The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 14, 1983 - Page 3 Inflation reduces salary hikes for business grads By ERIC MATTSON Starting salaries for business school graduates from the University went up about 4 percent last year, a substan- tially lower increase than such positions have offered in previous years. According to a report released yesterday by the placement office of the Graduate School of Business Ad- ministration, recent graduates also are being more selective about which job to accept, with 39 percent going into positons which pay significantly less than the highest offer would have. THE REPORT, which did not include graduates who were unable to find jobs, includes figures for both bachelor's and master's graduates. According to placement director Margaret Carroll, who prepared the report, salaries had been rising bet- ween 8 percent and 12 percent annually at inflation's peak. She said the decline in the inflation rate was the primary cause of this year's low increase. "Job content and opportunity for ad- vancement were given as the most im- portant factors for the selection of a position, followed closedly by industry of the employer and level of respon- siblity," Carroll said in the report. LAST YEAR, 290 firms recruited bachelor's and master's degree studen- ts through the school's placement of- fice, conducting 11,141 interviews - an average of 15 on-campus interviews per business student. Carroll said the school does not have accurate figures on how many students have not found work since graduation. The most popular positions for- master's degree holders last year were with aerospace and electronics com- panies, the automotive and transpor- tation industry, management advisory services in public accounting firms, and commercial banking. Bachelor's graduates also favored aerospace and electronics companies as well as food and beverage processing firms, chemical and pharmaceutical firms, public accounting, and commer- cial banking. Master's graduates accepted positions paying from $13,200 to $44,700. Bachelor's degree holders were given jobs paying from $12,000 to $28,500,the report said. Joint Venture Daily Photos by RENEE FREIER No, this isn't a scene from last year's hash bash. These students, from the University's "Woody Plants" botany class, are merely examining local plant life during a field test they were taking yesterday at the Bird Hills forest off of Huron River. Man banned from 'U' buildings Subscribe to the Michigan Daily By MICHAEL ROLNICK An Ann Arbor resident who says University security officers have ban- ned him from all University buildings is seeking felony charges against the of- ficers who he says threatened him. Glen Roberts, 21, filed a complaint Tuesday with the Ann Arbor office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation because of a Sept. 12 confrontation with three University security officers who r asked him to leave the Law Library. ROBERTS, who is not a student at the University, said he had been to the library several times before to conduct research for a legal suit in which he is involved. When he entered the library Sept. 12, Roberts said he was stopped by a guard, who asked him for student iden- tification. When Roberts said he was not a student but had used the library several times before, the guard called for two other officers. The guards told Roberts use of the library is restricted to law students, lawyers, or people holding special passes and asked him to leave. When he protested, they) asked him for other T ' r 'The officers treated me nicely until they found out I didn't have a phone number. That is when they suggested that I . . . go hang out on the ... Diag.' --Gle1 Roberts Phone 764-0558 identification. "THE OFFICERS treated me nicely until they found out I didn't have a phone number," Roberts said. "That is when they suggested that I should go hang out on the south corner of the Diag with all the street people and vagran- Roberts said he was leaving the building when the officers threatened to use force and told him he was not to en- ter any University buildings in the future, a prohibition he says infringes on his constitutional rights. Robert's complaint says the ban would keep him from voting if his assigned polling place is located in a University building, denies him the right to medical care at University Hospital, and bars him from attending performances or eating in University building open to the public. A spokesperson at the FBI said the bureau must decide whether the com- plaint is within their jurisdication before they can file charges. University security officials declined to discuss the incident. 'U' names YOUR UNM IS WORTH AN OFFICER'SOMISSION IN THE ARM Your BSN means you're a professional. In the Army, it also means you're an officer. You start as a full-fledged member of our medical team. Write: Army Nurse Opportunities, P.O. Box 7713, Burbank, CA 91510. A Y N EORPS. BE ALLYUCAN BE., .. Eli HAPPENINGS temporary Highlights The University Philharmonia and The University Choir under the direc- tion of Patrick Gardner and Carl St. Clair will perform Vaughan Williams' Serenade to Music and Beethoven's Choral Fantasia at 8 p.m. tonight at Hill Auditorium. Films AAFC-Baby It's You, 7 & 9 p.m., MLB 4. Alt. Act. - Ann of 1,000 Days, 7 p.m.; Mary. Queen of Scots. 9:30 p.m.. Nat. SCI. DLB. Cinema Guild - Derzu Uzala, 7 & 9 p.m., Lorch Hall. Cinema II - Gallipoli, 7 & 9 p.m., Aud. A, Angell. Mediatrics - Last Tango In Paris, 7 & 9:15, MLB Aud. 3. Performances The Ark - Jim Post, 8 p.m., 1421 Hill Auditorium. Music School Recital - Pamela Jean Sternad, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall Performance Network - "Dangerous Times" 8 p.m., 408 W. Washington. PTP - "Rivals," 8p.m., Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre. Halfway Inn - Plain Truth, Ground Zero, and Dissonance, 9 p.m., Half- way Inn, Corner of Hill and Church. Admission $2.50. Ann Arbor Women's Peace Camp - "Children of a Lesser God," and "The Civil Defense Primer," 8 p.m., at the Performance Network, 408 W. Washington. Tickets are $3-$5. For information call 995-5871. Speakers Anthropology Colloquium - Elinor Melwville, "The Pastoral Economy in 16th Century Mexico," 4 p.m., 2053 LSA. Guild House - Sallyanne Payton, Professor, University of Michigan Law School will speak at the continuing series "Women's Lives," noon, Guild House, 802 Monroe. For information, call 662-5189. Astronomy - Robert Kirshner, "Dark Matter in the Universe," 8:30 p.m., Aud. B, Angell. South and Southeast Asian Studies - Suresh Vasant, "The Junnat Caves of Maharashtra and Their Environs," noon, 130 Lane Hall. Law School - Peter L. Berger will present the William Cook lecture on Dimensions of Pluralism: Religion and Morality in America, "Churches as Mediating Structures," 4 p.m., MLB 1. Aerospace Engineering - Undergraduate Seminar, Robert Buchanan, "Current Flight Test Capabilities and Career Opportunities," 3:30-5 p.m., 107 Aerospace Engineering Building. Meetings Korean Christian Fellowship Bible Study - 9 p.m., Campus Chapel. Ann Arbor Chinese Bible Class - 7:30 p.m., University Reformed Church. Chinese Students Christian Fellowship - "Fellowship and Bible Study," 7:30 p.m., 730 Tappan. American Cancer Society - Washtenaw County unit meeting, 7 and 8 p.m., 4105 Jackson Rd. minority Services worker By GEORGEA KOVANIS University officials yesterday named a temporary replacement for the black student representative in the minority services office. Donna Hodge, a doctoral candidate in psychology, will replace Valerie Glenn, who resigned last month after a University audit of the office's books. Hodge was selected over one other candidate by a committee consisting of Vice President for Student Services Henry Johnson, Ellen Offen, the assistant director of the Office of Com- munity Services, and the minority student services staff members. Offen said Hodge will begin work next week and will continue in the position until a permanent replacement is found. The position will be opened for applicants Monday. Q RIBS:. PCA T CHICKEN FR O SHRIMP 10 SEAFOODS DINNERS' SANDWICHES * SIDE ORDERS CARRY - OUTS %OR DELIVERY SERVICE D~ADYT~1 nVf T CCD £ rf!'C, M A G NJi S EXHIBITION AND SALE of FINE ART REPRODUCTIONS NEW THIS YEAR: " CLASSIC PHOTOGRAPHS " POST CARDS " EXHIBITION POSTERS " RARE PRINTS Michigan Union Presents MON.-FRI., OCT. 17-21 10:00 a.m.-5 p.m. POND ROOM MICHIGAN UNION (Oct. 20-Anderson Room) FEATURING: Old Masters, Impressionism, Surrealism, Van Gogh, Picasso, Escher, 19th - 20th Century American, E. S. Curtis, Norman Rockwell, Oriental Art and Museum Posters from the Metropolitan, Walker, Guggenheim, National Gallery and more. PRICES MOST LARGE PRINTS S3-50 each or 3 for S 9.00 S I I II!