Page 2-- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, November 12, 1985 Scholar cites st (Continued from Page 1) employment patterns over the next decade. Her own decision to pursue a career as a professor - economics is her specialty - was partially influenced by her family's academic background. Her father, brother, and sister all earned their doctorate degrees and her mother had a master's. Her mother-in-law received a medical degree in 1912. "IT WAS A CULTURE I was raised in, and I feel comfortable in," she says, and adds jokingly, "maybe it's lack of imagination." Still, she admits that entering the male-dominated university world presented "very difficult hurdles for women to jump." When she began her own ascent up the administrative ladder in the late 1950s and early 60s, women were filing discrimination suits against colleges across the country in an attempt to break down barriers that until then had locked women out of executive of- fices. SHE CREDITS much of her deter- London School of Economics and Political Science A chance to study and live in London Junior-year programs, Postgraduate Diplomas. One-Year Master's Degrees and Research Opportunities in the Social Sciences. The wide range of subjects includes: Accounting and Finance * Actuarial Science " Anthropology " Business Studies * Economics S Econometrics * Economic History * European Studies * Geography * Government * Industrial Relations * International History * International Relations e Law e Management Science * Operational Research " Personnel Management * Philosophy " Population Studies " Politics " Regional and Urban Planning Studies " Sea-Use Policy " Social Administration * Social Planning in Developing Countries * Social Work * Sociology * Social Psychology * Statistical and Mathematical Sciences " Systems Anaylsise rides of mination to plow new ground to the advice and confidence given her by Fleming, whom she met in 1950 when both were students at the University of Wisconsin. Fleming had finished his law degree and moved on to the University of Illinois when Newell's first husband died shortly after their marriage. At the encouragement of a mutual friend, Fleming found Newell an ad- ministrative position at Illinois in 1953 so that she could forget the death of her husband and finish her PhD in economics. She became the first woman to teach in the economics department there. BUT THEN Newell married a student she met at Illinois, and the couple moved to Indiana to take teaching positions. She joined the staff of Purdue's graduate school of business as its first female professor. But tragically, she was widowed a second time in 1964 at the age of 34. She had a baby daughter on her han- ds, and again looked to Fleming, then chancellor at the University of Wisconsin, for direction. Fleming asked her to join his staff as an assistant responsible for in- vestigating policy changes under con- sideration by his administration. "THIS WAS not just sympathy," Fleming says, looking back on his decision to hire Newell. "We thought she was a very able woman." Newell, too, says she "used a lot of elbow grease. I am a hard worker. My track record is good. I get the job done." She moved to Ann Arbor in 1967 af- ter Fleming was appointed president during the days of student unrest. She women worked as his assistant, and then, he appointed her acting vice president for student affairs. SHE WAS the only woman in the University's central administration at the time, and the first female vice president in the Big Ten. In the eyes of an explosive student body, Newell held the most controver- sial position outside of the president. She remembers well her first day on the job. As she walked into the office, she found the men's rugby team staging a sit-in in protest of administration plans to pave over the rugby field. NEWELL MANAGED to convince the University's planning department to spare the rugby field, but it wasn't the last student confrontation with which she was to meet while in office. Ultimately, students demanded a say in the selection of the permanent vice president of student affairs. The hiring committee selected a man, and Newell was forced to step down. "We were having all kinds of student problems and I said to her 'Barbara, even if you do the best job in the world you're never going to live down the stigma of me appointing you without asking them," Fleming recalls. DURING HER four-year term in the central administration, she helped establish the Residential College, develop faculty evaluations by students, expand University Health Service, and eliminate racial and sexual bias from financial aid programs. She also helped set up co- ed residence halls. Newell went on to take an ad- ministrative job at the University of Pittsburgh and then the presidency of Wellsley College. In 1979, Joseph Califano, secretary of the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, invited Newell to serve as an undersecretary. When she arrived in Washington, D.C., however, she found that Califano had been fired. Carter offered her an ambassador- ship to the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Paris. She resigned in 1981 when President Reagan took office. She returned to academics - this time as the first female to head up statewide public university system. As chancellor of the Florida State university system - the fifth largest in the nation - she served until last August. Nowshe has made a full circle back to a position as a scholar at Harvard. She says she might enter the business world, but professes that her first love is "public service." "I am much more interested in social welfare, social change, and quality of life," she says. Application forms from: Admissions Registrar, L.S.E., Houghton Street, London WC2A 2AE, England, stating whether undergraduate or postgraduate and quoting Room 10. LSE . t ,r 'q4 , « xusce _onow IN DEMAND. l RTWA SR9C)Nyyt 1X . * i°. ' at 1 ~ t :. : ,, I S f - t:?f=; Police Qrest I s nCprt t at Y . ;I '. r S>4ft$Vf ~l,,ctsNEW IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS 1010 Polish Foreign minister resigns WARSAW, Poland - The Communist Party Central Committee yester- day accepted the resignation of Foreign Minister Stefan Olszowski from from the Politburo, state television reported. Olszowski has long been identified with the hard-line wing of the party and is said to be out of favor with Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski, the party's first secretary. Zbigniew Messner, the new prime minister who replaced Jaruzelski in a government shakeup last week, was to propose his new government to Parliament on Tuesday. State television said the Central Committee also accepted the resignation of Kazimierz Barcikowski from the Central Committee Secretariat. It said Warsaw Party first secretary Marian Wozniak was named to the Central Committee secretariat in his place. The television report, broadcast on the main evening news program, said Olszowski resigned for "personal reasons" at a Central Committee meeting in Warsaw. Egypt foils assassination plot CAIRO, EGYPT - Authorities foiled a Libyan plot to assassinate two Libyan exiles by arresting a four-man "hit squad" as it assaulted the farm where the exiles were staying, Interior Minister Ahmed Rushdi said yesterday. The arrest of the Libyans at King Mariot, a resort beach near Alexan- dria, marked Egypt's third triumph over the Libyan intelligence service in the last year. Egyptian officials believe that Libyan intelligence is behind the plots. Rushdi said the four, who entered Egypt across the desert border bet- ween the two countries, were arrested as they prepared to storm the farm housing the two exiles - former Prime minister Abdel-Hamid El- Bakoush and Mohammed El-Ngaryef, a former member of the Libyan Revolution Command Council. AIDS patient in treatment dies PARIS - French doctors yesterday announced the death of an AIDS patient whose medical improvement they cited in a dramatic news conference heralding an innovative treatment for the disease. Other physicians, originally skeptical of the medical team's report that their treatment appeared to inhibit the progress of the virus, indicated the experimental use of the drug cyclosporine-A might have contributed to the patient's death. Dr. Phillipe Evan, part of the medical team that announced the treat- ment, said the 38-year-old male AIDS victim died Saturday night at Laennec Hospital despite a "biologically favorable" response to the drug. Dr. Jan Orenstein, associate professor of pathology and director of autopsy services at George Washington University Medical Center in Washingon, said cyclosporine, an immuno-suppressor, could have been a factor in the death. Reagan lays wreath for veterans America honored its war veterans yesterday with parades and memorials from New York to San Francisco. President Reagan laid a wreath at Arlington, homefront women were honored in Ohio and the Army saluted the late Gen. George Patton. Reagan laid the wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at the Arlington National Cemetery across the Potomac Rived from Washington and said in a Veteran's Day speech that military strength is needed to preserve the peace. But he added, "Peace is imperiled when we forget to try for agreements and settlements and treaties, when we forget to hold out our hands and strive, when we forget that God gave us talents to use in securing the ends he desires." South Africa threatens layoffs JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - The government, declaring that "charity begins at home," said yesterday it may have to send home thousands of foreign black workers if sanctions force more South Africans out of work. Minister of Manpower Pietie du Plessis denied a report in an influential financial newspaper that the government already had approved the ex- pulsion of some of the 1.5 million black foreign workers, many of whom work in the gold and diamond mines that supply much of South Africa's hard currency. But du Plessis said "contingency plans" were being drafted to send home foreign blacks if necessary in the future. "This action has been for- ced on the South African government by those who favor sanctions and disinvestment without having regard for the detrimental effect on in- nocent people," he said. "Since charity begins at home, the government has no option but to give preference to the needs of its own citizens as regards job oppor- tunities," du Plessis said in a statement issued in Pretoria, the capital. at Theh ~IIe Stht-gzrn BDali Vol XCVI-. No.49 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April - $18.00 in Ann Arbor; $35.00 outside the city. One term - $10.00,in town; $20.00 out of town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and Sub- scribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Syndicate, and College Press Service. 4 U 6~ S . N E^ bbYZsSY tl . F ': .. b ::......... .......... . , + :: E ~ 0~ ...... The Michigan Daily can only afford to print 10,000 free copies. So please, pass your paper on to someone or put it back in the rack when you're through reading it. PASS IT ON! UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND FAIRCHILD SCHOLARS PROGRAM UAW bargainers OK contract TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The United Auto Workers bargaining council yesterday approved a con- tract with the General Dynamics Corp. that could end a two-month-old strike against the nation's leading defense contractor. The contract, which offers amnesty to as many as 101 strikers fired or disciplined for acts of alleged misconduct, will be voted on by members Tuesday. Nearly 4,500 employees at five plan- ts in Michigan, Ohio and Pen- nsylvania have been on strike since Sept. 18 against the No. 1 supplier of tanks to the defense department. An earlier agreement reached last week was rejected over the question of amnesty. Michael Hall, chief stewart at UAW local 2075 in Lima, said the proposed contract settled the amnesty issue to the union's satisfaction. "No people will lose any time," said Hall. General Dynamics originally plan- ned to fire nine pickets for alleged misconduct. Unpaid layoffs and writ- ten reprimands were planned for 92 other union members. RENT A REFRIGERATOR Phone: 429-5672 or 815-895-2443 FREE DELIVERY A unique way to earn your M.S. or Ph.D. in electrical engineering. Work 3 days a week at full salary; study 2 days a week under full fellowship. Apply today if you have a B.S. (in science or engineering), the background for E.E. study, and a G.P.A. above 3.2 (4.0 scale). To apply, please write or call the Fairchild Program, Department of Electrical Engineering, The University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742. Phone (301) 454-6199. U.S. citizenship required before employment begins. Or contact the Fairchild Program representative when he visits your campus: DATE: TIME: PLACE: November 26, 1985 8:30 - 4:30 Engineering Placement Center Editor in Chief ..................NEIL CHASE Opinion Page Editors.........JODY BECKER JOSEPH KRAUS Managing Editors .......GEORGEA KOVANIS JACKIE YOUNG News Editor...............THOMAS MILLER Features Editor.........LAURIE DELATER City Editor............. ANDREW ERIKSEN Personnel Editor..........TRACEY MILLER NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Joanne Cannella, Philip Chidel, Dov Cohen, Kysa Connett, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle, Rachel Gottlieb, Stephen Gregory, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jakelevicm Vibeke Laroi. Jerry Markon, Eric Mat- tson, Amy Mindell, Kery Murakami, Jill OserowskyiChristy Riedel, Michael Sherman, Jennifer Smith. Jeff Widman, Chery Wistrom. Associate Opinion Page Editor .. KAREN KLEIN OPINION PAGE STAFF: Jonathan Corn, Gayle Kirshenbaum, David Lewis Henry Park, Peter Mooney, Suzanne Skubik, Walter White. Chief Photographer...............DAN HABIB PHOTO STAFF: Jae Kim, Scott Lituchy, John Munson, Matt Petrie, Dean Randazzo, Andi Schreiber, Darrian Smith. Sports Editor ............... TOM KEANEY Associate Sports Editors.........JOE EWING BARB McQUADE, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL, STEVE WISE SPORTS STAFF: Dave Aretha, Mark Borowsky, Debbie Frances, Liam FlahertyB Steve Green- baum, Rachel Goldman, Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Phil Johnson, Rick Kaplan, Christian Mar- tin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Brad Morgan, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Chris Parker, Mike Redstone. Duane Roose, Jeff Rush, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert. Business Manager.......DAWN WILLACKER Sales Manager.........MARY ANNE HOGAN Assistant Sales Manager............ YUNA LEE Marketing Manager........CYNTHIA NIXON Finance Manager............ DAVID JELINEK Classified Manager. GAYLA BROCKMAN DISPLAY SALES: Lori Baron, 'Sheryl Biesman, i I