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This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 31, 1980 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1980-10-31

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

University
plans
business
school
addition
By JOYCE FRIEDEN
An unlikely group of "studen-
ts" -area business executives-is just
one of the groups at the University that
officials say would benefit from the
planned addition to the School of
Business Administration building com-
plex.
According to Anneke Overseth, the
School of Business Administration
director of development, the project
would involve the construction of three
new buildings and would cost ap-
proximately $15 million.
THE THREE NEW structures would
*nclude a new business library, a dor-
mitory for executives attending
workshops given by the business
school, a building housing both offices
and classrooms for the school's
Division of ' Management Education,
and a new computer station.
University Planner Fred Mayer ex-
plained that the additions, which would
all be connected, would go up in an area
bordered by Monroe Street on the nor-
th, Tappan Street on the west, Hill
Street on the south, and East University
Avenue on the east.
Mayer said the buildings would be
designed along contemporary architec-
tural lines similar to the business
school's Paton Accounting Center and
its assembly hall. "It will take its place
among the other business buildings in
architectural form," Mayer said.
OVERSETH stressed that the
project, the result of several years'

The Michigan Daily-Friday, October 31, 1980-Page 5,
UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO
GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
M.B.A.
ALL MAJORS AND FIELDS INVITED
Our representative will be present on your campus for
the Graduate Schools Career Day to answer questions
about our curriculum, admissions, financial aid, and
career opportunities in the following management
fields:

Health Administration
Finance
Marketing
General Management
Accounting

Public and Nonprofit
Human Resources
Economics
Management Science
Policy

WEDNESDAY, NOV. 5
Contact Career Planning & Placement

Daily Photo by PAUL ENGSTROM
PLANNFD CONSTRUCTION for the Business School would include three new structures: a business library, a dormi-
tory for visiting executives and a classroom/office building to house the Division of Management Education and a new

computer station.
work by a planning committee com-
posed of representatives from the
business school, the University Ar-
chitect's Office, and the University
Planning Office, was still in the early
stages of planning. "It's very
premature at this point," she said.
Overseth explained that the new
library is necessary for several
reasons. "Students have been com-
plaining that the library is too crowded,
and our current shelf space is not
adequate," she said. "The new library
would have larger seating facilities and
2 times the shelf space of our current

library."
THE SCHOOL'S Division of
Management Education has been in
existence for 30 years and is ranked fif-
th in the nation, according to Overseth.
"Over 7,600 executives attended our
workshops during the '79-'80 school
year," she said. "Currently we are
using hotels and conference centers all
over Ann Arbor to house them. We
would like to bring it back to the cam-
pus."

Overseth added that the dormitory
\ would be very simple, containing about
100 rooms "with a single bed and dome
study space."
Funds for the project would not come
from the state, Overseth explained, but
instead from private contributions.
"We would raise the money through
private gifts from alumni and other in-
dividuals," she said.
Mayer said that the project received
approval by the Regents in July.

- s sAEE
-PTENTAL
1A

State denies Curene
link to birth defects

michigan
men's
glee club

'GE C
. E U
E B
,1

LANSING (UPI)-National Center
for Disease Control data shows
unusually high birth defect rates in
Lenawee County, but the state,.Toxic
Substances Control Commission
refused yesterday to link the figures
with Curene contamination.
Commission members said they need
to examine more closely the individual
cases before deciding whether to blame
the high defect rate on the presence of
Curene, which was manufactured in the
region until last year.
CURENE IS generically called
MBOCA.
The information, collected by the
disease control center in Atlanta from
1970-78, showed higher than normal in-
stances of six types :of birth defects
from among 13,000 births.
"This is worth being very concerned
about," said commissioner Michael
Cardin.
BUT COMMISSIONER Lawrence
Roslinski warned against over-reacting
to the information.
"The last thing we want is to allege
this is higher in birth defects just
because the state has a better reporting
system," Roslinski said.
Among the birth defects recorded
during that period were 116 cases of a
purple birthmark known as pigmented
nevrus, compared with a national
average of 11.3 incidences. A type of
clubfoot appeared 122 times during the
recording period compared with the
expected 27.j
A RARE BRAIN deformity normally
shows up 1.7 times during the recording
period, but appeared five times in the
county.
Portions of Adrian, the largest city in
Lenawee County, have been con-
O
The DAILY'S
PHONE NUMBERS:
Billing 764-0550

taminated with Curene. The chemical
substance used in the manufacture of
plastics was produced by the Anderson
Development Co. of Adrian under the
name Curene until 1979.
Traces of Curene have ben detected
in the urine of workers, their families
and persons living in a low-income
neighborhood near the plant. Although
the state has attempted. cleanup, urine
samples from children in the sub-
division continue to contain Curene.
Norman Zimmerman, senior
toxicologist for the commission, was
wary of tying the birth defects to the
chemical. Other information held by
the state could mean a different inter-
pretation of the situation, he said.
But state Department of Public
Health officials appeared reluctant to
release information involving specific
cases claiming the privacy of persons
involved in the studies would be
violated.

CEL EBRATES
THE
friars
siver anniversary
F E AT U RI N6
"p;st friars from the last 25 years
concert
SAT NOV. 15, 8:00 PM. HILL A U D.
T icket s: $4.50, $3.50, $2.50, $1.50 (students)
H I L L BOX OFFICE OPENS NOV.10,. 9-5PM.

mmmmim_ -M- mm"

WHEN YOU VOTE FOR YOUR CONGRESS MEMBERS THIS FALL... REMEMBER
IF THEY VOTEDFOR YOU LAST SPRING- AGAINST DRAFT REGISTRATION

On Thursday, April 17, 1980, the House Appropriations Committee voted to approve funds for regis-
tration for the draft. This approval was narrowly passed by a vote of 26 to 23, with 4 members not
voting. If approval hd not been granted by this Committee, draft registration would not have gone to
the full House of Representatives. Listed below are the House Appropriations Committee members'
names and voting records.

I

THESE CONGRESSMEN VOTED FOR YOU
These Congressmen had the courage to vote against draft
registration. Remember to vote for them this fall. They deserve
all of our support.

THESE CONGRESSMEN VOTED FOR REGISTRATION

California
Julian Dixon (D-28th Dist.)
Edward R. Roybal (D-25th Dist.)
Illinois
Robert H.Michel (R-18th Dist.)
George M O'Brien (R-17th Dist.)
Bennett Stewart (D-1 st Dist.')
Sidney R. Yates (D-9th Dist.)
Indiana
Adam Benjamin, Jr. (D-1st Dist.)
John T. Myers (R-7th Dist.)
Iowa
Neal Smith (D-4th Dist.)
Maryland
Clarence D. Long (D-2nd Dist.)
Massachusetts .
Silvio 0. Conte (R-1 st Dist.)
Joseph D. Early (D-3rd Dist.)

Michigan
Carl D. Pursell (R-2nd Dist.)
Bob Traxler (D-8th Dist.)
Minnesota
Martin Olav Sabo (D-5th Dist.)
Nebraska
Virginia Smith (R-3rd Dist.)
New York
Matthew F. McHugh
(D-27th Dist.)
Ohio
Clarence E. Miller (R-10th Dist.)
Louis Stokes (D-21 st Dist.)
Oregon
Robert Duncan (D-3rd Dist.)
Pennsylvania
Lawrence Coughlin (R-13th Dist.)
Joseph M. McDade (R-10th Dist.)
Wisconsin
David R. Obey (D-7th Dist.)

THESE CONGRESSMEN
DID NOT VOTE
New York
Joseph P. Addabbo (F-7th Dist.)
Robert C. McEwen (R-30th Dist.)
South Carolina
John Jenrette (D-6th Dist.)
Utah
Gunn McKay (D-1 st Dist.)

Alabama
Tom Bevill (D-4th Dist.)
Jack Edwards (R-lst Dist.)
Arizona
Eldon Rudd (R-4th Dist.)
Arkansas
Bill Alexander (D-1st Dist.)
California
Clair W. Burgener (R-43rd Dist.)
Vic Fazio (D-4th Dist.)
Connecticut
Robert N. Giamo (D.3rd Dist.)
Florida
Bill Chappell, Jr. (D-4th Dist.)
William Lehman (D-13th Dist.)
C.W. Bill Young (R-6th Dist.)
Georgia
Bo Ginn (D-1st Dist.)
Kentucky
William H. Natcher (D-2nd.Dist.)
Louisiana
Lindy Boggs (D-2nd Dist.)

Massachusetts
Edward P. Boland (D-2nd Dist.)
Mississippi
Jamie L. Whiten (0-1st Dist.)
Missouri
Bill D. Burlison (D-10th Dist.)
New Jersey
Edward J. Patten (D-15th Dist.)
New York
Jack F. Kemp (R-38th Dist.)
North Dakota
Mark Andrews (R-At Large)
Ohio
Ralph S. Regula (R-16th Dist.)
Oklahoma
Tom Steed (D-4th Dist.)
Pennsylvania
John P. Murtha (D-12th Dist.)
Texas
Jack Hightower (D-13th Dist.)
Charles Wilson (D-2nd Dist.)
Virginia
J. Kenneth Robinson (R-7th Dist.)
Washington
Norman D.,Dicks (D-6th Dist.)

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY STUDENTS AGAINST REGISTRATION AND THE'DRAFT

QD#ejqm 7'I Gf't' / l....061 u ii lv r a./Wr Li. . ' rA 47

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