cl be Alit i au Ninety-six years of editorial freedom Ann Arbor, Michigan - Wednesday, September 11, 1985 IatIQ Vol. XCVI- No. 5 Copyright 1985, The Michigan Daily Eight Pages Roses. bid- failsbefore ull house in Cincy CINCINNATI - Pete Rose came up empty last night in his first attempt to break the tie with Ty Cobb, going 0- for-4 and postponing his date with destiny for at least one night. Rose tied Cobb's lifetime mark of 4,191 hits last Sunday in Chicago, going 2-for-5. He did not play in the opener of a 10-game homestand Mon- day night against San Diego because the Padres threw a left-hander, Dave Dravecky. BUT ON Tuesday night before a packed house at Riverfront Stadium, Rose took his place in the lineup at fir- st base for the Cincinnati Reds again- t Padres right-hander LaMarr Hoyt, gainst whom he had an 0-for-2 lifetime mark. The Reds player-manager popped out to shortstop twice and lined out to left field twice. It was the fifth time in his past nine games Rose has gone without a hit, and he is now hitless in his last six at-bats. . Rose came to bat against Hoyt in the first inning, greeted by a standing ovation and illuminated by the housands of flashbulbs popping in the stands. When the count went to 3-1, the crowd booed Hoyt, but Rose popped up the next pitch behind second base to Padres shortstop Garry Templeton. ROSE came up again against Hoyt See SAN DIEGO, Page 7 Josephson nominate By JERRY MARKON The Michigan Student Assembly last night empowered President Paul Josephson to nominate a new vice president to replace Mickey Feusse, who resigned from the post Sunday. Josephson must submit his choice to the assembly by 5 p.m. Friday, unless he requests a one-week extension. THE PROCEDURE for selecting Feusse's replacement had to be worked out by the assembly after it was discovered that the student body constitution did not include provisions for replacing an assembly officer. Also last night, Roderick Linzie, the assembly's minority affairs resear- cher, said he had decided to withdraw his recentresignation after Josephson asked him to reconsider the move. Josephson's nominees for the vice presidency must be approved by a two-thirds vote of the assembly. If his nominee is rejected, assembly mem- bers will then put forth other nominations, in which case only a majority vote would be required. ALTHOUGH HE wouldn't reveal the names of candidates under con- sideration for the post, Josephson did say he would prefer to nominate someone from inside the assembly. Lawrence Norris, chairman of MSA's Minority Affairs Committee, said he wasn't informed of an earlier MSA Steering Committee meeting at which committee members drafted the succession process for vice president. Norris is a steering com- mittee member. In response, Josephson guaranteed Norris and the assembly that he would solicit minority input in making his decision. Earlier, he had affirmed that minority and women students would be strongly considered for the post. Josephson added that the position of vice president remains open to any student in the University. Feusse suggested Kurt Muenchow, head of MSA's Budget Priorities Committee, as a potential vice president, and Rackham Graduate School Representative Steve Krawc- zyk agreed that Muenchow deserves the position. Muenchow said he hadn't been con- tacted by MSA leaders, and that he hasn't given any thought to becoming vice president. IT WAS NOT until Feusse's resignation that MSA leaders learned of the need to create a procedure for filling vacancies. "There just happens to be no selec- tion procedure," said MSA Parliamentarian Rick Frenkel, who researched the issue at Josephson's request. to VP Neither the original student body constitution, written nearly a decade ago, nor the 1980 revision of the con- stitution included a provision for filling vacancies in the assembly's top two positions. JOSEPHSON said he recognized upon taking office that there were cer- tain gaps in the constitution. Because of these gaps, he said, MSA's Core Committee - which was formed over the summer to evaluate the entire assembly - reviewed the con- stitution. But Core Committee member Bruce Belcher said the committee hadn't made the constitution one of its major priorities. "We weren't aware of the selection problem," Belcher said. "We were looking at the bigger problems, such as why MSA hasn't been as effective as it should be." "IT'S SOMETHING you'd expect to be there, so we just weren't looking for it," he added. Even if Frenkel or the Core Com- mittee had noticed the lack of a selec- tion procedure, Josephson said, the Assembly wouldn't have had time to take action before Feusse resigned. "The constitution wasn't a big priority like the code. It was a priority like filing or changing the office around, another thing we had to do," See MSA, Page 3 Associated Press Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds pops out in his first at-bat last night as he went on to fail to get a hit in four times at bat. Rose remains one hit shy of breaking Ty Cobb's all-time hit record of 4,191. Internship programs aid students after college w By LAUREN SINAI Until David Cohen worked as an intern for the Peace Corps in Washington, D.C. last Isummer, he hadn't an inkling about job possibilities for an economics major. Now he sees himself returning to the Peace Corps for a full-time position when he graduates this spring. Business senior Eleni Sengos, on the other hand, isn't at all certain that insurance is e pression for her, especially after her ummer job with Aetna Life and Casualty in Chiago. WHETHER THEIR experiences are good or bad, undergraduates like Cohen and Sengos who land summer internships across the country through the University's Public Service Intern and Business Intern programs say their jobs provide career in- sight they might not have gained otherwise. "I started out the summer without any perspective of where I wanted to go," Cohen said, "and because of being involved with PSIP I decided what I want to do in the foreseeable future." To become involved in either program, operated by the Office of Careering Plan- ning and °Placement, students must apply and interview with former interns. The process begins tonight at 6 p.m. in Rackham Auditorium, and the Public Service Intern Program on Wednesday, September 18 at 6 p.m. also in Rackham Auditorium. AND THE process is competitive. About 300 students applied to each group last year, though only 75 were chosen for the business program while 100 were selected for the public service program, according to Anne Richter, assistant director of the career placement office. She said students are chosen on the basis on extracurricular activities and previous work experience, on motivation and en- thusiasm - and academic record. But this year students who are rejected, as wellas any other undergraduates, will be able to get help in finding internships through a third program, Summer Jobs and Internship Services, created by the Career Planning office this fall. "I'm not guaranteeing a placement," said Jobert Abueva, an LSA senior who is coor- dinating the service. "We'll give the student a guideline and help him through (the job search process), but the internship is up to his design." ABUEVA, a former intern in the business program, said he will help students resear- ch available internships on a one-on-one basis, and show them how to assess their skills and goals through lectures, workshops and group discussions. He can be reached in the career placement office on the third floor of the Student Activities Building. This term business program, open to sophomores, juniors and seniors, consists of weekly, two-hour workshops focused on specific job-hunting skills such as cover let- ter and resume-writing, researching an em- ployer, finding housing in a strange city, and handling office politics, said Sengos, now coordinator of the program. Par- ticipants will also practice interviewing before a videotape camera; the tapes will then be critiqued by their peers. During this period students will be looking for entry-level, usually paying positions in the field of their which choice, Sengos said has run the gamut from banking to adver- tising. During the winter term, the weekly meetings will be devoted to guest speakers and panel debates from such fields as finan- ce, computer;-manwgement, and the media. The Public Service Intern Program, open to students in all class levels, offers monthly workshops on resume writing and job hun- ting in Washington, D.C. and Lansing, ac- cording to Emily Weber, an LSA junior who coordinates the program. The University reserves apartments at George Washington University during June and July for public service interns to rent. The cost of spending the summer in ;Washington runs about $1,200 Weber said, .A good parking place is hard to find inA2 I By JENNIFER SMITH The ticket is on the windshield and the person who wrote it is nowhere in sight. Few things are as frustrating as eing confronted with an Ann Arbor parking ticket. Ann Arbor parking enforcement officers issued 254,329 parking tickets between July 1984 and July 1985, and the city collected $1.4 million in ticket revenue during that period, according to Donald Mason, an assistant city ad- ministrator. The. revenue includes fines from overdue tickets and impounded cars. "THEY'RE OUT to get you," said LSA senior Bill Ranger, one of many students interviewed who said students seem to be a favorite target of the ticket writers. 'Parking is one of the worst things about U of M," he said. "I don't pick on students," said parking enforcement of- ficer Chuck Fritts as he wrote out a ticket on Church Street yesterday. "I don't know one car from another. If there's an expired meter then I do it. I'm just doing my job." Fritts' beat includes the south end of the campus area, a predominately residential neighborhood where many students live. On an average day, he said, he dispenses 150 to 200 tickets in his area. ONLY ONE-THIRD of the tickets issued in the city are written in the campus area, according to Jim Stein, a city parking enforcement official. Stein said there is a com- mon misconception that ticket writers focus on students. "We have a total of 12 parking enforcers, four of which patrol the U of M area," he said. Many students choose to risk getting a parking ticket rather than feed the meters. "Sometimes it's worth the $3 ticket rather than going back to put money in the meter," said Joanne Warwick, an LSA junior. Although the city estimates that 60 percent of all tickets are eventally paid, "the rate of compliance within the first 14 days is only 25 percent," said Lillian Cuthberry, the parking violations coordinator. After 14 days, unpaid tickets are declared in default and the fine is raised. Two weeks later the fine jumps again, and a car which has six or more unpaid tickets can be.im- pounded by the city - with towing at the owner's expense. Lorne Brown, an LSA senior, learned the hard way after his car was impounded twice. He has paid over $200 in parking and towing fines over the past two years. "The University doesn't do nearly enough to provide adequate parking," he said. As an alternative to towing, the City Council this week gave preliminary approval to reintroduction of the Den- ver boot, a device which would immobilize cars with six or more unpaid tickets. Men at Work Two men put their muscle power to work on a construction site on State Street. Daily Photo by ANDI SCHREIBER JOIN THE DAILY Michigan Alumni work here: The Wall Street Journal The New York Times The Washington Post The Detroit Free Press INSIDE LOUIE, LOUIE: Arts checks out a release of rock history. See Page 5. 1 " T - -- -- -- ---