Page 10-The Michigan Daily- Friday, September 5, 1986 'U' Terrace residents fight hospital growth - -1 Freshmen adjust to U festyle (Continued from Page 1) w By ELIZABETH ATKINS Residents of University Terrace, a University-owned housing complex for graduate students, will be watching and waiting this fall as the planned destruction of their homes draws closer. But residents say they will plan militant opposition if University Hospital attempts to expand onto their land. "I would hope that if the hospital made moves to tear down the building, the residents would be militant about moving out," said Gerald Huntley, a resident and member of the University Terrace Solidarity committee. David Foulke, associate director of University's housing, said, "The Terrace land has already been identified as a site for future hospital expansion, though no actions will be taken in the immediate future, specifically before July 1987." The 40-year-old apartments are adjacent to the Nichols Arboretum and-the new University Hospital. Single and married graduate students living in the efficiency and one-bedroom apartments pay between $237.00 and $333.00 per month in rent. According to the housing office, current Terrace leases are effective until July 1987, making the destruction of the buildings in the immediate future unlikely. A 10-year plan for medical campus expansion written in 1980 states that the Nichols Arboretum and the nearby cemetery, valley and river are off-limits to hospital expansion. University Terrace sits on the only available land In the late 1960's, two of the Terrace buildings were torn down and replaced with a parking structure. " Recently, the new hospital took over two more Terrace buildings to house an obesity clinic. According to University Terrace resident Angela Hinz, "Half our parking spaces were taken away and are used for the clinic's patients, who were given parking stickers which permit them to park in what used to be our parking spaces." Leroy Williams, director of housing information, said it was necessary to give all but 89 of the Terrace's parking spaces to the hospital last spring. The residents living in the complex in June were guaranteed parking spaces in June. Since then, leases for new residents have not guaranteed parking spaces. Williams said many single graduate students who live in the complex do not own cars so they are unaffected. Any expansion onto Terrace space would be used for additional parking, possibly a structure identical to the one which has already been built, Foulke said. He also said thatthe removal of approximately two buildings would be sufficient for a new parking structure. Those buil- dings could include one or both of the buildings presently being used by the hospital, he said. Last spring, Terrace residents picketed the dedication of the new University Hospital because expansions claimed 40 of the complex's parking spaces. Residents of the complex have formed the University Terrace Solidarity Committee to protest the destruction of the complex.. "Reducing the total family housing community is uncon-' scionable," said Angela Hinz, a coordinator for the group. Without a proposal to replace the housing, the students would be forced to find off-campus housing, which costs 30 to 40 percent more, Hinz said. Many upperclassmen claim they have no problem picking a freshman face out of the crowd. FRESHMAN-WATCHINGis "kind of a big sport. You see them and you smirk 'Aahhh, a freshmen.' It's just something you smile at. Maybe you see yourself and relate," said Pete. "Being a senior, I can tell (who's a freshman) better than last year. (Freshmen) seem smaller. They're looking around at everything. Their eyes are going, checking out all the people. They look new," he said. "The (freshmen) girls all have the same haircut," said Lauren, a sophomore. "It's all in the facial expression. They look like they just don't know what they're doing. They look around a lot." Edward, a junior, says he has an easy method for freshmen- detecting. "In classes, you always know if there's a freshman. When they get their first handouts, they stare at them and ask all those stupid questios like 'What's due tomorrow?"' Carrying a map is another, dead giveaway. Though map carriers could easily be transfe students or cartographers, most students automatically assume the culprits are freshman. One. freshman even labelled map carrying as "a little too obvious." At least one student, however, took an egalitarian attitude. Refusing to join in the freshman bashing, he said, "I can't tell the difference. All students look' the same." I I 4 Woman disciplines naughty burglars PONTIAC(AP) - An Oakland County woman who found three burglars in her home chastised them sufficiently that they returned her belongings, reinstalled her television equipment. and waited on the couch for police. "I was not mad," Marcia Sparling said. "I was determined that they weren't going to get away. TM ONE of those people who believe if you've done a crime, you pay for it. My daughter said it was pure stupidity." . Mrs. Sparling came home and found a strange car in her driveway Friday. When she and her 14-year-old' daughter spotted some of her belongings in the back seat, she suspected her Oakland Township home wag being robbed. But instead of leaving quietly, she confronted the men inside and demanded to know what they were doing. "I had no fear at all ," she said. "They were extremely cooperative and gave me no cause to be afraid or fearful." SHE SAID she told the men their prosecution might be affected by how cooperative they were, and one of the suspects became nervous. Sparling said she refused their pleas to move her car froim behind theirs and let them drive away, and insisted she would call the police. I I Daily Photo by DARRIAN SMITH Open-eyed Three year old Abby Lau pauses to sit and examine returning students scrambling to their first classes yesterday. I The Office of Major Events presents HOLLY NEAR Your basic problem: Physics Genetics Statistics Calculus Complex Numbers Analytical Geometry Stress Analysis Organic Chemistry Pr.bability Gaussian Transformations Differential Equations Titrations Electromagnetics Thermodynamics Fluid Mechanics Etc., etc., etc.... Your BASIC solution. Saturday, September 27 8pm, Power Center Ann Arbor Tickets available at the Michigan Union Ticket Office, all Ticket World Outlets, Schoolkid's Records & Tapes, Herb David Guitar Studio x Charge by phone 763.TKTS How would you describe Introducing BASICALC." The new Texas Instruments prgammable calculator. VILLAGE CORNER? A party store ...........,........L liquor store . ............. tobacco shop ......... .......0 T post office . .. .... . . . . . . . . .. . all of the above . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . e sor eh a a tin jusc stlocals tore .. .. part-tim bank mm 4 Now there's a programmable scien- tific calculator that solves even the most complex math, engineering and science problems in a BASIC way. The TI-74 BASICALC. Unlike most other programmable calculators that require you to learn a new, complicated system of key- stroke commands -in effect. a new has more calculating power than comparably-priced programmables. Your basic specs: " Operates as a calculator or BASIC computer - 8K RAM expandable to 16K RAM - 70 built-in scientific functions And a variety of options, like soft- ware cartridges, are available that make it even more powerful and convenient. Stop by and see the TI-74 BASICALC for yourself. In basic terms, what it really offers you is a bargain. I i . I