4 Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, April 7, 1986 BUSINESS Student entrepreneurs profit from parties By MARC CARREL Two University seniors with a knack for throwing parties are cashing in on their talent by hosting bashes from Chicago to Paris. LSA students Ray Solnik and Scott DeGraff last year formed Karma Productions, a business which produces theme parties, after Solnik's partner in a similar business graduated. USING THE reputation he had gained from his previous business, Solnik approached the Nectarine Ballroom about hosting a beach party in September. After the party's suc- cess, Karma Productions signed a con- tract to put on a party at the ballroom every Thursday from October through December. To attract crowds to their parties, Solnik and DeGraff offered special promotions such as a free trip to New York and reduced drink prices. The two entrepreneurs donated a varying portion of their profits to charity. Jan Loader, director of the local chapter of the March of Dimes, which has received some of Karma's charitable contributions, said, "Ray approached us. He does everything ,and just brings us the money." "FOR people to voluntarily do things like this, I think it's good," Loader said. "They're not saying 'What's in it for me?"' After the financial success of several parties which ran on budgets averaging $400 to $15,000 and grossed thousands of dollars, Solnik and DeGraff decided to take their business across the Atlantic-to Paris. Hiring a French production com- pany to handle the details overseas, Solnik and DeGraff planned a party over the telephone. THE TWO businessmen dubbed their project "A California Beach Party in a Paris Winter" and scheduled the party over last spring break. Two and one-half weeks before the party, Solnik and DeGraff flew to Paris to finalize their plans and send out 20,000 bilingual invitations. Invitations were distributed to American students studying in Europe, as well as Europeans and Americans living and working in France. "We had a very diverse crowd," Solnik said of the party, which attrac- ted 1,400 to 1,500 guests. THE PARTY, which featured a California band, a fashion show, a large video screen, and beachwear displays, was described by Solnik as "a wild party-a real extravaganza." "It basically brought together European students and American students who were in Paris at the time or could make it to Paris.,, "It blew my mind," said Mark Cohen, an LSA senior who went to Paris just to attend the party. "It was either Paris or Aspen and the party sounded like a better time than Aspen." "IT LIVED up to my expectations, though," he said. "I was there until 6 in the morning." "We are a bit much, I have to ad- mit," Solnik chuckled, showing off a watch which sports the Karma Productions logo. He said that he had two watches, one for himself and one for DeGraff, made for the holiday season. Karma Productions is currently planning a college graduation party to be held in May simultaneously at nightclubs in both New York and Chicago. Some of the proceeds will go to the Better Boys Foundation, which supports under-priveleged children primarily from the Chicago area. "INVITATIONS are being passed around to schools across the country and commercials for the party are on the radio in Chicago," DeGraff said. He and Solnik are looking into a video hookup between the two parties, possibly through MTV, but have not made any definite arrangements. Besides Karma Productions, each student is involved in other business ventures. Solnik, who is from Roslyn, N.Y., owns a moving service and co- owns a messenger service. HIS MOVING service, Move U, transports students' belongings back from Michigan to the New York area, and runs only in the fall and spring. His other business, Mercury's Messengers, delivers bouquets of balloons and cakes for special oc- casions. DeGraff represents Life's a Beach surf gear and sold drinker helmets during the last football season. DeGraff plans on attending law school next year. Solnik is headed for Stan- ford University business school. Both plan on resurrecting Karma Productions once they finish their respective educations, and DeGraff said they may even do one or two par- ties a year in they have the time. For now, though, both are still planning the graduation party. "A LOT of people think that you host a party and it's no big deal. But it's a lot of work. We've had a good time doing it, though." DeGraff said. Mareos troubled by legal problems -------------------, COOKIES NIGHT OWLS TAKE A STUDY BREAKI! Buy 2 or more of Mrs. Peabody's cookies I or brownies after 9:00 p.m. and get I a FREE beverage!I Open till 14 p.m. daily COUPON MUST BE ' 715 . UiverityPRESENTED WITH PURCHASE 715 N. UnIvers y OFFER VALID THROUGH I 7 HMAY 2,1986 L... mu mu...U...m .. m mm..U... in n~ni -m ....... I CAN'T SLEEP? Count Copies at Kinko's. We're open 24 hours a day 7 days a week. 540 E. LIBERTY Open 24 Hours 761-4539 WASHINGTON (AP) - Dozens of lawyers across the country are tracking the financial dealings of Ferdinand Marcos, searching for a fortune in land and other holdings the deposed Philippine president is believed to have controlled in the United States. "This is going to be one of the biggest boons to American law firms we've seen in a long time," said Nor- man Ornstein, a political scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative think tank. Bruce Fein, an expert in inter- national law and a former deputy U.S. attorney general, agreed, adding, "It's likely that these cases will be tied up in the courts for a long time to come." 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Hoover Ann Arbor, MI 48104 662-3149 -- FOX HILLS CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH, INC. 111 West Ann Arbor Road Plymouth, Michigan 455-8740 CONGRATULATIONS GRADUATING STUDENTS . >: >;: E : are one of the key reasons he wants to leave his rented beachfront home in Hawaii and go to another country, ac- cording to persons who have spoken to him. But Marcos has found no other country willing to take him. He has been turned down by Spain, Mexico, Singapore, Indonesia, Panama and Thailand. Marcos landed in Hawaii on Feb. 26, a day after his 20-year regime collap- sed and he was replaced as president by Corazon Aquino. Since then, there have been numerous revelations from Manila about the lavish and profligate lifestyle of Marcos and his wife, Imelda. Mrs. Aquino has formed a Com- mission on Good Government and charged it with recovering as much as possible of what commission chair- man Jovito Salonga has termed Mar- cos' "ill-gotten" wealth. Salonga estimates Marcos' wealth may reach $5 billion to $10 billion. Last week, Salonga returned to Manila after a trip to the United States and Switzerland, where he won promises of cooperation in both nationsand set in motion a series of legl maneuvers aimed at blocking Marcos' access to the money. The most publicized case in the United States involving alleged Mar- cos' assets is in federal court in New York, where lawyers operating on behalf of Mrs. Aquino's government have sued to block the sale of five properties they claimhare owned or controlled by Marcos. The properties-a Manhattan shop- ping center, three Manhattan office buildings and a Long Island estate-are worth $350 million, accor- ding to Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., chairman of a House subcommittee investigating Marcos' American holdings. A temporary restraining order has been issued blocking liquidation of the five properties. Ralph and Joseph Bernstein, the two New York brothers alleged to have been involved in Marcos' pur- chase of the real estate, will testify in public Wednesday before Solarz' panel, the House Foreign Affairs sub- committee on Asia and the Pacific. They had previously refused to testify in public. In addition, federal grand juries in Alexandria, Va., and Pittsburgh, Pa., are investigating dealings between' U.S. businesses and officials of the Philippine government and armed forces. Marcos has not been subpoenaed by either of those panels, but the Justice Department said last week it was sending two top prosecutors to Manila to look at newly uncovered documents that might be sent to the panels. Correction A student in Political Science Prof. Raymond Tanter's class, "The Arab- Israeli Conflict," was incorrectly identified in Friday's Daily as a member of the Israeli Defense Force. According to Prof. Tanter, there are no members of the IDF in the class. The Daily regrets the error. IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS Investigators suspect Libya in German nightclub bombing BERLIN - A West German newspaper yesterday quoted Bonn security officials as saying Libya was behind the bombing of a discotheque frequented by American soldiers and is planning more at- tacks on U.S. targets. The Welt am Sonntag newspaper also reported that security officials suspect a link between the disco bombing, which killed an American soldier and a Turkish woman and injured 204 people, and Wednesday's bombing of a TWA jetliner over Greece, which killed four people. It said the officials will use laboratory tests to compare remnants of the bomb used in the disco bombing with the explosive device used in the airliner. The Welt am Sonntag newpaper quoted unidentified security officials as saying the attack on a main street in the American sector fo the city was part of Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy's campaign of vengeance against the United States for the recent clash in the disputed Gulf of Sidra Soviets launch Afghan attack ISLAMABAD, Pakistan -Waves of Soviet and Afghan jets blasted rebel positions yesterday in Afghanistan's strategic Paktia province as elite commando units backed by tanks fought to encircle the insurgents in a major offensive. Guerrilla officials said that Soviet and Afghan commandos, borne by the helicopters, and tank units were closing in on a string of heavily defended insurgent strongholds in southern Paktia, near the Pakistan border. Both sides suffered heavy casualties, the officials said. Officials of the Yunis Khalis guerrilla group, one of seven Afghan guerrilla groups fighting the Marxist government of Afghan President Babrak Kasmal, said more than 1,000 commandos were landed by heli- copter Friday night around the large Yunis Khalis base at Zhawar. Officials at the Afghan Information Center in the Pakistan border city of Peshawar said the guerrillas were rushing reinforcements from camps in Pakistan to aid defenders of their embattled positions in Paktia. Soviet and the Afghan forces tried unsuccessfully to capture the Zhawar base last summer, but were beaten back. Mandela quoted in media JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Winnie Mandela was quoted in the South African news media yesterday for the first time in 11 years by two leading newspapers that said the government ban on quoting her is no longer valid. One paper, the Sunday Star of Johannesburg, quoted the anti-apartheid leader as assailing President Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher as "Friends of the racists," referring to South Africa's government. The Star said that in an interview Saturday, Mrs. Mandela also called for "immediate and total" international sanctions against South Africa. Mrs. Mandela, the wife of jailed black nationalist leader Nelson Mandela delarhas been under government banning orders for most of the past 23 years. The orders restricted her movements, barred her from political ac- tivity and prohibited the nation's news media from quoting her. The last time she was quoted directly by the national media was in 1975, during a brief lull before her restrictions were renewed. Shanties incite college arrests; MADISON, Wisc. - A handful of anti-aparthei demonstrators were' back on the Wisconsin capitol grounds in Madison yesterday after police arrested 17 protesters during the night while dismantling makeshift shanties erected there for a second time. But no immediate attempt was being made to build the shacks, which symbolize housing conditions in black South Africa townships, for a third time. The dismantling of a shanty also sparked arrests over the weekend at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind. Twenty-two people, 19 of them students, were taken into custody Saturday and charged with trespassing after they refused to end their demonstration, said university spokesman Joseph Barnett. The situation at Purdue was quiet yesterday, officials said. At Yale University in New Haven, Conn., protesters received per- mission to leave six shanties standing until April 12, when the school's governing board is to meet. Originally, the university had ordered the protesters to abandon the shanties by noon Saturday. Police raid Protestant office BELFAST, Northern Ireland - Police raided the headquarters of the main Protestant paramilitary group before dawn yesterday after ex- tremists burned or stoned the homes of 16 police officers and six Roman Catholics, police said. Police seized tapes and documents at the Belfast office of the Ulster Defense Association, suspected of helping organize an unprecedented wave of anti-police violence by Protestants. Protestants oppose the Anglo-Irish accord signed Nov. 15. which gives the overwhelmingly Catholic Republic of Ireland a consultive role in British-ruled Northern Ireland, where Protestants outnumber Catholics 3-2. Arsonists razed two police officers' homes, and youths rioted overnight in two Protestant neighborhoods in Belfast, police said. Royal Ulster Constabulary spokeswoman Sgt. Isabel Uprichard said one police officer fled from his blazing home with his family. The other police officer's house was unoccupied. Police arrested six people, but no injuries were reported. The homes of 103 police officers have been attacked in the past week. The Protestant violence followed a bomb explosion Saturday in a down- town Belfast tavern, which police sources said they suspected was the work of the IRA or the Irish National Liberation Army. Four people were hurt, two seriously. C ije £idiigau Bt-uig Vol. XCVI- No. 127 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 Syndicate, and College Press Service. You Have Finally Ma And We Want To He Celebrate Your Achiev $0 Down And A Solid Will Enable You To Chrysler Or Plymouth] $149/Month. C L Fo ide It, (p You ement. redit History ease A New r As Low As NY PIZII ent SEE OR CALL TO Fox Hills Leasing Ag l.ow *.*.m..a.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Universityof Michigan ice of InanClal FALL & WINTER 1986-87 APPLICATION DEADLINE TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 1986 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, Adam Cort, Laura Coughlin, Tim Daly, Nancy Driscoll, Rob Earle, Ellen Fiedelholtz, Amy Goldstein. Susan Grant, Stephen Gregory, Steve Herz AMary Chris Jaklevic, Philip Levy. Michael Lustig, Amy Mindell, Caroline Muller, Kery Mura- kami, Jill Oserowsky, Joe Pigott, Kurt Serbus, Martha Sevetson, Wendy Sharp, Cheryl Wistrom. Opinion Page Editor...........KAREN KLEIN Associate Opinion Page Editor.. . HENRY PARK .PINION PAGE STAFF: Rosemary Chinnock, Peter Ephross, Leslie Eringaard, Gayle Kirshen- baum, Peter Mooney, Susanne Skubik, Caleb Southworth. Arts Editor............... NOELLE BROWER Associate Arts Editor........... BETH FERTIG Books ................. REBECCA CHUNG Film ..................... SETH FLICKER P..t.--Al AN! PAI It Sports Editor ............... BARB McQUADE Associate Sports Editors ....., DAVE ARETHA, MARK BOROWSKY, RICK KAPLAN, ADAM MARTIN, PHIL NUSSEL SPORTS STAFF: Emily Bridgham, Debbie deFrances, Liam Flaherty, Jon Hartmann, Darren Jasey, Christian Martin, Scott Miller, Greg Molzon, Jerry Muth, Adam Ochlis, Duane Roose, Jeff Rush, Adam Schefter,. Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan. Business Manager.........DAWN WILLACKER Display Sales Manager ...... CYNTHIA NIXON Assistant Sales Manager.. KATHLEEN O'BRIEN Classified Manager ......GAYLA BROCKMAN Finance Manager.........MIKE BAUGHMAN Marketing Manager........... JAKE GAGNON DISPLAY SALES: Eda Benjakul, Diane Bloom, Phil Educate, Albert Ellenich, Debbie Feit, Mason Franklin. Heidi Freeman, Traci Garfinkel, John Graff, Jennifer Heyman, Beth Horowitz, Debra Led- erer, Parker Moon, Carol Muth, Debra Silverman, David Zirin. 2011 Student Activities Building To ensure consideration for financial aid* for the coming school year, continuing students must submit their application materials by the priority deadline. The application must be rarnaiwar hwthe ffirnpof Financial Air and th i QRR-R7 Family Financial Statement mailed