4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 15, 1985 South Quad escapes another fire. By JERRY MARKON Another fire was narrowly averted in South Quad yesterday morning when a cigarette tossed into a trash can burnt itself out before University security arrived on the scene. The near-fire in Kelsey House was located in one of the same trash cans that was set ablaze on Feb. 4, when South Quad residents evacuated their dorm for over an hour. ACCORDING TO five officials, the cigarette- which was discovered by a student retur- ning home from the Union's Computer Center - did not produce enough smoke to mandate pulling a fire alarm. "Had there been a fire, there would have been an alarm pulled, because that's the regulation," said South Quad Building Director Mary Antieau. A resident in Kelsey House said he saw fire officials in the hallway when he left the dorm early in the morning, and Fire Inspector Robert Harris confir- med that arson investigators from both the fire and police departments arrived on the scene after being called by University security. FIRE INSPECTOR Robert Harris confirmed the department will look into the incident, saying "it's possible it could be related to the other fires." He labeled the latest incident "an attempt at deliberately lighting another fire." "A person would have to be pretty naive to throw a lit cigarette into a trash can," he added. Joel Allan, the manager of housing security, called the near-miss a "suspicious incident which we are looking into." Yesterday morning's near-fire was the latest in a series of fires plaguing central campus in the past two weeks. In addition to the previous South Quad fires, a trash can fire was extinguished in West Quad on Feb. 9, and another trash can fire was put out Wednesday morning in a men's bathroom in the Union. Investigators have several suspects in the rash of fires, including a former West Quad resident who was evicted last year for assaulting another resident, a varsity athlete who was the prime suspect in a similar series of fires in South Quad last year, and another former South Quad resident who no longer lives in the Quad. Creativity, skills gain jobs, couns 1 (Continued from Page 1) Deborah Orr May, director of the University's Office of Career Planning and Placement, suggested that studen- ts begin by asking themselves the following questions: " What skills have I developed in college? " What aspirations do I have for my job? ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION INTERN TAMARACK OUTDOOR EDUCATION PROGRAM ORTONVILLE, MICHIGAN -opportunity to train as a naturalist with our outdoor education staff. -involves working with children in a recognized school camping program. -February to June, immediate opening. -some experience and ba'ckground in outdoor education, natural resources, forestry, or related fields. Contact Randolph Childs (313/627-2821), Marvin Berman (313/661-0600), or make appointment with Tamarack at Career Planning & Placement. Housing Division Resident Director Position Available August 1, 1985 HENDERSON HOUSE, 1330 HILL ST. Undergraduate Female House Application Forms Available in the Housing Office, 1500 S.A.B. Qualifications: A bachelor's degree or the equivalent is desirable. Henderson House offers a co-operative living arrangement. The 30 undergraduate women residents share the responsi- bilities of cleaning the house and cooking meals by each working five hours per week. The Resident Director super- vises the work activities, orders food, is responsible for building maintenance and acts as a liason between student residents, Housing Division and University supporting or- ganizations. Applicants are encouraged to make an appoint- ment to visit the house by telephoning Maia Bergman at 995-0123. DEADLINE FOR APPLICATION IS 4:00 P.M., MARCH 1, 1985 A NON-DISCRIMINATORY AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER s What jobs reflect those skills and aspirations? A University of Texas study indicated that the most marketable skill among liberal arts students is the ability to communicate effectively, both in writing and speaking. Other important skills include data processing, computer literacy, budget management, sales and managing ex- perience, and a working knowledge of human relations. Areas of work where liberal arts students typically find jobs include communication fields, banking, fashion, marketing, real estate, social services, travel, and government - though jobs in this sector have been declining. But placement officials stressed that liberal arts students won't find the job of their dreams posted on the list of recruiters at their universities' placement offices or in the want ads section of the newspaper. "VERY FEW liberal arts graduates I EARTHSHAKING - etors say are in the main stream of on-campus recruiting," Kayser said. "They have to go out after they graduate and find the jobs themselves." May echoed her comments. "Advertised jobs are only 20 percent of those available," she said. "A passive job hunter only applies to those jobs he or she sees in the paper... You must go out and find the jobs." BUT FINDING them may require a bit of creativity. As a case in point, the University's career planning and placement office has asked job hunters to list as many job titles as they could think of in a given length of time. According to May the average student generated only about 30 titles. "Most people base their career choices on the 30 jobs they've heard of. There are more than 35,000 job titles out there and these kids are only choosing from the 30 that they know," she said. There are at least three ways to learn more about a career. Besides reading up on the field, a University student can turn to the career planning and placem- ent office's alumni job network. Alumni have given the office their names and phone numbers and encourage students to call them about their jobs. KEY OF DAVID MATH,TEXT AND REVELATION $6.00 POSTPAID GRAPHIC SOLUTION TO THE WARREN REPORTERROgs4.5o To TH E KEY BOX 634 PARKCHESTER, NY 10462 Tomorrow; A look at the business field. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press international reports Kidnapped reporter finds refuge WASHINGTON-American journalist Jeremy Levin, kidnapped 11 mon- ths ago in Beirut, was freed yesterday in apparent good health and is being cared for in Damascus, Syria, authorities said. Levin, the Beirut bureau chief for Cable News Network, disappeared last March 7. Syrian Ambassador Rafic Jouejati said his government secured the 51- year-old Levin's release, adding that the reporter had been examined at a medical"center in the Syriancapital and found to be in good health. Although the ambassador said the newsman was freed after negotiations, a Syrian source said he had escaped and found his way to a Syrian military post in eastern Lebanon. "He escaped. He is with us," the source said. Christian-run Voice of Lebanon radio in Beirut also reported his freedom as an escape. "I fled toward midnight from the two-story villa where I was being held," Levin was quoted as saying. "I walked for two hours before hearing a dog and humanvoices." "I thought my kidnappers were at my heels so I hid under a truck. But when I saw it was Syrian soldiers, I gave myself up," he said. Toyo cops find poisoned candyx TOKYO-Nearly a quarter of Japan's police were on alert yesterday to' head off a Valentine's Day offensive by the "Man with 21 Faces" extortion gang, which threatened to put cyanide-laced candy in stores across the nation. Some 45,000 plainclothes and uniformed officers-about a quarter of the nation's total police force-was ordered to duty in response to the discovery of at least 13 poisoned candy packets Tuesday and Wednesday in Tokyo and Nagoya. Police said tests confirmed that eight of the 13 packages-all marked with' a warning that they contained poison-were spiked with lethal doses of cyanide. No injuries or deaths have been reported as a result of poisoned candy. The "Man with 21 Faces" gang has mounted a nearly yearlong campaign to extort payoffs from food and candy firms. But, while the gang has managed to elude police, it apparently has yet to collect any of the money it has demanded. Philippine hotel fire kills 23; still burning, authorities say MANILA, Philippines-Authorities blamed arsonists yesterday for a luxury hotel fire that killed at least 23 people and search teams hunted for more victims in the blackened building, where fires were still burning. Winds fanned new fires in previously untouched areas and the 460-room hotel Regent of Manila Hotel, continued to belch black smoke early today-48 hours after the deadly blaze broke out. The bodies of 21 people were recovered and officials said two others had been located. At least five Americans were killed and two remain unac- counted for, a U.S. Embassy spokesman said. Fire department officials said the death toll was expected to rise when the nine-story hotel's top four floors are searched. "They (victims) must be all over the place," said a major source who requested anonymity. "Some stayed in their rooms and died there, some miglt be in the hallways, in the elevators, or the stairways." Vietnamese overrun rebel force KHAO SARAPEE, Thailand-Vietnamese troops and armor sweeping through the jungle behind a ferocious artillery barrage overran one Khmer Rouge stronghold yesterday and seized part-of another in the western Cam- bodia mountains, Tiai military officers reported. The Thai border commander predicted the entire guerrilla complex would fall by today. A knowledgeable Soviet bloc diplomat said ti may be the "tur- ning point of the war" that broke out after Vietnam invaded Cambodia and ousted Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge regime in January 1979. With guerrilla forward defense lines shattered by three days of withering artillery fire, 13,000 Vietnamese troops surged from the south and east in a pincer movement that overwhelmed the Khao Din stronghold and captured half the guerrilla headquarters at Phnom Malai, said Col. Chettha Than- najaro, deputy commander of the Eastern border Field Force. Hundreds of guerrillas fleeing the assault on Khao Din trudged northward about 19 miles south of the key Thai border town of Aranyaprathet. The seasoned fighters, who have roamed the Cambodia countryside for years, took everything with them-field guns, food, even war elephants. Israelis raid Lebanese village SIDON, Lebanon-Israeli soldiers rolled into a south Lebanon village yesterday, pushed French U.N. peacekeeping troops aside and bulldozed four buildings they claimed were guerrilla weapon storehouses, United Nations officials reported. Sources in the area, who spoke on condition they not be identified, said the Israelis knocked down three houses and a Shiite Moslem Civic center and arrested more than 60 villagers during an eight-hour occupation of Bourj Rahal. Shiite guerrillas make frequent raids on Israeli forces in the area. Israeli military sources in Tel Aviv, Israel, said one man was killed in the raid, and reporters said two villagers were wounded. The sources would speak only on condition of anonymity. The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv reported that elsewhere in south Lebanon yesterday, Israelis killed 11 guerrillas and captured nine in one en- counter. Vol. XVC -'Np. 113 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Tuesday through Sunday during the Fall and Winter terms and Tuesday through Saturday during the Spring and Summer terms by students at the University of Michigan. Sub- scription rates: Feb. 15th through April - $5.50 in Ann Arbor; $9.50 outside the city; Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Ar- bor, Michigan 48109. The Michigan Daily is. a member of the Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndi- cate and College Press Service, and United Students Press Service. J Study Abroad LONDON POLITICAL INTERNSHIP PROGRAM " Earn up to 16 hrs credit " Work as Intern to Members of Parliament and Constituency Agents * Course work and directed studies in British Government " Central Londonlodging " Fall 1985 and Spring 1986 sessions. Inquiries: Dean Timothy Perkins 403 ME, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115 (617) 437-4364 4 4 You choose suntan tion you need from lotions by number-depending the sun. Now, thanks to Carrera, on how much protec- you can do the same with sunglass lenses. A PERFECT BLEND OF SPORT AND FUNCTION Carrera's wide variety of lenses allows each person to choose the right sunglasses for every situation. C-60 C-80 C-100* Editor in Chief ................. .NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors...........JOSEPH KRAUS PETER WILLIAMS Managing Editors..........GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor ................ THOMAS MILLER Features Editor............LAURIE DELATER City Editor ................ ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor ............... 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