4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily, Monday, February 10, 1986 MSA official resigns after speaking to media (Continued from Page 1) MSA employee Jennifer Faigel, who chaired the assembly's Women's Issues Committee last year, agreed that Bullard did not always perform her job effectively, and she stressed that Bullard's resignation may have been triggered by a series of conflicts between her and MSA leaders. "THERE were times when she was just sort of sitting around and an- swering the phone," said Faigel, who added that Bullard still represented a valuable resource because of her con- nections inside the University. But Richard Layman, an executive assistant to Josephson, said MSA's handling of Bullard and Norris was an attempt to hide its disunity and poorly-organized leadership struc- ture. "MSA is like the administration in a lot of ways. We don't want people to know our dirt," Layman said. "This whole sordid issue shows a very con- voluted, confused decision-making organization." "I DON'T think Phil (Cole) has the right to prohibit Bullard to speak," Layman said. "This is a great exam- ple of the garbage can theory of organization." Belcher added that "sometimes MSA tried to present an image of unity to the Univerity community which doesn't always exist." "A lot of the disunity that doesn't come out realtes to personality con- flicts," Belcher said, citing disagreeements between Norris and other assembly members. Daily staff writer Rebecca Blumenstein filed a report for this story. Judge calls for new trial for CIA demonstrators (Continued from Page 1) was conducting job interviews. Protesters planned to display quietly their opposition to the CIA. After a noon rally on the Diag, protesters returned to resume their vigil. They found the office closed to them, but not to interviewees and of- fice personnel. Soon afterwards Deborah Orr May, director of the office, read the protesters a notice that they would be arrested for trespassing if they did not leave the building. Prosecuting attor- ney Bob Cooper said Friday that May only read the notice after she recognized the approximately 50 demonstrators outside the office were not "as quiet and peaceful as they represent themselves to be." Cooper added that both May and the Ann AR- bor police were reluctant to make arrests. But the protestors maintain that lack of access to the office and the arrest of Buchen earlier in the day sparked the louder chanting. The trespassing notice includes a warning that future entry into any University-owned or leased building would subject them to arrest. Defen- dants maintain that because they were students, faculty, or taxpayers, they had a right to be in the Student Activies Building. Cooper said that once a trespass notice is given by the appropriate agent of the property the defendants have no lawful authority to stay there. Green explained her decision to stay after hearing the notice: "(May) couldn't tell me to leave a University building and never to enter another University building, so I stayed." BUSINESS 'U' business school r By EVE BECKER Nearly one-third of top U.S. business executive with college degrees have graduated from Big Ten and Ivy League Universities, ac- cording to a recent study published in the Chronicle of Higher Education. The study, which surveyed 70,000 company presidents, vice presidents, and directors, shows that the Univer- sity's business school ranks eighth in the number of undergraduate degrees and fifth in the number of graduate degrees granted to business leaders. Yale University leads the un- dergraduate category, while Harvard University leads the graduate category. BUSINESS school administrators, students, and placement officers at- tribute the success of University graduates to the well-rounded program and the high calibre of students the business program at- tracts. "We attract the kind of students the companies want, real top students," said Peggy Carroll, director of the business school's placement office. Competition to get into the business school is stiff. Six people apply for every one space in the MBA program, ...... . ........... -- ----.....-.---- I \oIf qou t when you're eating a I II ' IdM cookie with hot chocolate. COOKIE & HOT CHOCOLATE 99 I WITH THIS COUPON I OPEN DAILY *, . 7 (e 4'~1 OFFER EXPIRES I OPNDILYOM y s( V 'v 'TJMARCH 1, 19863 JUST IN TIME FOR MID-TERMS! The English Composition Board Presents A Workshop On "THE FUNDAMENTALS OF WRITING AN IN-CLASS ESSAY EXAMINATION" eceives to and the majority of MBA students have had some work experience before enrolling. THE WALL Street Journal ranks the University's MBA program sixth in the country, while Money Magazine ranks it in the top nine. The program's reputation attracts leading companies to campus placement officials say. The placement office schedules as many as 13,000 campus interviews yearly with businesses such as IBM and the First Chicago Bank. A business degree from the Univer-. sity has launched many successful careers. For example, Roger Smith, chairman of General Motors, Roger Fridholm, president of the Stroh's brewery company, and Phil Smith, president of General Foods, all ear- ned business degrees at the Univer- sity. BUSINESS school Dean Gilbert ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE Learn Quickly at ACCESS night & day tutorial classes all levels taught other languages available Call 994-1456 or visit 617 E. University, Suite 250 Lowest Prices in Town Michigan's 1st & Only State & Certified Commercial Translating Study Program FANTASY ATTIC COSTUMES Send a Bundle of Love on Valentine's Day Costumed balloon bouquet deliveries 305 S. MAIN ST. ANN ARBOR, MI 48109 662-2680 Your Downtown Party Place p grades Whitaker also credits the quality of students for the business school's success. "The University gets very strong students. They are able people," he said. "Able people are going to do well." Because employers seek out job candidates with thorough training and a strong work ethic, the business school is a good source of potential executives, he said. "WE HAVE the kind of curriculum that turns out people for general management. It's well-rounded, and that's what's important in terms of moving people up the executive ranks," Whitaker explained. Carroll said University business graduates are in high demand, with the average student receiving three job offerings upon graduation. Glen Anderson, supervisor of organization and administration for the central finance office at the Ford Motor Company, said he recruits at 38 colleges in the nation to fill spots for all of the company's finance depar- tm ents. HE SAID the University is among his recruitment stops because it has "a good balance of programs within different areas." Anderson says he looks for students who are "team players, motivated, with good communication skills, both written and oral, and students who want to operate in an organization such as ours." "We find that pretty characteristic of Michigan," he said. Dave Crittenden, a second-year MBA student who received his bachelor's degree in business from the University, said that a University degree has "opened up a lot of oppor- tunities for me." "THE PROGRAM'S very rigorous. You're getting a good grounding in basic business backgronnd," he said. He added that the school strikes a balance between the different aspects of business - Specific causes and theory. How to start your law career before you start law school. Start with the Kaplan LSAT prep course. After taking Kaplan, thousands of LSAT students score between 40 and 48. And those scores give you the best shot at getting into the school of your choice and going on to the top firms or Lcorporations. Call today KAPLAN STANLEYH. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. 203 E. Hoover Ann Arbor, MI 48104 662-3149 IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Election tabulators walk out MANILA, Philippines - Government computer operators tabulating results in the chaotic Philippine presidential election charged yesterday that vote totals were being manipulated and walked off the job, halting the vote count. A member of a U.S. team of observers appointed by President Reagan called the operators' charges "stunning" and said he did not see how a winner could be declared under the circumstances. More than two days after the polls closed, President Ferdinand Marcos and challenger Corazon Aquino remained locked in a neck-and-neck bat- tle, each ahead in one key unofficial count. An international group of election observers said its investigation showed the presidential race was rife with fraud and cheating. "We are scared and we don't know what to do next," said one of the 29 computer operators after walking out of the government Commission on Elections, known as Comelec, with less than 30 percent of the estimated 22 million votes tabulated. Army arrests secret police PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti - The army began rounding up members of former President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier's secret police yester- day and government and religious leaders appealed for an end to the violence that has wracked the country since Duvalier fled last week. In an attempt to quell the unrest, the government imposed a 2 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew for a third day in Port-au-Prince, the capital, and canceled annual Mardi Gras celebrations that were scheduled to begin Sunday. No official casualty figures have been released. But morgue officials told a Canadian journalist yesterday that at least 300 people have been killed in the Port-au-Prince area since Duvalier left the country early Friday. The victims were shot or beaten or died in traffic accidents. At least 10 were members of the Tontons Macoutes, the feared militia formed by Duvalier's father, Francois, after he assumed power 28 years ago, of- ficials said. Crews search train wreckage HINTON, Alberta - Work crews yesterday pulled the first bodies from the twisted wreckage of two trains that collided head-on after a freight failed to allow a passenger train to pass. At least 29 people were killed. The accident occurred at 10:40 a.m. EST, 10 milest east of Hinton, a pulp-mill town on the main Canadian National railroad line, said Bill Dewan, a spokesman for the principal cross-country freight line. The freight train, with 114 cars and three diesel locomotives, was west-bound, he said, and the 9-car passenger train was heading east. Estimates of the number of passengers ranged from 101 to 120. Of the 24 crew members on both trains, seven were missing, said Dewan. He said the accident occurred on a slight curve after the freight train entered a single track from a double track. The trains collided about 75 yards from where the section of double track ended. "The train should not have left the double tract section, and whether its failure to stop was due to signal failure or human failure is what is under investigation," he said. Soviets ready for spy swap BERLIN - Soviet dissident Anatoly Shcharansky, the best-known figure in a major East-West prisoner swap expected this week, will be moved to East Berlin today in preparation for the exchange, a newspaper reported yesterday. The West Germany newspaper Bild also quoted Soviet sources as saying Shcharansky's mother, Ida Milgrom, 77, might be allowed to leave the Soviet Union at a later date. "The timing has not been fixed and she will not in any circumstances be part of a trade with other people," Bild quoted the sources as saying. The Bild report came as West German officials confirmed the Soviets had released three West Germans arrested on corruption charges. The three - Bodo Luetke, Pavel Arsene and Monika Schanzenbach, who flew to West Germany Saturday - were arrested last year during Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's crackdown on corruption, Schanzen- bach was sentenced to seven years in jail for bribery, and the two men were awaiting trial on similar charges. NASA may have know of problems before fatal launch CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - Navy divers searched the ocean floor yesterday for wreckage from the exploded shuttle Challenger amid charges NASA knew of possibly "catastrophic" problems with shuttle rocket boosters before the fatal launch. The shell-shocked space agency refused to comment on the report as its investigation into the tragedy continued under a thick cloud of secrecy. But officials privately acknowledged awareness of problems with seals between booster rocket fuel segments on many past flights. The New York Times reported yesterday that agency documents. showed top shutle managers knew of potentially dangerous problems with seals around shuttle booster rocket fuel segments last year and that internal memos were circulated as late as December listing concern about possible failures. Jesse Moore, associate administrator for spaceflight and chief of the' shuttle program, last answered questions from reporters on Jan. 29, the day after history's worst space disaster. Since then, he and other program managers have been inaccessible. The Challenger disaster appears to have been triggered by a rupture at or near a seal joining the lower two of fqur solid propellant fuel segments in the ship's right side booster rocket. The escaping flame apparently heated Challenger's giant external fuel tank enough to raise internal pressure to the rupture point, setting off a titanic explosion that blew the shuttle apart and killed its seven-member crew. 0hije Sirljtganpt BaIl Vol XCVI - No. 92 The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967 X) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms. Subscription rates: September through April-$18 in Ann Arbor; $35 outside the city. One term-$10 in town; $20 outside the city. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and subscribes to United Press International, Pacific News Service, Los Angeles Times Tuesday., Feb. 11 1035 Angell Hall 4:10 to 5:30 p.m. r THIS WEEK AT GUILD HOUSE 802 MON ROE A ANN ARBOR, MI 48104 GUILD HOUSE WRITERS SERIES Monday, February 10 8:00 p.r m. i. Cynthia King and LawrencePike READING FROM THEIR WORKS *Cosponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly FOR MORE INFO CALL 662-5189 February 14 Noon Forum "The Meaning of Work in a High Tech Era" JANE MYERS Public Relations Consultant I February 12 6-8 p.m. RICE & BEANS NIGHT $2 requested Proceeds for material aid to Central America. i G CHIROPRACTIC-A GREAT OPPORTUNITY Some people look for a good job. Wise ones build a career. Why not plan a life that will bring you satisfaction? Sherman College of Straight Chiropractic pro- vides you with the knowledge and skills necessary to become a successful Doctor of Chiropractic. At './ Sherman you study with a dedicated and qualified faculty who prepare you to go out and serve your community well. ' Feel good about yourself and your career. Take advantage of the chiropractic opportunity. } ..w.Send for more information NOW! ogervcei 524 LSA Building 764.9216 Syndicate, and College Press Service. Editor in Chief............ERIC MATTSON Managing Editor.......RACHEL GOTTLIEB News Editor............... JERRY MARKON Features Editor............CHRISTY RIEDEL NEWS STAFF: Eve Becker, Melissa Birks, Laura Bischoff, Rebecca Blumenstein, Marc Carrel, Dov Cohen. Laura Coughlin, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle. Amy Goldstein, Susan Grant. Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz, Linda Holler, Mary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy, Michael Lustig, Amy Mindell, Caroline Muller, Kery Murakami, Jill Oserowsky, Joe Pigott, Kurt Serbus, Martha Sevet son, Cheryl Wistrom, Jackie Young. Opinion Page Editor.........KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor ... HENRY PARK OPINION PAGE STAFF: Gayle Kirshenbaum, Peter Ephross, David Lewis, Peter Mooney, Susanne Skubik. Sports Editor ............... BARB McQUADE Associate Sports Editors ......DAVE ARETHA, MARK BOROWSKY, RICK KAPLAN, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL. 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