Ninety-Two Years of Editorial Freedom Sit It-!3U11 1 IaiI NICER Mostly sunny with a high in the mid GOs. Vol. XCI, No. 35 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, October 20, 1981 Ten Cents 12 Pages 'U' research corporation proposed By ANDREW CHAPMAN SA. task force committee has recommended that the University set up a research corporation to recruit in- dustry supposrt for research activity at the University. The proposed Michigan Research Corporation would serve as a "broker" between the University and outside industry to attract high technology in-' dustry money to research activities at the University, according to an interim *report drawn up by the task force on University/Industry Interaction. , TASK FORCE chairman Robert Howe presented his report to the Senate Assembly yesterday afternnon. According to,Howe, the MRC would be a non-profit, tax-exempt corporation under the control of the University Regents. Its main purpose wold be to r"facilitate the transfer of technology" from the University to industry, he said. The corporation, which would be funded in part by the University and in part by the private sector, would help to stimulate economic growth in the state, according to the task force report. THE MRC WOULD also give Univer- sity faculty a chance to be involved in research they would ordinarily not have the funds to engage in, Howe said. The research corporation would require an initial investment of ap- proximately $7.5 to $10 million from in- dustry ,and the University, the report said. In addition to the initial investment ' the MRC would require $1 million an- nually for a couple of years before it became self-sufficient. University may solicit industry contracts HOWE SAID the MRC's self- sufficiency would be achieved after a couple of years because of its ability to collect money on patent and license royalties on all technological in- novations it produces. Another benefit the MRC would provide for the University is its, ability to pay higher salaries to professors in- volved in the corporation, said George Gamota, director of the Institute of Science and Technology. The MRC would be able to pay faculty at rates comparable to those high technology industries pay because the corporation would be able to draw such a large amount of industry money into its salary fund, Howe explained. THE IDEA FOR the MRC grew out of a committee report made to Vice President for Research Charles Over- berger last spring calling for increased interaction between the University and industry. The task force report claimed that the University needs the MRC because federal funds for research have declined, the MRC would help boost the sagging state economy, and because of the University's recent loss of faculty to higher-paying industry jobs. The report will now be followpd up by an in-depth report to be compiled by Engineering Prof. Walton Hancock, and will be released to the academic community by the end of this winter term. HOWE SAID, in his presentation of the report to the Senate Assembly yesterday, that the University h4s had "a bad track record for getting resear- ch grants. "We seem to end up with the same policies as in the past," Howe said. See RESEARCH, Page 5 Howe ... proposes new research corporation New Polish leader reaffirms ties to Warsaw Pact Daily Photo by BRIAN MASCK *Surf's upa A brave surfer (located near lower-right-hand corner of the light house) finds tackling the icy waters of Lake Michigan at Grand Haven a lonely pursuit. Gusting winds of up to 60 mph and waves reading 14 feet were reported Sunday at this locale. On-campus, recruiters *d.o hire on GPA alone WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski, in his first full day as chief of the ruling Communist Party, reassured Poland's Warsaw Pact allies yesterday of "fraternal cooperation" and also conferred with his generals. The Solidarity labor federation, responding to the latest shakeup . in the Communist Party leadership, agreed to end "unjustified" strikes but thousands of defiant workers continued protest actions. . JARUZELSKI, who is a general and defense minister as well as premier, was elected first secretary of the party Sunday by the 200-member Central -Committee that fired Stanislaw Kania from the top leadership post. The official news agency PAP reported Jaruzelski met with the ambassadors from the Soviet Union, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Romania and Hungary, and stressed the significance Poland attaches to the...fraternal cooperation with the states of the socialist com- munity." PAP said Jaruzelski also met with the Defense Military Council and "made decisions about the tasks of the army," but the agency gave no details. SOLIDARITY LEADERS, meeting in Gdansk,' sent telegrams to local chapters calling strikes "economically adverse" and saying they would "see to it that unjustified protests...are eliminated." Marek Brunne, Solidarity's national spokesman, issued a statement saying the union would "make all efforts to achieve agreements with the authorities before the emergence of ex- ploisive situations and conflicts." But he added, "our union cannot agree to any kind of renegotiation of the agreements" reached during a wave of strikes last year that led to the creation of Solidarity as the only independent union in the Soviet bloc. Some Central Committee members at their three-day meeting accused Solidarity of violating the agreements and said they should be renegotiated. SOLIDARITY leader Lech Walesa, visiting France, told a news conference in Paris he hoped the concentration of power by Jaruzelski would help Poland act against its economic and social problems. The government will be relying on one man, and we will be dealing with one man," he said. "It may be more rapid and efficient to take decisions. It appears to be an improvement, and we are relaxed about it." Walesa said "small strikes might continue because "protest is necessary in a democracy, but "widespread strikes hurt both the people and Solidarity.' SOVIET PRESIDENT Leonid I. Brezhnev sent a congratulatory message to Poland's new party chief, saying he had confidence Jaruzelski would "rally the ranks" during a "crucial 'historical moment." The telegram also urged Jaruzelski to fight against "encroachments by counter- revolution." The Soviet Union has kept a close eye on its War- saw Pact ally during the past year of sweeping reforms that launched Solidarity, and was critical of Kania's moderate stance. Jaruzelski, the third party chief in a little more than a year, had backed Kania's "line of agreement" or peaceful solution to Poland's problems and Solidarity's demands, but recently took a harder stance, urging the union to moderate its policies. Kania replaced Edward Gierek on Sept. 5, 1980, less than a week after the union and government signed an accord aimed at ending nationwide strikes. PAP said in a report that nearly half of Poland's provinces "are plunged into strikes, ' threatened strikes and strike alerts due to food." Textile workers in Zyrardow, west of Warsaw, oc- cupied factories for the seventh day, and thousand s of workers downed tools in southwest Zielona Gora province. Solidarity's Presidium, meeting in the Baltic port city of Gdansk, sent telegrams to its chapters yesterday warning "against decisions 'which might sharpen the situation and be conducive to social conflict." Leaders of the 9.5 million-member union were / expected to meet Thursday to decide whether to stage a nationwide warning strike over food distribution and prices. The union and government agreed on a price freeze Sunday pending a new economic reform plan. It was not known if the agreemtn wold end the union's plan to stage a nationwide protest. By MIKE McINTYRE On-campus recruiting is in full-swing, and the consensus among company represen- tatives is that a student will need more than just good grades to land a job in an ever- competitive market. Although most job interviewers say a strong GPA can bolster a candidate's chances of getting hired, they cite other factors, such . as communication skills and leadership ability, as being equally important. ACCORDING TO William Mair of Touche Ross & Co., a "Big 8" accounting firm that has been recruiting at the business school, equivalent GPAs among jfb candidates do not necessarily translate into equal performance. "Schools differ so much that it's not prac- tical to look at GPAs," Mair said. "We're looking for well-balanced people," he continued. "Good social skills are unecessary to function effectively in a flexible anddynamic society." Johnson Wax's Barbara ,Reed, who was recently on campus interviewing prospective sales management trainees, said she cannot over-emphasize the importance of interper- sonal skills. "GPA doesn't tell us a lot about that per- *1 son's ability to communicate and do the job," Reed said. "We're looking for a high-profile type person-somebody who's a self-starter, very highlymotivated, and possesses leader- ship ability. We've had a lot of success with liberal arts majors," she said. Although many recruiters play down the importance of grades, others place a great emphasis on an individual's GPA. SOME RECRUITERS have a "minimum GPA" in mind when interviewing prospective candidates, said Jack Weikart from Exxon. Although he said he personally deplores the notion, "There are other recruiters in Exxon as well as other companies who are very grade point conscious," and subscribe to the philosophy that "a 2.5 GPA hasn't got a chan- ce of a snowball in hell," he said. Students often come out of an interview surprised at the informal approach taken by hany recruiters and the general nature of the questions asked of them. "The questions were really, really general, ... like, 'Do you feel that you have been suc- cessful thus far and why?' and, 'What is the most demanding situation that you have ever been confronted with,"' said LSA senior Phil Rubin. "You really have to tell them what they want to hear, more or less ... you have to twist things and make yourself look good." "IT WASN'T AS scary as I thought it would be," said Elise Malstrom, an LSA graduate who recently interviewed with IBM and Xerox. "I thought that the interviewers would be really different from me-like Martians- but they're just regular old people." Recruiters say that performance in the in- terview is an important factor in determining who is invited to the firm for more inter- viewing and who must look elsewhere for a job. "The on-campus face-to-face interview is a yiticog in the hiring process," Weikart said. ROBERT SCHARFF of Peat, Marwick, Mitchel & Co., a top-ranked accounting firm, said that a successful candidate must convey everything about himself or herself in a con- vincing manner during the interview. "Basically, you have 20 minutes to sell yourself . . . just like you would sell a product," Scharff said. In addition to academic performance and communication skills, recruiters also judge candidates by their involvement, in extra- curricular activities. Employers said in- See FIRMS, Page 5 A PULISH CIIZEN reads news or the resignation of Communist Party Chairman Stanislaw Kania, who was replaced Sunday by Premier Wojciech Jaruzelski following party elections. -TODAY Red, white and blue OH, SAY DID you see the American flag hanging from the Burton Memorial Tower yesterday af- ternoon? The flag and Carillonneur William DeTurk's rendition of the Star Spangled Banner STrivia Did you ever stop to think about how the attendance num- ber at football games is arrived at? What's more, are you afraid to stand up and cheer for fear of ending up on the lap of one of those 165,000 other people when you sit down again? Don't worry, there's no real need to panic about a large attendance number. The attendance figure announ- ced at the game is an estimate based on the number of tickets sold-not the actual number of tickets redeemed. The game attendance estimates also includes the teams, the band, officials, the press, security and game workers. accumulating two bachelors degrees, two masters and a Ph.D. in education. He never finished high school. Cham- berlain, 48, finally joined the class of '52 when a colleague recently approached Highline High School Principal Ken- neth Teller with some of Chamberlain's writings-earning the deficient scholar his overdue credit in English. "It was, an emotional moment," Chamberlain said. He was presen-. ted with the diploma at a party to celebrate his Ph.D. from Seattle University. "I never in my wildest dreams ever ex- pected this to happen. I just went right on to college and kept telling myself that I'd take care of the oversight someday," he said. Teller presented Chamberlain with a h 4 -PMs i