to add any See UNION, Page 7 Taiwanese stage a quietfeud By JOHN ADAM Angry signs plastered on kiosks across the campus are part of a quiet feud among the several factions of Taiwanese students on campus. One faction supports Taiwan's current Nationalist Chinese (KMT) gover- nment. The others support the Taiwanese Independent Movement - a group that believes Taiwan should be independent from the Nationalist Chinese who took over in 1949 after the communist revolution on the Chinese mainland. THE CURRENT dispute centers around the mysterious death of former University student Chen Wen-Chen. Chen, who graduated from the Univer- sity in 1978 was found dead in Taiwan last July shortly after he had undergone an intensive interrogation by KMT's national security police. One faction has accused the KMT of murdering Chen for his suspected anti- KMT activities in the United States. The other group claims the Taiwanese Independednt .Movement murdered Chen to try to discredit the KMT gover- nment. Campus kiosk signs such as "Dictator. KMT agents go to hell" and ,"Prof. Chen's death/Taiwanese students here fear murder/KMT campus spies out!" represent the view of the so-called ethnic Taiwanese-those who were on See TAIWANESE, Page 11 Chen ... his death sparks debate Further state cuts recommended LANSING (UPI)- Gov. William Milliken's budget staff recommended yesterday that $270 million be whacked from Michigan's fiscal 1981-82 spen- ding-meaning cuts of around 5 percent in welfare benefits. A vote on the as-yet-unreleased executive budget * slashing order, the largest reduction in state history is set for October 22, to provide time to negotiate on proper spending reductions. Cuts are recommended across state government, with mental health and education taking com- paratively small reductions in light of the large proposed welfare cut. THE PROPOSED figures include a $20 million reduction for four-year colleges and universities, $4.1 million for community colleges and $15.1 million from public elementary and secondary schools. A spokesman for Milliken, Robert Berg, said although the governor had spoken out against further welfare benefit reduction over the summer, the $152 million Department of Social Services cut could not be made without trimming payments. "When you have to cut that much money, a sub- stantial amount has to come from DSS," he said, ad- ding a 5 percent benefit reduction probably will be necessary. Berg also downplayed significance of the document released by budget staff at a meeting of House Republicans. n. , "It's premature to start talking about specific numbers," he said. GOP lawmakers have taken a position that education and mental health should be protected from the cuts and have backed reductions in welfare programs. Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK Ring our bells The University's new part-time carillonneur, William De Turk, plays the set of 53 bronze bells housed in Burton Tower. See story, Page 3. TODAY Plaza for the people HE PEOPLE'S PLAZA is back and so is a band of crusaders known as the Peoples Plaza Brigade. The group has repainted the signs that used to read "Regents Plaza" to read "Peoples Plaza." "Oh, they're back at it again, huh?" remarked an official at the paint division of the University plant depar- tment. El dergraduate satirists at the Harvard Lampoon."We thought that since People is so successful, it is therefore ripe for parody," said Paul Sax, one of the Lampoon writers. "People is relentlessly readable. It's sort of the prose equivalent of Muzak. We wanted ours to be like that." And it is; the parody issue matches People's exactly, and is full of real advertisements, including one from the authentic magazine that reads, "Compliments from the real thing." "I got a few chuckles out of it " said Hal Wingo, assistant managing editor of People. "I think there were points at which they had our style down pretty well." Covergirl First lady battle Betty Ford says there's nothing wrong- with Nancy Reagan replacing the White House china, even if Rosalyn Carter doesn't think it's such a good idea. "I commend her for bringing it up to good condition," Ford said Wednesday about the expenditure of $210,000 on a new 220-place china service for the White House. Ford said the money for the china came from private donations. Q Getting into the act to hold the other arm and we held him until police arrived." The third man later disappeared. Davis, a 27-year-old Republican attorney, said he rode with the police to the 19th Precinct stationhouse, where he was told by other wit, nesses the man had knocked down an 81-year-old woman and taken her purse, leaving her with a cut on her head. Police said the suspect was being booked on a charge of second-degree robbery. Q On the inside SDorts profiles Iowa Hawkeve defensive end Andre Tin- I I i