WINNERS-Kel ha Seals i the 1991 redplent of the Manufacturers Bank MIDority Scholarship t the UDlverslty of Detroit Mercy. Pictured wltb M . Seal I Michael T. MODahaD, PresldeDt of MaDufacturers N tional Bank of Detroit. Seal tecelved a ODe-year, $7,50 scholar hlp, form MaD facturers Bank 'where be recently completed aD Intern bip iD the Credit Depa'rtment. Sbe plan to graduate form tbe Unlnr ity's College of BusiDe and Admlnl tration ID May 1992 with a major accouDti_ •• anquet recog By DANNY R. COOKS On Friday, August 23, 1991 from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Douglas Com­ munity Association SpoDSO� the Filst Annual Midnight B kctball League Banquet at Kalamazoo Val­ ley Community College. Designed to ddrcss the needs of • -African American men ages 18 to 25, the Midnight Basketball League "provided viable alternative to banging out", a foe for positive learning of life skills, educational . and job opportuniti ,and excite­ ment and unity.in the community, according to Steve Dwming, Com- : missioner of the league and the Banquet' m ter of ceremony. ; Highlight of the banquet was the presentation by KVCC om' 0 nineteen two-year scholarships the players. Scholarship winners included · Levam Smith, Terrance Fuller, Bob : Wasbington, Lamar Blanchard, DJ. Hayes, Willie D vi ,Clinton Blood­ . worth, Otis Wilson, Dlon Ware, Kevin Fannin, Tom White, 'ler- renee Carver. BUSINESS FINANCE SCHOLARSHIP WI � S -. (Bac Row): Lnara It, T rrance II r, Bob Was I_Ito., La ar Blanchard, D.J. aaye , WlUle Davl ,CliDto Bloodwo , aDd Otis Wilson. (Front): Dlo. Ware, Kevin aDDI, To W Ite, a d Terrence Ca"er. (p to., D. eoob) 14 wodcsbops during t.bc_12 eek se on. Wor hop covered topi Uke job interviewing, the role of the Black male in the hi tory of the Blac famiiy, interpersonal relation. hi ,sexually transmitted eIi'seates alcohol and dJUI ab THE PURPOSE 0 midnight b ketblll goc beyond imple di - traction. League mem t 64 . partidpID ere requiJcd to lid low cono ro • r d rs aoo c re r National and � even gready affected employer recruitment of graduatina college stuclen in 1990;- 91, and the UCCIC of the fu� recruiting seuo depends oa how quickly the U.S. and local eeoeo adjust to those even . That w the conel ion reacbed in the annual recruiting report ucd recently by Wayne State University Placement Services offici Is. A tal ofl,7CT1WSU,studen regi teredfor placement istalk:e in 1990-91. . Even atl'ecting the economy ad­ versely during the past year included the Persian Gulf War, severe federal and tate bud et problema 8Dd con­ tinued downsizing of automodve-re­ lated manufacturing in outhea t Michigan. All of these even only heightened and already "le n and cautious" attitude mong local employclI, placement ofDcia y. Employers' attitudes were reflected in a lS-pe�nt drop (from 244 to 2(17) in the number of com­ panic recruiting at WSU. Also reflecting those tdtudes w a 20- percent year-to-year decrease (from 3,401 to 2,714) in the number of students interviewed by visitina compani . GRADUTATES IN SOME majors fared better than others, how­ ever. For example, although mergers among large national ccountln firms reduced the number of com­ panies from eight to six, intervie for accounting majors dropped 11 percent from the previous year, a much mailer decline that pI �ment offici expected. Additionally, in­ tervie for finance majo d Hoed just 4 percent, a decre thaI also ::;._tI_mc was maller than expected. But de pite some promising igm, the general busines climate been hit by the war, the reces­ sion, waning consumer confidence, the avings and loan cri i , slower car and 'home sales and company cos t-cetting . The Detroit area, because 0 heavy reliance on the auto industry, been especially vulnerable to tbe o economy. Automakers for the Orst tIme Have found themselv faced with war, reee ion and con­ tinuing market erosion from forcip automotive manufacturers, all at the same dmc. AlthoUSh the war is over, the recession and the eroded American automotive market share are ex­ pected to continue for the foresee­ able future. John Crusoe, WSU placement services director, says fu­ ture graduates will fim! it difficult to land high-quality, high-paying jo in southeast Michigan. "Students will have to be more ilUng to go other places or with smaller, higher-risk companies," Crusoe says. IN PREPARING FOR the com­ ing recrui ting season, placement er­ vices are making moves they hope will at I t panially offset the cur- WESTERN MICHIGAN Midni<' tar apply tor college financial aid. Community agencies that ticipated in the 0 incl but eren't limited to, the FllDily Health Center, Gateway, The Upjobn ti tute, Kalamazoo Valley Com­ munity College and Western Michigan Unive. Ity. Preference for enrollment in next year's lea will be given to players ho have evideoce of vac::atiODal or educational achie�ment, accordina to the League' Statement of Pur­ pose. Cons men in Micbi an nd tbrougout tbe country who purchase goods from catalogs and direct marketer may omeday have another cost dded their bill: a stat� sale tax. In a case -that appears the U.S Supreme Court, orth Dakota Supreme Court ruled that a delaware-based mail-order house mUit collect sal taxes on pure made in that state. While tbe rulii1a . currently only applies to orth Dakota, it will affect all Ita In- cludln Michigan if the U .s. Supreme Court upholds the decision. "Tbe di P te between tate tax aDd mall-oJder bo has been heat­ j up for a hile now," said Stephen Bpatefn, Coopers & Lybrand t r in charge of t Retail Group in the· firm' Detroit office. "Sta have been bandling the i ue in­ dividually. but the Supreme Court'rs goins to have to ettle the m tter. Jt It through, it i going to impa t !be bottom line of both mail-order bmine and customers. " MOV buy .nem wi h ttl men' PHILADBLPHIA (AP) - MOVE membe�a have used some of the settle­ ment money from the 1985 confrontatioa with the city to buy two new hou es about two miles from the scene of that deadly gun battle and bombing. Resident have ex- pressed coacere bout the presence of the radical group in their Wett Phil adelphi neighbor­ hood. MOVE huns modern convenience and preaches a back-to-nature philo opby. When police tried to evict t em, a gun battle erupted, followed by a dayloag siege. diates al NAACP· C m pri on job di . . ml BATTLB CRBBK - Taylor time. He w denied the reque t Jones, P ident of tbe NAACP- and advised to return to work BC, aiinounced this week that, within the contract period. 25 through the efforts of Legal March 1991, or be terminated. Redre Chainnan Jiles B. Wit· Fields returned to work on 25 Iiams. the NAACP-BC w able March91,Jone aid, witha tate­ to i t in the resolution of a ment from hi phy ieian dated 23 grievance brought to its attention March 91 that he could perform on March 25. 1991. light duty effective 25 March 9] . 1be grievant, Charles Fields, However, the Coldwater F cility unfairly d mJased from did not allo him to return to position food m r- ork. Their reason w that the visor at the Florence Ctan medic I verification Field Women'l FacUlty partment of . presented limited him to light . Correction in Coldwater. duty.· Mic po. . Their reasonin contllc with • Fielda, a food em a bealth insurance claim dated 7 . t the Cold March 1991 which cl ifie hi lity, bad vera! (1987 dutied as light. - 1990) of ati factory ratings . Both Williams and Jones met with excellent commen on hi at tbe Coldwater facility in an at- performance, Jones laid. tempt at reconciliation with th . Fields worked under a contract upervi ory taff. Williams fur - • which guaranteed a limited medi- ther advised Fields of hi legal . cal leave. He also worked in a job rlghts and other ppropriate tep which had been cl ified and he could take in hi own behalf. certified in a igned th claim The NAACP-BC' input 'light in duty', Jo aid.' eventually re ulted in Field • · reinstatcment to his old position • IELD , R an out- and recovery of all wages and • patient foot operation, ked for bencfi eftective to hi date of . an extension of his mcdicalleave diami 1.