The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 5, 1983 - Page 5 Peace Corp seeks recruits By LINDA LANE Seniors who are undecided about what to do after graduation will have the opportunity to interview for a dif- ferent kind of job later this month. Peace Corps representatives will be on campus today and tomorrow to give lectures and answer questions from potential volunteers as part of their an- nual recruiting drive. They will return later this month to conduct interviews. THE UNIVERSITY has a special. significance for the Peace Corps, since President John Kennedy announced the program's creation on the steps of the' Michigan Union in October 1960. Since that time, 1,025 University graduates have been Peace Corps volunteers, and 36 alumni are currently serving in more than 60 nations world- wide, according to Victor Bullen, the University's Peace Corps represen- tative. In exchange for two years of service,. volunteers receive free transportation to and from their assigned country; in- tensive language, cultural, and technical training; complete medical and dental care; and a monthly allowance for food, rent and travel ex- penses. IN ADDITION, a volunteer receives $175 per month, which is set aside in the United States, and a deferral on student loans payments. "It's not giving up two years of your life-it's adding two years to your life," Bullen said. Now a graduate student in the School of Natural Resources, Bullen spent four years in Paraguay as a Peace Corps volunteer. "I joined the Peace Corps because I thought it was a great opportunity to get to know a place while I was helping myself," Bullen said. "You really get to know your own culture just by con- trasting it to other cultures." UNIVERSITY graduate David Rockholm, who received a masters degree in biology in August, said it was this interest in observing other cultures and a desire to serve people that drew him to volunteer for the Peace Corps. "I'm excited about going to a new place and metting new people," he said. "It'll be an interesting time, where I'm able to learn a lot as well as help other people." Rockholm has been assigned to teach secondary school in the Fiji Islands, and will fly there in November for two to three months of intense language and cultural training. Rockholm also said he hopes to find out if he enjoys teaching. "I want to take a step back from school-I want to' learn how to apply (what I've been taught)," he said. ALTHOUGH many people think of the Peace Corps as a place for people with scientific or medical backgroun- ds, the program needs all kinds of volunteers, and employs students with undergraduate degrees in almost any discipline, Bullen said. If a volunteer is assigned to a job out- side of his or her field, the Peace Corps will often provide the necessary training for free. "Volunteers always agree that they got more out of the exerience than they put into it," said Jane Carter, a Peace Corps recruiter. But Carter said that the Peace Corps can have a darker side. In addition to "learning to care about people," Carter said she learned about the unpleasant aspects of the world. "I HAD ALWAYS thought poverty was neat and clean and well-mended, but it's not. It's dirty and ugly," she said. Culture shock is another obstacle that volunteers have to overcome. Volun- teers may feel briefly that home is very far away, and that they're stranded in the midst of a strange culture, said Car- ter. The degree of culture shock ex- perienced varies from person to per- son-all volunteers feel it eventually, Carter said, but the Peace Corps coun- selors help the volunteers adjust to a Carter ... challenges students new culture. Carter said that the occasional "thank you" and the feeling of accom- plishment makes the job worth the ef- fort. "I felt that I did have a finger in the dike-I did help," Carter said. Pillsbury politics AP Photo Former Democratic presidential advisor Esther Peterson, (left), protests Reagan's spending policies in the "First National Let Them Eat Cake Sale" held yesterday on Pennsylvania Avenue. Helms drops opposition to holiday WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Jesse Helms (R.-N.C.) agreed "You can be assured it was worked at with Helms, Sen. last night to drop his filibuster against legislation to create a Baker consulted with Helms and I do not expect him to ob- national holiday honoring Martin Luther King Jr. and permit ject," said Griscom. a vote on the bill Oct. 18, Senate Majority Leader Howard SENATE MINORITY Leader Robert Byrd said he was Baker's chief spokesman said. seeking consent of all Democrats to the arrangement. -Tom Griscom, the press aide, confirmed the agreement, Earlier yesterday, the slain civil rights leader's son joined which still needs the consent of all senators. But he added, "If a rally on the steps of the Capitol where Helms was denoun- one senator objects, the whole thing is off." ced as a "spokesman for racial hate." BAKER HAD planned a vote today on a cloture motion to limit debate by Helms, who has been stalling the bill since President Reagan has said he would sign the bill, which the Monday. A cloture motion calls for immediate action on an House passed 338-90 two months ago, despite some earlier issue. reservations about the cost of a new national holiday in lost The first hint of a change came when Baker said on the floor work time. The bill would observe the holiday on the third he would introduce a "unammous consent" resolution for the Monday in January, starting in 1986. King's birthday is Jan. vote on Oct. 18, eliminating the need for the cloture vote. 15. Dance Fever! LEARN TO DANCE-STUDY WITH SOME OF THE FINEST UNIVERSITY DANCE INSTRUCTORS CLASS LESSONS " TAP DANCE-WEDNESDAY-5:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Lisa Ryan. Instructor " BEGINNING BALLET-MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY-7:45 p.m. to 9:15, p.m. Christopher Flynn, Instructor " INTERMEDIATE/ADVANCED BALLET-MONDAY AND WEDNESDAY- 7:45 p.m. to 9:15 p.m. Christopher Flynn, Instructor * JAZZ DANCE-TUESDAY AND THURSDAY-6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Charles Gullo, Instructor * MODERN DANCE-TUESDAY AND THURSDAY-6:00 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. WHERE? UNIVERSITY DANCE BUILDING (Central Campus Rec. Bldg.) WHEN? 10 WEEKS, BEGINNING WEEK OF OCTOBER 10th COST? $6.00 a class lesson, plus $5.00 initial reg. fee REGISTER? AT THE DANCE BUILDING-9 a.m. to 4 p.m. OCTOBER 3 to 7 MORE INFORMATION! CALL 763-5460 or 764-6118 A Part of P.A.C.E., School of Music Preparatory and Community Enrichment Program Daytona race draws few (Continued from Page 1) Participants are given three laps around the track, with one warm-up 1 lap and one wind-down lap. The second trip around is timed, and each pylon knocked down adds a second to the driver's time. "IT'S NOT how fast you drive, it's how safe you drive," said Bob Cronin of the Chrysler Corp., the competition's announcer. As of 2:30 p.m. yesterday, the time to beat was 19.5 seconds. But many THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ARE A GREAT WAY TO GET FAST RESULTS CALL 764-0557 drivers were well above the mark, with scores in the 22-to 23-second range. Just in case anyone, decided to exhibit their reckless driving skills, drivers were required to wear seat belts and safety helmets while driving. In an emergency, the car can be stop- ped by radio control. "IT WAS A lot of. fun,'' said engineering senior Jim Robnett, who raced around the track at 12.05 seconds ds. Student reps skip meetings E -Systems continues', the tradition of the world's great problem solvers. > ,,- GREW SAID that one of the commit- tee's three student members came. regularly and "was a real part of the committee, but the other two maybe came to three (meetings) between them." The Financial Affairs Committee added two student positions to the panel for the first time last December, but at the three remaining meetings, only one of the appointees showed up for one of the meetings. THE COMMITTEE with the largest number of student. positions, the Academic Affairs Committee, also suf- fered from a lack of student attendan- ce. At only one meeting were there ' more than two of the five student mem- Poice notes Students raped Two University students' were raped at their apartment in the 500 block of Longshore early this morning by two men in their mid-20s, Ann Arbor Police said. The first victim was awakened at 2:30 a.m. to find two intruders in her bedroom. The men threatened her with a knife, and each raped her. The victim's roommate, who had not been home, returned to find the men still in the house. She was also raped by the men, who then bound the two women and robbed them of a small amount of money before fleeing the apartment. The women were taken to University hospital, where they were examined and released. Ann Arbor police have no suspects in the case, and are con- tinuing their investigation. bers present. A few committees did manage better attendance. The Research Policies Committe and the Civil Liberties Board had near perfect attendance. Still, the overall picture seems to indicate that this is the exception. The Michigan Student Assembly is responsible for appointing students to the committees, but this is not as easy as it seems. Last year, for example, there were still openings for student members on several committees as late as January. "ONE PROBLEM is that on a lot of the committees students don't feel that their input is vital," explained LSA junior Susan Povich, vice president for personnel at MSA. John Strek, a member of the Academic Affairs Committee last year, agreed with Povich. "I would have been better motivated if I thought I could have contributed more," said Strek, an engineering senior who was listed in the commit- tee's minutes only once as being in at- tendance. "MOST OF the things we dealt with were faculty related. I didn't have enough background on some of the issues. They (faculty) have more ac- cess to information than we did," he said. LSA senior Pamela Scales, a member of the same committee last year, said that last minute changes in meeting times was partially to blame for low student attendance. Another reason for student absen- teeism is that MSA did not follow-up on its appointments, several former MSA -and committee members said. "IT WAS JUST assumed that if you were appointed, you would go to the meetings," said Steve Linowes, an LSA junior and member of the Student Relations Committee last year. MSA President Mary Rowland said she hopes attendance will be better this year and plans to take measures to prevent absenteeism. Guglielmo Marconi was able to see communications rev- olutionized by his development of the first successful system of radio telegraphy-the wireless. His first experimental transmis- sions were no more than a few feet. But, within a quarter of a century, he had advanced his system to the point that a radio message sent from England could be received in Australia. E-Systems scientists and engineers continue to expand the technology he began. Today, communications equipment designed and developed by E-Systems engineers is used extensively around the world for line-of-sight or satellite communi- cations, digital communications and applications requiring micro- processor-based teleprinters, tactical radios and microminia- ture HF VHF and UHF equipment. In addition to communica- tions, E-Systems engineers are solving many of the world's toughest problems in antennas, data acquisition, processing, storage and retrieval systems and other systems applications for intelligence and reconnaissance. Often, the developed systems are the first-of-a-kind. For a reprint of the Marconi illustration and information on ca- reer opportunities with E-Systems in Texas, Florida, Indiana, Utah, and Virginia, write: Dr. Lloyd K. Lauderdale, Vice President Research and Engineering, E-Systems, Inc., Corporate Headquarters, P 0. Box 226030, Dallas, Texas 75266. .'E-SYST EMS The problem solvers. An equal opportunity employer M F H V pt -Im mm EM m m m am a I Rm RW m 19 Milli