4 Page 2- The Michigan Doily - Sunday, October 2, 1983 Law dean gives school human face By JACKIE YOUNG As did many of her fellow un- dergraduates in the late 1960s, Sue Eklund idealistically looked to the, University to "do something" about social injustice. "(I) assumed there were so many things (University President) Robben fleming could do somethng about. Then the University was the most ob- vious authority figure to appeal to," she said. PROFILE NOW THE 35-year-old Eklund, con- sidered to be one of the top law school administrators in the country, finds herself in a similar role. "Students sometimes view me as a bit more of a lifesaver than I actually should be," said Eklund, assistant dean for student services. "Some of the warm feelings students have for me I :wish they had a bit more for the in- stitution." Instead of being a "miracle worker," as some law school students have labeled her, Eklund said all she tries to :do is "find a logical, efficient response :to the problem at hand." ALTHOUGH the Law Quad's gothic buildings may not have changed much since Eklund labored through law lec- tures from 1970 to 1973, her Hutchins Hall office reflects the transitions in her life from a 1960s student to a legal aid attorney on an Indian reservation to :University administrator and mother of ;two. "During my first year as an un- dergraduate my political science professor was quite involved in Latin American studies," said Eklund, who earned a bachelor's degree in political science in 1970. ",'Between the goals of doing sonething for mankind I had from high school and the interest I established in his courses, I thought that I should work in the foreign service or something in South America to help bring good government to the people." "BUT BETWEEN going through Daily Photo byJEt-SCHRIER Law School Assistant Dean Sue Eklund spoons a mouthful of spaghetti into one-year-old Kate Eklund's mouth and gets a satisfied grimace in return. school here in the late 1960s, early 1970s, and other things happening in society, I decided probably the better thing I could do for South America would be to leave it alone rather than trying to im- pose on its government," she said. It wasn't until she practiced as a legal aid attorney on a Navaho reservation in Chinle, Ariz. that Eklund realized that she didn't enjoy the "day to day particularities related to law practice." "I realized that both my own tem- perament and a reasonable assessment of the impacts I was likely to make on people made me believe that if I could do just a little bit of good for individual human beings, I would find it both more satisfying and more easily measured as far as making a contribution to society," she said. EKLUND, a native of Detroit, said it was this realization that prompted her to apply for the law school post while she was in Ann Arbor for a women's alumni conference. And no one was more surprised than Eklund, who at age 27, became one of the University's youngest administrators. In the eight years that she has held the post, Eklund has gained the reputation as being extremely ac- cessible to students, many of whom are taking the same classes she did ten years ago. "If you have been battered by all the bureaucracy then she can work out all your problems. She is a very under- standing person," said second-year law student Kim Cahill, who called Eklund the school's "central problem solver." OTHER students, however, are somewhat more critical of Eklund. "She's a complex woman, said a second-year law student who asked not to be identified. "She helps a lot of people who can't deal with pressure. But I think she is too wishy-washy sometimes.... I think she has gotten the image that she is on this white horse and that she is a person who will always help you. But what she does is she'll try and make you think that you're happy and that you've gotten what you wanted, even if you didn't get it, and then send you away," But Eklund defends her position. "By the time a student's request comes to me it is typically the only humane, See LAW, Page 5 IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Soviets protest at U.S. Embassy MOSCOW - Hundreds of thousands of Soviets, herded by police and organizers with megaphones, marched past the U.S. Embassy and down a dozen windswept Moscow streets yesterday in a demonstration for peace and against "the shameful American aggressors." The marchers, organized by the Communist Party at schools and work- places and through radio and newspaper announcements over two days, were ferried to the rallying points by buses to join in the biggest demon- stration seen in Moscow outside official holidays like the Nov. 7 Revolution Day. Demonstrations not sanctioned by authorities are forbidden in the Soviet Union and always broken up by police. Moscow's only unofficial peace group has been harassed over activities that include nothing more than circulating petitions calling for trust between the two superpowers. Radio Moscow said 500,000 people took part in yesterday's "mass anti-war manifestations" on a bitterly cold and occasionally snowy day, converging on parks, stadiums and the government university with split-second precision. Continental pilots defy strike HOUSTON - Continental Airline union pilots defied a strike yesterday and manned scheduled flights to keep the bankrupt airline on a limited schedule. 'The pilots and flight attendants walked off their jobs shortly after 2 a.m. CDT, one week after Continental filed for reorganization and protection from creditors under federal bankruptcy laws. The company stopped all domestic flights for 62 hours and then resumed one-fourth its previous schedule and recalled 35 percent of laid-off employees. The employees who returned to work did so at half their salaries and with longer work days. Continental spokesman Bruce Kicks said some passengers, apparently worried over reports of possible delays, failed to show up for their flights. Most Continental flights departed on time even after the Air Line Pilots Association and the Union of Flight Attendants went on strike, angry over the layoffs of 70 percent of Continental's work force and pay cuts for remaining employees of about 50 percent. Pentagon spends surplus money WASHINGTON - The Defense Department, like all government agencies, hates to have money left over at the end of the fiscal year. So when the Pen- tagon faced the end of the government's fiscal year Friday, it went on a one- day, $4.2 billion shopping spree. Veteran Pentagon observers said it was the largest single-day defense ex- penditure since the Vietnam War ended a decade ago. To avoid having to return any part of its fiscal 1983 appropriation to the t Tresury Department, the Pentagon awarded 234 contracts and wiped out what would have been a surplus. Just the bare-bones descriptions of those last-minute contracts covered 29 pages. By contrast, the Pentagon normally announces two dozen to four dozen contracts every working day. The previous Friday, 4 contracts were let with a total worth of $777.3 million. The Defense Department is in the midst of a five-year, $1.7 trillion build- up, record peacetime defense spending designed to cure what President Reagan and .top administration officials say are years of neglect of America's military machine. In.fiscal 1983, the Pentagon was authorized to spend a total of $178 billion. Charges made in Aquino killing MANILA, Philippines - The government revealed yesterday "crucial" evidence that Benigno Aquino was slain by a communist but a new op- position leader said the "villain" President Ferdinand Marcos ordered the killing. The government said "heretofore secret details" were disclosed by a for- mer bodyguard of Aquno, who said the assassination was ordered by Com- munist Party of the Philippines central committee chairman Rodolfo Salas. The former bodyguard, Rosendo Cawigan, 44, told the government Salas tried three times to recruit him as the hit man to kill Aquino and that he reported each attempt to government authorities. Thenews release said, however, that Cawigan vianted to murder Aquino on his own because he feared Aquino would have him killed for previously testifying against him. A Japanese freelance writer has said he saw soldiers shoot Aguiiro. Oppo- sition leaders also accuse the government of complicity in the assassination, a charge Marcos denies. Mondae wins Maine "straw pol" AUGUSTA, Maine - Former Vice President Walter Mondale received a resounding vote of confidence from Maine Democrats yesterday to go along with his support from organized labor in his bid for the 1984 presidential nomination. Mondale received 939 votes for 51 percent of the total cast by party ac- tivists in a non-binding "straw poll." Finishing second was Sen. Alan Cranston of California with 531 votes for 29 percent of the total. A distant third was Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina with 198 votes for 11 percent. Mounting the podium minutes after the vote was announced, a jubilant Mondale told cheerring supporters, "As Maine goes, so goes the nation. Thank you, thank you, thank you." AFL-CIO leaders endorsed yesterday the White House quest of Mondale, officially ending the giant labor federation's longstanding policy of neutrality during presidential primaries and caucuses. h t Atiaiq3n taili Sunday, October 2, 1983 Vol. XCIV - No.22 A (ISSN 0745-967X) The Michigan Daily is edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday mornings during the University year at' 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 48109. Sub- scription rates: $15.50 September through April (2 semesters); $19.50 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Satur- day mornings. Subscription rates: $8 in Ann Arbor; $10 by mail outside Ann Arbor. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE MICHIGAN DAILY; 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. 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