The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, January 7, 1987 - Page 5 Terrace residents lose fight Some housing to be destroyed for parking By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Despite continued protest from residents, the University's Board of Regents last month authorized the destruction of two University Terrace buildings to make room for an additional parking structure on the medical campus. "All of the students who will loose their housing will be relocated either to other Terrace apartments or North Campus housing," said James Brinkerhoff, University vice president and chief financial advisor. "We have plenty of room." 'I don't know what sort of action we are going t take, but I'm sure that we will not just sit ther and watch two of our buildings be torn down' -Angela Hinz, member of the Universit Terrace Solidarity Committe BUT residents of the University-owned housing complex for graduate students do not agree. "There is no place to put us, no place for our families to go," said Angela Hinz, a member of the University Terrace Solidarity Committee. "I simply don't understand how they can tear down good housing when Ann Arbor is in the midst of such a housing crisis," she added. Terrace residents have repeatedly expressed concern that they will be unable to find such low-income housing elsewhere. According to Brinkerhoff, the 40 units will be destroyed when leases terminate in July. Construction will begin soon afterward. ' Arguments over the best use for the land have drawn protest from Terrace residents, including threats to plan militant opposition if the hospital attempts to expand into the complex. "I don't know what sort of action we are going to take, but I'm sure that we will not just sit there and watch two of our buildings be torn down," said Hinz. Terrace residents also complain that the regents' latest a decision was made at a time when not enough students were e on campus to protest it. "We have done our best to keep the needs of the students Y in consideration, but in accordance with the University's master plan we needed to take action to proceed with the growth of the medical center," said Regent Deane Baker (R- Ann Arbor). But residents of University Terrace claim that they were unaware of such a master plan until they pressured the hospital to release their future plans. "We were the ones who informed the housing office of the University's plans," said Hinz. According to Brinkerhoff and Baker, the possibilities of building additional student housing near Observatory Street are being investigated. University Terrace residents protested at the opening of the new University Hospitals com- plex last June because 40 of the residents' parking spaces were given to hospital staff mem- bers. Now, residents are protesting a proposal to tear down two apartment buildings to build a parking garage for the hospital. Abuse ordinance approved The Ann Arbor City Council passed an ordinance last month requiring the arrest of an assailant in cases of domestic violence, including cases of spouse abuse. The ordinance, aimed at providing assistance to women who are battered by their husbands, includes a section giving them support in a program run by the police department and SAFE House, a women's assault prevention center. . The ordinance was changed from the first time it appeared before council two weeks earlier to require .arrest "only if the assailant is present or can be readily apprehended." The revised ordinance read: "A threat with a weapon is covered by 'this section only if it is made at or about the time of the assault, if the weapon is present, and if ftlee p apparent ability to use it." The ordinance was also revised Ato require police to "make a reasonable effort" to alert SAFE House volunteers of a domestic violence situation so they can give support to the battered wife after the release of the assailant. This clarification requires police officers to try to notify SAFE House and the victim, but does not hold them legally liable if they can't. The council also established a citizen's advisory committee to -oversee the enforcement of the ordinance. The Domestic Violence "Coordinating Board, made up of representatives from the police department, the domestic violence project, and city offices, will make recommendations to the city council regarding the effectiveness of the ordinance. A section was added after consultation with the city attorney 'to exempt assaults between parents and their children under 18 from the domestic violence ordinance. This was done to avoid conflict with other state and city' policies regarding child abuse. The ordinance was passed in response to domestic violence problems in Ann Arbor. The Ann Arbor Police Department estimates that it receives approximately 20-40 domestic violence calls per month. SAFE House receives 400 crisis calls per month in Washtenaw County; approximately 25 percent of these come from Ann Arbor. According to SAFE House and the domestic violence project, 3 to 4 million women are beaten in their homes each year by their husbands, ex-husbands, or boyfriends. Violence against wives will occur at least once in two-thirds of all marriages and 95 percent of all assaults on spouses are committed by men. -Eve Becker 'U' Hospital receives Certificate of Need The University Medical Center was granted a Certificate of Need in December by the Michigan Department of Public Health, enabling them to continue all major organ transplants, including heart, heart-lung, and pancreas transplants. "A Certificate of Need has been required of all state hospitals for transplants since 1984. Heart, liver, and pancreas transplants, however, were performed at the University Hospital long before permission was given by the state. The Certificate of Need allows current programs to continue, according to Dr. Jeremiah Turcotte, director of the Organ Transplant Center at University Hospital. The requirement, enacted two years ago by the state's Department of Public Health, was designed to cap the rising costs of medical care. Assigning specific hospitals as transplant centers reduces duplicity and wasted resources. Because transplant technology is expensive, allowing many hospitals to perform transplants could result in higher health care costs. University doctors have been transplanting kidneys since 1964, and can now continue with certification. The University Hospitals' 1,000th kidney transplant was performed Nov. 19th and for the first time at the hospitals, a wife donated the organ to her husband. Arthur MacRitchie, a designer of airplane components, and his wife Jettie, a dialysis nurse, were the first married organ donor-recipient pair to be operated on at University Hospital. The couple met while he was undergoing dialysis for his failing kidneys. -Paul Cho 'U' receives $1 million from Ford Motor Co The University has received a $1 million donation from the Ford Motor Company for the Engineering Instructional Complex, a computer complex linking research, library resources, and classroom materials within the College of Engineering. The gift is part of the University's Campaign for Michigan, a five-year, $160 million fundraising effort. It is Ford's third donation to the campaign, bringing its contribution to $4 million. The campaign is currently in its final year and had raised $143 million by the end of last month. Organizers expect to top the goal this year. Previous donations from the Ford have gone to the business school, University Hospitals, and the University's Dearborn campus. The announcement of the newest Ford contribution was made at the end of September by Don Patterson, chairman of Ford. Leo Brennan, Executive Director of the Ford Motor Company Fund, said, "We have an active interest in the University because it is a large supplier of employees and we recruit there heavily. We regard the University also as a great community and state asset." - Kevin Gray Rapist sentenced The 20-year-old Ann Arbor man charged with assaulting two University women in October was sentenced last month to a maximum of 90 years in prison for first degree criminal sexual conduct. Christopher Bernard Skinner pleaded guilty last November to two counts of criminal sexual assault and two counts of breaking and entering with intent to commit sexual assault. He will be eligible for parole in 40 years. According to police reports, Skinner broke into both victims' homes on East Ann and Greenwood streets. He muffled their faces with his hand, assaulted them in their beds, and fled. He told one woman he had a gun, seen. although none was Judge Patrick Conlin also sentenced Skinner to a 10-year term, served concurrently with the 90-year term, for assault to commit penetration. Skinner gave a Packard street address in court documents. He was arrested for disorderly conduct almost a week after the rapes near the location of the Greenwood Street assault. He was put before a police line-up where both women identified him as their assailant. Skinner will also serve up to 15 years for a breaking and entering charge from last August. Police said they found him in a Greenwood home, but he eluded arrest by running away. -Melissa Birks Botony professor dies Alexander Smith, professor emeritus of botany, died Dec.12 in his Ann Arbor home. He was 81. Smith's career spanned 41 years and he was known nationally as an authority on mushrooms. A Wisconsin native, Smith retired from active faculty status in 1975 degree from Lawrence College in Wisconsin before coming to the University, where he earned a master's degree in 1929 and a doctorate in 1933. He became a professor in the Department of Botany in1956. Survivors include his wife Helen, daughter Nancy, one sister, and one brother. -Kevin Gray Mall proposal cancelled The developer of the University Center, a proposed shopping mall nearNorth Campus, has withdrawn its plans for the mall. Developer Bill Martin of First Martin Associates declined to comment on the firm's decision last month to withdraw the plans, but Ann Arbor City Councilmember Doris Preston (D-Fifth Ward) cites opposition from area residents and merchants as a key factor. Residents who opposed the plan say that the mall would have created traffic problems while detracting from the commercial character of the downtown area and from the residential character of northeast Ann Arbor. Larry Hunter (D-First Ward) said that the firm apparently withdrew the plan when it seemed the council would not support it. In October, the council had voted to send the plan back to the city planning commission for further consideration after First Martin Associates had revised the original plan. The new plan would have provided additional land buffers to set back developement and parking and would have closed Nixon Road between Huron Parkway and Plymouth Road for additional parking. First Martin Associates, however, withdrew the plan before the planning commission could reconsider it Ann Arbor resident Leslie Morris said that the revised plans for the mall still would have drawn shoppers away from the downtown area. "I wanted to see the downtown remain healthy," she said, noting that there seems to be a nationwide trend of developing the outskirts of cities at the expense of downtown commercial areas. - Francie Allen Police investigate bomb threats Ann Arbor police are investigating a series of bomb threats on campus Monday evening, according to Sgt. Jan Suomala. At 11:35 p.m., members of Sigma Phi Fraternity received a call from a female with a deep voice saying a bomb was in the basement of the house. Five minutes later, a woman called Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity and told them of a bomb in Mason Hall. Fraternity members in both houses reported the threats to the Ann Arbor police. A University Hospital employee received a call at 11:46 p.m. in the admitting room. The caller said there was a bomb on the hospital's third floor. Ann Arbor police checked all three areas threatened and found no explosive devices. Officers believe the same person made the calls, Suomala said. Police are also investigating an arson in East Quad that burned a piano and caused severe water damage to a music practice room. According to Fire Inspector Ron Baker, the fire was probably started with a lighter. -Melissa Birks Religious leaders denounce research proposal Fifty-two Ann Arbor religious leaders last month denounced a proposal to remove the "end-use" provision of the University's classified research guidelines. In a letter to University Vice President for Research Linda Wilson, the clerics strongly advocate the retention of the clause for moral, or more specifically, religious reasons. The end-use provision currently prohibits classified research that may result in harm to human life. University President Harold Shapiro appointed a committee to evaluate the research policy in November 1985. The committee recommended deleting the end-use clause in both its majority and minority reports. The Rev. Harvey Guthrie, rector of St. Andrews Episcopal Church, drafted the original letter to Wilson and sent copies to about 100 local religious leaders. -Robert Choi and Richard Kang Smith ... prof. emeritus dies after a career as an administrator, teacher, and investigator of the evolution and systematics of the higher fungi. Colleagues praised Smith and said he was "tremendously enthusiastic about mushrooms." Bill Anderson, director of the University's herbarium, said Smith communicated his love for his field to both professionals and amatuers. Smith received an undergraduate Proposed zoning change 1 City proposes zoning changes ". .... . : ... . :. .v ....v.:::iiii'.:.::...: ": .. . . :. i::n :.w : v.. v. .. ...N... ..... . ... .. .... n..... . .. .:-v. i^vvvv ~ .: .;vQ ' I (Continued from Page 1)' I , I I HI {I - I j ::U Ak AA (I), i N K 14 0 zJ 0 z) Rezoning would prohibit future student group housing in shaded areas. The department will recommend that 38, instead of 45, lots be rezoned, exempting the three families that did not sign the petition and four other lots on streets already dominated by group housing. "We've been trying to satisfy all sides but there's going to be a loser somewhere along the lines - and it will probably be the groups. I think their future capacity to expand will be limited," Clarke said. "They always pull these things when students are out of town. It's just dirty. "I think a lot of their claims are exaggerated," Kavanagh added. "I think things have gotten a lot better in the last term. I lived in that area for a year-and-a-half and I didn't think the noise or trash was major problem - but I'm a college student." KAVANAGH SAID that although existing fraternities and sororities in the North Burns Park area don't need to expand, the proposed rezoning would discourage ,e, ,hn.ter years. We can fight it all we want, but we don't have the pull. Our strength is not that of the neighbors," he added. Clarke agreed that the Greeks' lack of involvement in city issues, combined with the political strength of the neighbors, makes the city likely to approve the rezoning. "(The families) are on the Planning Commission, they run for City Council - they're basically in the mainstream. They are more in tune with the system," he said. "A lot of times the students aren't in tune with how things are in the CAMBRIDGE 2 BUT THE+ not mobilizing Greek system is to fight the .m OAiL Dn LN XN1 X -q 1k nrv y I rezonin~y