Ninety-One Years of Editorial Freedom .:J'l r e Mitt U IEIUIIQ NICE Sunny with high tem- peratures in the lower 40s. 101. XCI, No. 99 Copyright 1981, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 25, 1981 Ten Cents Ten Pages MR ws I Surviving the interview blues By PAM KRAMER It may not be Hitchcock material, but the fearful tension involved in a job interview isn't easy to ignore. The question ings like a guillotine, ready to fall if you come up with the wrong answer: What can I do to get this job? "The best advice I can give students is: Don't be gross," said Prof. Ben Schneider, a psychologist at Michigan State University who has conducted research on job interviews. "I generally counsel people to be the way they are, and not to play games ... but then, again, life's a game." THERE IS A veritable gold mine of information available to students who cower at the thought of the impact job in- terviews could have on their future. Books detail how to dress for success, videotapes at the University's Career Planning and Placement office show *the right and wrong ways to answer interview questions, and researchers continue to study the psychology of job in- terviews. Researchers say interviews are becoming less subjective now than they have been in the past. "PET HUNCHES used to be relied on heavily," said University Psychology Prof. Rodney Lowman. "In some cases a person's character was judged by how firm their handshake was, or whether they looked the interviewer in the eye." In the past, some interviewers wanted to see how a can- didate would react in a stressful situation, Schneider said. "If theyknew somehow in advance that a person was a smoker, they would make sure there were no ashtrays in the room. Or, they might set it up so there wasn't a chair for the student," he said. Now many companies, in response to the possibility of bias suits, are setting up training programs to alert their recruiters to certain biases they may not know they possess. Also, interviews are more structured now than in the past. "WE HAVE A pretty well-organized format that we try not to deviate from a lot," said George Valsa, college recruitment supervisor for Ford Motor Company. "A struc- tured interview is the best way to get job-related infor- mation, and we can better control "the interview so that' Equal Employment Opportunity problems don't occur." The Equal Employment Opportunity Act prohibits discriminatory hiring practices. Still, researchers and recruiters agree, some innate biases exist. First impressions are important, research- shows, and sometimes decisions are made during the first five minutes of an interview. APPROPRIATE ATTIRE is also important, experts say, because it makes the interviewer feel more comfortable. The right clothing gives the student a better self-image which can improve his or her performance in the interview. See SURVIVING, Page 8 FOR. HERE AT coI'4SOI4PAmvEt6NQRAt-. "Is ' _ ,I ,, 7,, .7d Y y} Ex- hostages prepare for Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM STUDENTS BROWSE THROUGH shelves at University Cellar. Despite handling 60 percent of the student textbook market, the store has suffered severe financial losses in the past two years. Money, labor woes hit By KEVIN TOTTIS When it opened in the early 1970s, its purpose was to provide students with reasonably priced textbooks. Today, its managers boast, it handles 60 per- cent of the student textbook market. And in the 1979 and 1980 fiscal years the University Cellar lost more than $175,000. Employees and board members give a ,number of reasons for the losses, but everyone seems to agree that if the financial problems continue much longer, drastic changes could be in order for the Cellar. "IF WE RUN another couple of years at a loss of $75,000 we won't be here," said John Sappington, the ac- ting U-Cellar general manager. The Cellar earned $109,000 in 1977 and $36,000 in 1978, Sappington said. In 1979 and 1980, though, the store lost $108,000 and $71,000 respectively. The figures for the losses can be deceiving, Sappington explained. In 1977, the Cellar lost its property tax exempt status in a case before the Michigan Supreme Court and over a period of one and a half years had to pay the city of Ann Arbor $85,000 in back taxes. THE ACTING manager does not deny, however, that the losses are not solely due to the $85,000 in unexpected taxes. One of the biggest reasons the store has lost so much money, Sappington said, is because it sells so many tex- tbooks in relation to its other goods. "Anyone loses money on textbooks," he said. The markup on textbooks is not that large, he said. "For instance, the books are sold to us for 80 cents and sold most places for $1.00. We sell them at 95 cents," Sappington said. But general expenses for selling tex- tbooks are 25 percent, he explained, therefore bookstores must make their money selling other merchandise. ULRICH'S AND Follett's, U- Cellar's major competitors, make up much of this lost revenue by selling Michigan insignia merchandise. Ac- cording to a clause in the Cellar's lease with the Michigan Union, however, the store may not sell any of this merchandise because it competes with the stand in the lobby of the Union. Sappington said he feels one answer to U-Cellar's problem could be in selling the "Michigan" merchandise. "We think it's appropriate for a student store to sell Michigan insignia merchandise. They are in high - Cellar demand." Still another major reason for the losses, Sappington contends, is a high level of employee discontent. "THE LOW morale has cost us," hea said. In order to help alleviate this problem "we spent more time working on our people rather than on immediate operations." Kathleen Dannemiller, a member of the Cellar's board of directors and assistant to the University vice president for student services, agrees that employee strife has been one of the Cellar's biggest problems. When the store opened it consisted, of several autonomous departments and one "facilitator"-the original manager, Dennis Webster, Dan- nemiller said. See FINANCIAL, Page 2 U.S. I From UPI and AP WIESBADEN, West Germany - America's 52 former hostages - some exultant, some bitter, some isolated from guilt and stress - completed medical tests yesterday in preparatiori for their final journey home. One said the-first thing he would do in America was "kneel down and kiss the ground." The big moment - homecoming - was set for 3 p.m. EST today, when their special Air Force jet lands at Steward Airport near West Point, N.Y., after the flight from Wiesbaden and a stopover in Ireland. Up to the last moment, stories emerged of cruelty and brutality in Iran and one diplomat, Malcolm Kalp, said he spent 374 of the 444 days' cap- tivity in solitary confinement because he tried to escape. "I WAS CHOKED, kicked in the groin and punched," he said. As the 50 men and two women prepared for their 5 a.m. departure, the joy of coming home was overshadowed by word that three of the Americans were in isolation in their hospital rooms, suffering from severe depression and other psychological scars of their ordeal in Iran. Military sources at *the Wiesbaden U.S. Air Force Hospital said the three were being kept under observation in their rooms because of their psychological conditions. STATE DEPARTMENT spokesman Jack Cannon said several of the Americans were having serious problems adjusting. "There were several in worse shape than others. Many are suffering from guilt and stress," Cannon said. One former hostage has refused to etiiurn leave his room. Another kept pacing the halls in agitation. One soldier refused to shake hands with his officers. THE NATION's official welcoming celebration will be held Tuesday after- noon at Andrews Air Force Base in suburban Maryland, with Vice President George Bush and Secretary of State Alexander Haig in attendance. State Department spokesman William Dyess said he didn't think that former President Carter or any officials from his administration had been invited tot the Washington ceremonies. The festivities at Andrews will be followed by an elaborate~ ceremony at the White House, where President See EX-HOSTAGES, Page 7 Reform or die, court tells'Jiang PEKING (AP) - Chairman Mao Tse-tung's widow Jiang Qing, ac- cused of framing and persecuting Chinese leaders in a quest to become "empress," was sentenced today to death - but given a two-year chance to reform. Former Vice Premier Zhang Chunqiao, adjudged a fellow "chief culprit" in Jiang's "Gang of Four," was given the same suspended death sentence, which means China's Supreme Court will review the sen- tences in two years to decide whether to execute the two. EIGHT CO-DEFENDANTS were given sentences ranging from 16 years to life. Six of them already have been in custody for more than nine years, which will count against their sentences. All faced possible death sentences on charges of frame-ups, per- secutions and armed rebellion plots. Jiang had been expected to be sen- tenced to death, with the sentence suspended for two years to give her a chance to reform through labor. Throughout her trial, which ended a month ago, she remained defiant and denounced her accusers and judges as "revisionists" who had turned their backs on Mao's policies. I Cheap drinks, local cornics a hit at 'U' Club By STEVE HOOK "Americans are just going to have to conserve more gasoline-that's all there is to it. I was thinking about this the other day as I was cruising up and down State Street looking for broads.'' (A ripple of laughter, some groans, hissing.) "But seriously, folks ...'' Okay, so this isn't The Tonight Show or Second City. All right, so you've heard some of these jokes before, and many of the others are in dubious taste or are simply flat. The comics onstage will hit on a few, and its just a buck to get in, so you get what you pay for. The drinks are cheap too, so you can intoxicate yourself through the slow moments. THIS IS "LAUGH Track," an experimental, surprisingly successful production approaching its third week at the 'University Club. The Wednesday night shows-organized by students Mark Cendrowski and Cindy Glazar, and sponsored by the University Activities Center-offer a string of aspiring comedians from Ann Arbor and beyond. Already, calls are coming in from Detroit' and Chicago from up-and-coming comedians seeking an audience. For nearly two hours, the humorists take the stage one by one to tell jokes, perform card tricks, attempt imper- sonations, and generally do whatever is necessary to get laughs-the crude, but passionately sought rewards of these performers. Nobody is getting paid, except for the one or two "feature" guests who bring with them experience from professional clubs such as Detroit's Comedy Castle. (They get about $25 for an appearance.) Most of the amateurs are studen- ts-"class clowns, who were a crack-up in high school and now have a chance to perform before a real audience," ac- cording to Cendrowski. THE AUDIENCES for the first two Laugh Tracks have been large, with more than 225 paid customers for each show. See LOCAL, Page 8 ODAY Blondie F YOU'RE MALE, blonde, and have just committed a serious crime, you may not go to jail if Judge Richard Delin is presiding over your case. The Nassau County (Long Island) Judge said yesterday he could not send a teenager, who pleaded guilty to man- slaughter, to jail because the 19-year-old has "beautiful hunna hairt" admih ha . anht-se u aii1tad in mnison I n. Chew Trident President Reagan may have quit his smoking habit by chewing jelly beans, but the health insurance trace association has advised the president to kick his jelly bean habit. "Jelly beans have no nutritional value, and are among the worst varities of candy for your energy." One nutritionist suggested that Reagan should switch to a substitute snack. "If he likes the chewy feeling, he should try raisins, and if he likes the shape of jelly beans, perhaps he should substitute grapes instead." And don't forget to brush three times a day. Q The wisdom of Solomon revisited You're sitting peacefully in a lecture room, listening to the professor expound the virtues of Plato. Suddenly your nn nn~r fi . _- h_ rar on*V-1- especially common during lectures on Plato, Solomon war- ned that "a whole generation is incapable of abstract thought. . . but many of these students do still tend to ex- claim 'wow!' in lectures on Parmenides." Bemoaning the fact that "medical researchers get all the government grant money," Solomon said the object of his study is to call public attention to the untapped resources of the liberal arts and humanitiesmi ml . a:' I