Ninety-five Years of Editorial Freedom j:j; b c LitPWan 43Iai1 t Crispy Cold and clear, with tem- peratures in the mid thirties. Vol. XCV, No. 63 Copyright 1984, The Michigan Daily Ann Arbor, Michigan - Saturday, November 17, 1984 Fifteen Cents Eight Pages F Students find snags in campus interviews By ALLISON ZOUSMER Clad in three-piece suits and black pumps, students line the lobbies of campus placement offices, waiting for them' turn to talk to recruiters who have come from miles just to in- terview them. On-campus interviewing has become an in- tegral part of the University, helping students to break through company red tape and allowing them more access to company spokespersons. But even with that convenience, many students see definite disadvantages to the preliminary interviewing system. MANY OF THE recruiters, according to business school senior Steve Simmons, "equate conformity with good performance. . . I don't think they encourage individuality or value a creative mind." After an interview for a sales position, Sim- mons said he received a feedback form that read, "Steve Simmons appears to be very in- dependent. However, he may want to take a more conservative approach. Try playing the interview game a little more." Playing the game can be ridiculous at times, Simmons said, but added that he is not ready to "hang up my suit and say this isn't for me. There are a lot of negative aspects but that's true of any job situation." MOST STUDENTS are given a half hour with recruiters and asked routine questions, a situation some feel eliminates the chance for a more personal interview. "It's unfair because it doesn't give the inter- viewer an inside glimpse of what you're like," said Wesley King, business school senior. Another problem students face with on- campus interviewing is simply the amount of time it takes away from studying and socializing. "STUDENTS have mixed emotions and 'I decided that this is my term to find a job, but I still have to work to strike a balance (between academics and interviews).' - Patricia Broderick Business school senior the way of academics because of planned visits," said Engineering Prof. John Clark. "Students often come to me and say they'll be missing class." In order to interview "diligently," a student should plan on spending at least two to six hours per week for interviews and reading company literature, according to Donald Peterson, director of the engineering school's placement office. THAT AMOUNT of time inevitably cuts into study time, and is especially difficult for students with an extreme work load, he said. "Students compolain, but they do what they have to - it's never been an issue," Peterson said. "Students heave a sigh of relief when the process comes to an end, so they don't have to spend so much time on it," said Leah Atwater, director of student services for the chem- istry department. feelings about interview," said Anne Richter, assistant director of Career Planning and Placement. "Socially, there's a need to exist as a person beyond being a student and if you add the concerns of a career decision, it can be very pressurizing." Business school senior Patricia Broderick agreed. "I decided that this is my term to find a job, but I still have to work to strike a balance (bet- ween academics and interviews)," she said. SOME STUDENTS say they would never let academics take a back seat to interviewing, but some professors say placement officers think differently. "It's almost inevitable that interviews get in Regents criticize CIA protesters By ERIC MATTSON Several members of the University's Board of Regents yesterday denounced protesters who chased Central In- telligence Agency recruiters off cam- pus this week. The regents also voted unanimously to give University President Harold Shapiro a $10,500 raise at yesterday's meeting, hiking his annual salary to $107,000. THE REGENTS condemned protesters who disrupted a CIA recruiting presentation in the Modern Languages Building Wednesday, an ac- tion which Regent Robert Nederlander (D-Birmingham) called "an outrageous violation of rights." Shapiro said he doesn't have any plans to take action against the protesters, although he added that he hasn't had time to review reports of the incident. Regent Thomas Roach (D-Saline) said that the disruption was a violation of freedom of speech. "Everyone, whether their views are popular or un- popular, has a right to exercise their rights," he said. THE DISRUPTION occurred about 4 p.m. Wednesday when three CIA recruiters entered an MLB lecture room to find 100 protesters staging a mock trial with the agency on the stand for "overthrowing the popular gover- nments of El Salvador, Chile, and Iran." Presiding "judge" Tom Marx alsc charged the CIA with "illegal mining of harbors in Nicaragua; with illegal fun- ding of (Nicaraguan) contras; with publishing manuals encouraging assassination and other illegal acts; with endangering the lives of the passengers on Korean flight 007; and with the illegal interference of elections in other countries." The CIA representatives left with many of the protesters right on thei] heels. REGENT DEANE BAKER (R-Ann Arbor) acknowledged that "those 'people who protested the CIA's presen- ce have a right to be heard," but adde that the actions they took created "an intolerable situation, and an apology is due to the students who wanted to in terview." Shapiro said that he plans tc apologize to the 12 to 14 students wh wanted to talk with representatives o the agency. Also yesterday, the regents raise Shapiro's salary 10.8 percent to $107,00( from $96,500. Regent Gerald Dunn (D-Garden City) said before the See SHAPIRO, Page 3 1 Bo s boys to battle Bucks I By DOUGLAS B. LEVY Special to the Daily COLUMBUS-When they clash, it will be for all the marbles. Today (12:10 p.m., CBS-TV), Michigan and Ohio State lay it all on the line. A capacity crowd in Ohio Stadium and a national television audience will be treated to a war. "We just have to put a great perfor- mance together, one where everybody just sells out and plays brilliantly, and we can win this game,'' said Michigan coach Bo Schembechler on Monday. ANYTHING short of brilliance and Bo's boys may be in line for an em- barrassing defeat. The 1984 Buckeyes, behind a potent offense, have built a record of 8-2, 6-2 in the Big Ten. A win over the Wolverines (6-4, 5-3) puts Ohio State in its first Rose Bowl in five years. For Michigan to have a chance, Buckeye tailback Keith Byars must be contained. Byars leads the nation with 1,568 rushing yards and 19 touchdowns. The junior averages 5.4 yards per rush, and is also second on the team with 34 receptions for 422 yards (a 12.4 average per grab). HOWEVER, Schembechler must be! cautious. "I'd say Ohio State is not a pure running team. They're a run-pass team," said Schembechler. Mike Tomczak is a three-year starter at quarterback and has two dangerous receivers from which to choose. Junior flanker Mike Lanese leads OSU with 35 catches for 541 yeards, 15.5 yards per reception. Freshman split end Cris Ca ter has caught seven touchdown pa- _s and has averagedX14.7 yards on Y s 30 season receptions. Tomczak's protection and Byars' gaping holes come from the strongest offensive line in the conference. "They're all good. They're all seniors, some of them fifth-year (seniors) and they're all, about 6-6, 265-270 pounds," observed Schembechler. DEFENSIVELY, Ohio State is not quite as prolific. Schembechler said that Michigan's best way to defense the Buckeye attack, is to keep Byars and company off the field. A key for the Wolverines then, is maintaining a ball control offense. Chris Zurbrugg will start his fourth game at quarterback for the Wolverines. On the season, Zurbrugg has completed 55 percent of his passes for 445 yards, with five scores and five interceptions. It is Zurbrugg's ability to execute the quarterback option that could damage the Buckeyes. Ohio State's defensive backfield star- ts three first-year players, including two freshmen at the cornerbacks. But Schembechler noted that, after a full season of competition, the backfield is playing like a group of veterans. THE BUCKEYE defensive front line and linebacking are typically strong. Tackles Dave Crecelius and Dave Morrill and middle guard Anthony Guiliani are all seniors. See WOLVERINES, Page 7 Daily Photo by MATT PETRIE Ups and downs Ted Ketchum, LSA Sophomore of Chi Psi, and Tammy Boskovich, LSA Sophomore of Delta Delta Delta, teeter totter on the Diag yesterday. The teeter totterathon is to raise funds for Mott's Children's Hospital to fight cancer. Baby Fae dead: heart transplant not bla-med LOMA LINDA, Calif. (AP)-Baby Fae, who made medical history and generated ethical questions as she fought for life for three weeks with the heart of a baboon beating in her chest, died yesterday after her kidneys began to fail. She was barely a month old. Leonard Baily, chief surgeon at r Loma Linda University Medical Cen- ter, where the baby died at 9 p.m. Thur- sday said that while the exact cause of e death had not been determined, he did not believe the baboon heart was at d fault. s HE SAID the baby lost "cardio fun- - ction in the last two hours of her existence-not from a rejection but from a culmination of events surroun- o ding rejection." f "It's probably a combination of things," Bailey said, noting d cyclosporin, the anti-rejection drug 0 used to suppress the baby's immune system, "has been touted as a drug that Scan kill kidneys. That isn't entirely . correct, of course. There are a host of other things." A preliminary autopsy was perfor- med with the parents' encouragement, he said. "I'VE SEEN the heart. The heart muscle is inflamed, which confirms the rejection," Bailey said. "She clearly had a rejection episode.... Hers was no more than moderately a problem. The 5-pound infant, born with a lethally deformed heart, outlived by more than two weeks any of the four adults whose hearts had been replaced with animal hearts. She had lived longer with the transplanted heart than she had with her own. "Baby Fae has opened new vistas for all children, including the as-yet unborn infants with similar lethal heart disease." His voice quavering with emotion, Bailey told reporters: "The Baby Faes and their parents are the real pioneers in this quest to enrich our quality of life. Today we grieve the loss of this patient's life...her unique place in our memories will derive from what she and her parentshave done togive rise to a ray of hope for the babies to come." 1963 pinup calendars to sell again in 1985 CHICAGO (AP)-For 22 years, Jack Chia has been trying to unload thousands of "Girl a Week & Joke a Day" calendars that he couldn't sell when they were new. No'w time is back on his side-the days and dates on the 1963 calendar match those of 1985. He laminated the pictures of his pinup beauties on an array of household items. He tried peddling the photos to a nudist camp. He tried selling the jokes to fortune cookie makers. No sale. STILL, CHIA said he expects 1985 to be the year he finally finds a market the 150,000 calendars he has left. "People like the calendarsbecause they think they're arty, they leave more to the imagination" than today's pinup pictures, he said. "Also, this is sort of a nostalgia appeal....These are part of history." Chia said he came up with the idea for the calendars in 1962, when pinup calendars were in their prime. He said he created the Good-Time Publishing Co. as a vehicle for his brainstorm and bought the rights to photographs of Sophia Loren, Brigitte Bardot and other beauties, posing in the nude or in scanty outfits. After spending about $50,000, Chia slapped a $1 price tag on the calendars and waited for success. But because of delays by the distributor, the calendars didn't hit newsstands until January 1963. Baby Fae ... dies from kidney failure TODAY 1 r younger Baltich, a recent graduate of the University of Minnesota-Duluth, defeated incumbent Gerard Bibeau to capture the $120-a-month job. He credits victory to cam- paigning door-to-door alone and with friends. Real jokes C AMARILLO, Calif. - Neither wind nor rain nor show got to Kevin Smith's 1964 Corvette when he was on wasn't sold, and the Corvette, kept "safe from the elemen- ts," had not a scratch. Keith Smith said. Miller's truck was painted with water-base paint. "It took him about an hour or so to wash it off, but it sure stood out," Smith said. "It's not really the macho image he was used to... He decided to wash the truck when his girl started laughing her head off on the freeway." Peanut nut Digest begins with the headline "Give a gift you grow" and shows the Christmas tins sitting on a bed of soybeans. Stut- tman got the idea from candy-coated peanuts. Soybeans are healthier - "the light version of peanuts," he said in a telephone interview. He said he hopes this year to double last Christmas's sales of 3,000 tins. Stuttman's Inari Trading Co. is one of 10 companies which produce soybeans for use as snacks and nut substitutes, said Bill Shurtleff of the Soyfoods Center in Lafayette, Calif. However, Shurtliff said he believes Inari is the only company offering confec- tion-coated soybeans. I I I I i