4 Page 6-Friday, January 28, 1983-The Michigan Daily GETTING STARTED An introduction to JOB HUNTING Resume writing Interviewing Job finding strategies Saturday, January 29 9:10-1 2:00 p.m. Career Planning and Placement 3200 Student Activities Building Register upon arrival. Open to all student levels. CARFER P CI'1RYE'ER Organized crime up despite govt. fight WASHINGTON (AP) - While top crime bosses are being swept into prison in increasing numbers, "the profits of organized crime are so huge that we have been outmanned and outgunned in the battle," Attorney General William French Smith said yesterday. Seeking support for President Reagan's "all-out war against big-time, organized crime," Smith and FBI Director William Webster told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the tentacles of America's vast cime syn- dicates are touching nearly every business and institution, including government. "TODAY THERE are few businesses or industries in our communities that are not affected by organized criminal enterprises," Webster said. Smith, citing instances where police and other officials have accepted huge payments to ignore criminal activity, warned, "The dollar amounts involved are so great that bribery threatens the very foundations of law and law enfor- cement." "The Congress, state legislatures and our courts," Webster added, "are not immune from attempts to influence them by organized crime. THROUGH their gambling operations, crime organizations also have been trying to gain an edge in the sports industry and collegiate ac- tivities, he said. "It's an obvious point of vulnerability, and we have seen signs that they have taken advantage of this," Webster said. Smith said it would be "pure speculation" to put an estimate on the money being made by the 25 Mafia families, the nation's primary organized crime syndicate, and other major crime organizations. But he said federal officials have seized about $400 million in assets during criminal in- vestigations over the past two years. THE NATION'S two top law enfor- cement officers, while admitting the magnitude of organized crime remains "gigantic," said major inroads are being made under Reagan's anticrime plan due to the increased cooperation of federal agents, the military and finan- cial backing from Congress. Webster said that in the past two years 359 of the Mafia's 20,000 members or associates, including a number of top bosses, have been convicted. This has been a signal that members at all levels in criminal groups can no longer consider themselves protected by a code of secrecy, Webster said. ALTHOUGH crime syndicates are in- volved in all types of illegal activity, Webster and Smith said gambling and drugs provides the bulk of their profits. While much of those illicit profits are being plowed back into criminal operations, Smith said that more and more, profits are being invested in legitimate businesses. Webster said all the Mafia families are involved in loan-sharking and use it to take over legitimate businesses. Some examples are firms involving vending machines, garbage disposal, meat and produce distribution, liquor stores and taverns, garmet manufac- turing, tranportation and hauling and labor unions, he said. "Organized crime contacts and in- fluence" have been identified with the International Longshoremen's Union; the Teamsters, the Motel, Restaurant and Bartenders Union and the Labors International, he said. ANN ABOR S2 INDIVIDUAL THEATRES SAwe at .,Libe t 7 1- oo $2.00 SAT. SUN. SHOWS BEFORE P9. M. OUR CUSTOMERS WILL TELL YOU... "FULL OF ADVENTURE" Nathan Darling-Ann Arbor "THRILLING" Ed Laseck-Milan, MI. FRI. MON.-r 5:50,7:40,9:30 (G) SAT. SUN.- 12:20, 2:10, 4:00, 5:00, 7:40, 9:30 Bishop Moses Anderson AP Photo Newly ordained bishop, The Most Reverend Moses Anderson smiles as he watches the ordination of two other bishops yesterday afternoon at =the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament in Detroit. Anderson is Detroit's first black bishop. Politce strike causes, citizens to form patroi r4 ANACONDA, Mont. (AP) - The police chief told residents and shopkeepers yesterday to do "everything they have to do" to protect their property as a two-day-old police strike kept the county government shut down. Merchants and citizens in this city of 10,500 people in southwestern Montana organized their own patrols and neighb- orhood watches as the striking officers walked a picket line Wednesday night. "It was a quiet night," said Police chief Jim Connors, who manned the department alone, spending the night catnapping beside the phone in the dispatcher's office. r THE CITY-county force of 18 policemen and seven dispatchers went on strike at 7 a.m. Wednesday after 10 months of unsuccessful negotiations for a new contract. Working conditions were the main sticking point. The city, which has been losing population and jobs since the Anaconda Minerals Co. closed its cop- per smelter in 1980, said it could not af- ford the officers' proposals. No further negotiatons have been- scheduled. AFTER NEARLY 30 hours alone on duty, Connors said yeterday the phone had been ringing often with citizens promising to come to his aid if needed and telling him they have organized neighborhood patrols. "They say they will help out," Con- 'Y' Summer Camps THE ANN ARBOR "Y" IS NOW ACCEPT- ING APPLICATIONS FOR STAFF POSITIONS AT THE FOLLOWING CAMPS: CAMP AL-GON-QUIAN: a resident camp for boys and girls located on Burt Lake 'in northern lower Michigan. Camp dates are June 25 to August 6. Senior staff positions, ages 18 and above are available in the fol- lowing areas: horseback riding, sailing, can- oeing, arts and crafts, archery, nature, woodworking, riflery, land sports, swim- ming, water skiing, and camp nurse. Salary. plus room and board. CAMP BIRKETT: a day camp for boys and girls located on Silver Lake near Pinckney. Camp dates are June 20-August 19. Senior staff positions, ages 18 and above are avail- able in the following areas: archery, swim- ming, sailing, canoeing, arts and crafts, na- ture, and general counselor. APPLICATIONS AND ADDITIONAL INFORMA- TION REGARDING POSITIONS AT BOTH CAMPS MAY BE OBTAINED BY CONTACTING THE ANN ARBOR 'Y', 350 S. FIFTH AVENUE, ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN 48104 OR CALLING (313) 663-0536. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER nors said. "It's kind of a buddy system and they will make citizens arrests ig needed." Merchants organized a committee to patrol on foot and in cars. Prof. and p astor speak4 on research, (Continued from Page 1) Engineering, the defense department is virtuallythe only place to go for funds. "There are very few of us who like this sort of umbilical tie with the Depar tment of Defense," he said, but to sever it would be to leave the University out of the high-technology wave of the future. SENIOR ADMITTED that this tie can result in military applications, even from basic research. "Any time you accept sponsorship fore research, you do lose a degree of freedom. After all, he who pays the piper can to some degree call the tune,' he said. And Senior said later in the night, "The more successful you are. . . the r more inevitable and almost certain it is that that improvement will finds military applications." COLEMAN SAID those applications must be considered when a research grant is taken, and suggested a com-, mittee of faculty members, students, and members of the community be formed to review Pentagon-sponsored.. projects. For the past year, Senior has been a member of a University committee trying to come up with guidelines on non-classified defense research, leading one member of the audience to ask if there wasn't a clear conflict of in- terest. Senior said it didn't present a con-, flict: "I do represent one viewpoint that. is held by many : . . a viewpoint that I. feel is necessary to be expressed." EARLY THIS month Senior's Research Policies Committee voted down a proposal for a panel to oversee non-classified research. Coleman said some .sort of panel is' necessary to open up defense depar- tment-sponsored research. 'Whatever research is done ought to be open," he said. "If it has to be kept under wraps, I would ;question whether it is a legitimate enterprise for the Univer- sity." ING There are still some things we have yet to imagine. SOPHIE'S CHOICE MERYL STREEP ( FRI. MON.-6:45, 9:40 SAT. SUN.-1:00, 3:50, 6:45, 9:40 R) --- NOW INTERVIEW NOW INTEVIE W'MING ON CAMPUS We are now accepting applications for management positions in: ELECTRONICS ENGINEERING II J