Infact thanks dorm residents and the university community for supporting the Nestle boycott. Page 2-Sunday, April 15, 1979-The Michigan Daily le"go ooting celebration in Uganda Further protest unethical formula' promotion by writing NESTLE: 100 Bloomingdale Rd. White Plains, NY 10605 Infact, A2 604 E. Huron 663-1870 Representatives of UNITED TELEPHONE COMPANY of Ohio will be recruiting in Ann Arbor on Thursday, April 19. We are interested in interviewing present college graduates or June graduates with the follow- ing degrees: 1. Bachelors or Masters Degree in Electrical Engineering. 2. Bachelors or Masters Degree in Business Admin- istration or Industrial Engineering. 3. Masters Degree in Business Administration with a strong background in Finance, Statistics, Market- ing or Accounting and a Bachelors Degree in Accounting. Call the Personnel Office collect at (513) 498-5174 or (513) 498-5118 prior to Monday, April 16 to schedule an inter- view. KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) - Rotting corpses and secret papers littered the grounds of Idi Amin's terror chambers yesterday as victorious soldiers helped Kampala residents loot shops and raid state warehouses. Meanwhile, Amin continued to elude pursuing Tanzanian and Ugandan exile troops. INSIDE THE State Research Bureau, where Amin held together his brutal eight-year reign with torture and murder, invaders found the rotting bodies of prisoners shot this week by Amin's fleeing security agents. The contents of secret files - records of forced confessions and lists of infor- mers to be paid off - fluttered across the parking lot of the three-story, pink stucco building that stands among flowering trees, stately buildings, and tranquil streets on Nakasero Hill. Amin's lodge is next door. Hussein Mayambala, a 30-year-old technician, was one of the few who sur- vived a stay in the Research Bureau's basement cells. "I WAS taken in August 1976 and ac- cused of plotting against Amin," he said. "They were right, but they never could make me talk." "I spent two months seven feet un- derground in a cell without light or toilet. I was tied up and fed a piece of potato and a half glass of water every day. "They forced me to sit naked on the neck of an upright bottle while they questioned me, and they put pins under my fingernails. "KILLING THOSE people now would be like being invited for a cup of coffee. It would be nothing," he said. A municipal employee at Entebbe said, "We all kept quiet to live. You made a little noise and you were gone. You behave like a stupid fool and you were all right." By some accounts as many as 300,000 Ugandans were killed by Amin's men in eight years. AT HIS official residence in Entebbe, 21 miles from Kampala on the shores of Lake Victoria, provisional President Yussufu Lule met with his Cabinet and told reporters gathered on the lawn that law and order was largely restored. But there were unconfirmed reports in Nairobi, Kenya, of widespread violence beyond areas held by the Tan- zanian and exile troops. Refugees, reaching Kenya, mainly Moslems and Sudanese who were favored under the Amin regime, repor- ted vigilantes had set up roadblocks in- side Uganda. Lule, sworn in Friday, said a court system would begin operating in a week. One of the first trials may be that ,of Amin. Tanzanian and Ugandan troops pushed north and east of tile capital Saturday looking for the fleeing tyrant. They met little resistance from ,Amin's few remaining men. I ___ ___ m FOR LEOTARDS at SPECIAL PRICES come to ERIC'S SECOND SERVE Factory Outlet for Discount Sports Apparel. Name Brands, Overruns and Seconds Long-Sleeve Leotards $6.80/Short-Sleeve $6.30 U I Some Exec. function with (Continued from Page 1) tion of the students, and this is a way for students to get input into policy making at the University. LSA Dean Billy Frye agreed, and said there is no possibility of a student serving on theExecutive Committee of the LSA cotlege. "THE COMMITTEE is very opposed I Tights $3.70/ Any Top and Bottom $9.25 406 E. Liberty 2 Blks. off State St. 663 -6771 -P ..riles..- ----".. .., -- - - --- - ---- 77777777/ jJ t /I/ ull OWN ti _, o UAL- ., Committees student iMput to student membership," he said, "Students don't have the expertisq which would lead to good judgment on the variety of issues we discuss-per; sonnel decisions, promotions, hiringi and so forth." However, Robert Pestronk, a graduate student in the School of Public health and one of the two student memj bers of the eight-member Executive Committee, said he thinks students should be placed on the LSA Executive Committee. "I don't see why not. Some student are capable of discussing and underj standing all these issues," he said. "Faculty members certainly don't have a monopoly on intelligence oz opinion." "ALTHOUGH NOT every student card understand all the issues, not ever; faculty member can either," he added; "To discriminate against students foal this reason is unfair." The School of Public Health's Executive Committee has closed ani open sessions, both of which allow student member input. However; students are only allowed to vote in the open meetings, and are restricted t4 discussion of the issue in question. "In both cases, the student point of view is asked-for and considered," said Pestronk. BRUCE KOZARSKY, LSA Student Government (LSA-SG) representative; said LSA-SG has long been in favor of a' student member on the LSA Executive Committee and said it would make the decision-making process of the Univerj sity more democratic. "It's a great idea, because it's very important for students to have an ac tive voice in matters affecting them,' he said. "I would even advocte a change in the Regents' bylaws so that students' votes would count." "The biggest problem now is that Executive Committee decisions are. closed and it's very important for us to have input and be aware of the decisions," he added. Frye agreed that some students may be qualified to serve on the Executive Committee, but said other things must be considered. THE MICHIGAN DAILY (USPS 341-900) Volume LXXXIX, No. 157 - Sunday, April 15, 1979 is edited and managed by students a the University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morns ings during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,. Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 Septem ber through April (2 semesters); 13 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer ses' sion published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates; $6.50 in Ann Arbor; $7.00 by mail out- side Ann Arbor. Second class postage padat Ann Arbor, Michigan. 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