LOCAL! Mlternative WeekendsF expand service opportunites Rachel Groman where students help at a soup kitchen unteers stayed at a ministry center and r the Daily maintained by the Detroit Rescue with a Proun from Aricors y te etoi Rsce it a grupfrmAmri.rs The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 5, 1998 - 5A Sweet dreams vertisements for Alternative Spring decorate the campus and flood stu- nts' e-mail accounts. These communi- service programs have become so pop- athat a similar group, Alternative 'kends, has formed to provide an out- for the increasing generousity of stu- Alternative Weekends, organized by -ject SERVE, began five years ago as esult of volunteers who wanted to con- au service throughout the year. -munteers join a team which goes to e seine site once a month for a semes- ," said SNRE junior Molly Eigen, the up's education training coordinator. The teams consist of seven to 10 dergraduates, graduate students and mue faculty. There are currently 45 lunteers. The locations for the program range m Chicago, where volunteers shop d deliver food for AIDS/HIV victims gh Open Hand Chicago, to Detroit, " haity isuses unds, tax tatuS DETROIT (AP) - Charities nation- ide already offer tax deductions for >ated cars, boats or mobile homes. A w program based in Oakland County ters deductions to owners of contam- ated or condemned property. e Better Dreams Foundation s its charitable purpose is to help ing children and substance abusers. But the Detroit Free Press said in a port yesterday that the foundation elf has done no work on behalf of ose causes - while most of its orts have been devoted to telling operty owners how they can receive x advantages and reduce their liabili- for costly environmental cleanups. chigan Attorney General Frank y took a dim view of Better reams. "This environmental and tax scheme one of the best I've seen in a long e," Kelley told the newspaper. "We ould not have charities giving tax eaks to willful polluters" Foundation Chair Steven DiMaggio id it was premature to judge Better reams' performance because it has recognized as a charity only since ber 1996. "Before people start judging and rt making such outrageous state- ents ... they should look at what 're trying to do," foundation attorney ran O'Keefe said during a Dec. 30 terview. But since then the foundation has jected Free Press requests for an terview because the newspaper sisted it be tape-recorded. $documents filed with the Internal evenue Service, the foundation stated expected to spend more than 600,000 on charitable activities rough the end of 1997. But Better reams has done no direct charitable ork with terminally ill children or bstance abusers, the Free Press said. "We essentially want to be check riters to other organizations," i aggio said. The only cause with t the foundation is involved is the )eration of two homes for recovering Idicts in Pontiac, he said. DiMaggio would not say how uch money the foundation con- ibutes to those homes. But Ron ixon, who runs several recovery ames, told the Free Press that he ays Better Dreams $2,000 a month use the two houses owned by the )undation. Axon also said he pays $1,000 in ,o thly rent for each of four other ontiac-area houses directly to Ralph laupin, the foundation's executive ice president, and Maupin's business ssociate, Charles Dill, Jr. Both Maupin and Dill declined to omment, the Free Press said. According to a 49-page information ackage distributed last fall to prospec- ve donors, Better Dreams "views f as a 'sophisticated nonprofit real state organization' with expertise in valuating, acquiring, managing and isposing of problem properties." The foundation says it will accept ny type of property, including pollut- Mission. Participants of Alternative Weekends also organize community service events for other groups on campus. Various fra- ternities, as well as the 21st Century Program, have sought the organizations help. LSA sophomore Katrina Sliwka is a site leader for Open Hand Chicago this year. The group returned Sunday from a weekend trip to Chicago where they worked at a grocery pantry for AIDS vic- tims. "We accomodate those that are not able to afford the proper diet needed,"' Sliwka said. Throughout the year, each site is vis- ited about five times by the same group. Sliwka's group plans to return to Chicago two more times this semester. Travel and housing expenses are cov- ered through fundraisers, as well as grants allocated to Project Serve, Sliwka said. While in Chicago, the vol- "My role (as a site leader) is to orga- nize the trip, making sure the site knows we're coming. However, I like to think of it as a group project," Sliwka said. Sliwka added she has gained insight into another community. "I don't think I'd have access to such eye-opening events (on campus)" she said. Site leader Greg Garza said he learned a valuable lesson about the increasing population of elderly peo- ple through his community service project. "People don't know how important this is," said Garza, an Engineering first- year student. "One out of eight people are 65 and over, and by the year 2010 it will be one out of five. This is one of America's most overlooked problems" "Applications for our program are avalable at the beginning of each semester. There are also mass meet- ings," Eigen said. EMILYINATHAeN/Daiy LSA senior Robyn Lebow dozes off while reading Death in Venice in the Michigan Union yesterday. As mid-terms approach students can be found fitting in a little sleep in places all across campus. STUDY ASIA SYRACUSE ABROAD IN HONG KONG STUDY-TRAVEL IN CHINA BUSINESS & LIBERAL ARTS CO URSES GENEROUS GRANTS & SCHOLAR SHIPS STUDY IN ENGLISH