City council approves addition to sorority By SUSAN GRANT The Ann Arbor City Council gave final approval late Monday night for a controversial 4,400-foot additon to the Collegiate Sorosis sorority. Neighbors of the newly-purchased house at 903 Lincoln Ave. have said the addition would destroy the balan- ce between single-family homes and group dwellings. "WHEN green space goes and one side of the street becomes fraternity row, the whole neighborhood is irrevocably changed," said James Robinson of 911 Olivia. Another neighbor, Morley Witus of 4818 Lincoln, said that virtually every family home in the area could be con- verted to group housing because of the ambiguity of the zoning law. Several council members - in- cluding some who approved the sorority's site plan, said they were concerned abut the vagaries in the zoning laws, which were changed last year. UNDER the original zoning laws, a house had to contain 5,000 square feet - excluding the basement and the at- tic - in order to be expanded for group use. But last year's change included basements and attics in the measurements if they are "habitable space," but there is disagreement about what that means. Councilmember Larry Hunter (D- First Ward) noted that the former owner could have built the addion without getting approval from the planning commission or the council and then sold the house to the sorority. BECAUSE of the ambiguities, Mayor Edward Pierce told the neigh- bors that they could challenge the council's decision in court. The approved plan will house 39 students and a house director. Coun- cilmember Kathy Edgren (D-Fifth Ward), who voted for the plan, said that "this site plan will provide affor- dable housing for 40 students within walking distance to the campus." Because the neighbors had said that the property will add to the already congested street parking, the plan in- cludes 10 additional parking spaces. Only six of these spaces will be given to members of the sorority, and the other four spaces will be reserved for guests. The sorority also has per- mission from the Delta Sigma Delta fraternity to use its parking for for special occasions. WHEN collegiate Sorosis reorganized in 1980, it rented the Alpha Epsilon Phi house at 1620 Cam- bridge, but the lease ran out in May and the fraternity moved back in. picture perfect Collegiate Sorosis will not build the additon until next year because the An inquiring photographer stops to p additon would not be ready for fall, so andtM ign the sorority will rent the Alpha Xi an the Delta house across the street. The neighbors plan to contest the council's decision and take it to court. Gerold Lax, the sorority's attorney, said the neighbors will not win the (ContinuedfromPage1)u case.t Daily Photo by DAN HABIB hotograph the fountain that stands between the Modern Languages Building be paid, Josephson says .p MSA asks for fee bike By KERY MURAKAMI The Michigan Student Assembly decided last night to ask the Board of Regents later this month for a 32-cent per student increase in fees next term and a 33-cent per student increase the following term. If approved, students would then pay $5.07 per term in mandatory fees to the assembly in the 1985-86 school year and $5.40 per term for 1986-87. MSA PRESIDENT Paul Josephson said the increases would be used mostly to cover an estimated 6 per- cent inflation rate. Among other in- creases, Josephson said that Student Legal Services would receive a 19- cent per student increase and the Students Tenant Union would get 5 cents per student more next year. Student Legal Services' increases, Josephson said, would be used to cover a court settlement the group made with its former director after he filed suit alleging that seven members of the services made inflammatory, statements at a hearing that led to his dismissal. SLS provides a low-cost legal ser- vices for students. The increase for the Tenants' Union, Josephson said, would be used to increase the salary of its director Jeff Ditz. "We wanted to bring him up to scale with other tenant advocates," Josephson said. THE UNION provides several ser- vices for students, including past histories of landlords and organizing rent strikes. The union was also responsible last year for pushing the WARM proposal on the city ballot. MSA hopes to take in $93,665 in 1985- 86, and $98,680 in 1986-87. In com- parison, SLS would get $245,245 in 1985-86 and $257,730 in 1986-87. The disproportionate cost of SLS, Josephson said, is due to the five full- time attorneys SLS hires. The proposals go to the executive officers today for approval before being sent to the regents for a vote at their monthly meeting in two weeks. Josephson said he doesn't expect much opposition to the proposals. tmat neisfaxing oniy eign crems next term to devote himself to the assembly. "I couldn't do this if my parents weren't well-off," he said, pointing out that students taking fewer than twelve credits are not eligible for student aid. UNDER his plan, which will be discussed by MSA's newly-formed ad hoc committee to examine the assembly's weaknesses, the executive officers - the president, vice-president, and treasurer - and the ten committee chairmen would receive $30 either in salary or some other alternative. One other way, according to Josephson, would be for the assembly to pay the $30 directly in- to a student's tuition account. "This is really what the money would be for," Josephson said, "to help pay for their education." The fate of his idea rests with the students, Josephson said. The idea will be opened up for either a student poll in the fall or more likely, as a referendum item in next April's MSA election ballot, he said. I DON'T know how students are going to take this," Josephson said. "It's going to be one of those things that either you love or hate. Some may perceive it like when Congress votes themselves a raise." But Josephson stresses that if it is enacted it wouldn't take effect until the next assembly takes of- fice. Josephson, however, is eligible to run for re-election. The idea, now in its earliest stage, has already encountered some opposition from past and present members of the assembly. SCOTT Page, last year's president, said that he would op- pose the plan if he were a student because "people on the assembly should not be making a profit for serving on the government." Page said that MSA should pick up the costs of being a represen- tative, such as travel expenses and meals if a representative has to miss a meal at the dorm. "They shouldn't make any money from the assembly, but it shouldn't have to cost them to be on the assem- bly," Page said. Eric Schnaufer, a graduate student on the assembly, echoed Page's concerns, saying that he was worried that students would run for the assembly to make money instead of "some greater desire to help his fellow student." ON THE other hand, Schnaufer added that "the way things are now, the assembly is made up of white, upper-middle class, well-off students." Josephson also downplays the possible problem of represen- tatives running for the "wrong reasons," saying that becoming a member of the assembly does not guarantee a post as committee chairman. Chairs aresusually elec- ted by the full assembly at the beginning of each term. Further opposition to the plan comes from Richard Layman, another member of the ad hoc committee. Layman says the "money could be spent on better things; the cost of paying our members shouldn't be pushed on the students." UNDER Josephson's plan, it would cost the assembly an ad- ditional $390 a week from MSA funds. How the assembly would meet this additional burden is one of the things the ad hoc committee will discuss, Josephson said, but the increase could be met with a five-cent increase in student fees. Students now pay $5 in mandatory fees to MSA per term. "Five cents a term isn't that big a sacrifice," Josephson said. If students accept the plan, the assembly would have to make two changes in its charter, before it can take effect in the spring of 1986, Josephson said. First the assembly would have to remove one clause which prohibits representatives from being em- ployed by the assembly, then adda second part saying that the officers and chairmen would be paid. Josephson said one factor that has to be resolved is some sort of set of requirements chairmen would have to meet in order to be paid. MSA is currently the only student government in the Big Ten and the Ivy League that doesn't pay any of its representatives. Police Notes Locker broken into The lock was cut on a storage locker in a home in the 1300 block of South University sometime between May 30 and 2 p.m. on Monday. Two typewriters and some luggage, valued at less than $575, were taken, police said. -Laura Bischoff SUB CRIBE! Cal 764-0558