Page 2 - The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 20, 1986 BUSINESS AIESEC students work, travel By DOV COHEN University students can travel, work for international corporations, win friends, promote world under- standing, and in general, have lots of fun. Students can do all of these things simultaneously. AIESEC, an international student exchange program, allows 40,000 students from 61 countries to gain practical business experience working for companies in other coun- tries. AIESEC is a French acronym for International Association of Stud- ents in Economics and Business Management. FOREIGN students find jobs in their own country for Americans, while Americans find jobs for foreigners. Nineteen University students in AIESEC went abroad last year, ac- cording to AIESEC member Rob Boyce, an LSA senior. Besides giving students business experience, the program helps promote internationalism, said Boyce. CAROLYN Kley, a senior in the business school, said she joined AIESEC "'for business reasons. And because it would be fun to travel abroad." While she was stationed in Freibourg, Switzerland, she developed an "appreciation of foreign cultures and foreign business en- vironments." "Their attitudes and culture are dif- ferent. They took business and work seriously, but (work) is not an all en- compassing - being like it is for some (American) business executives," she said. "THEY TOOK two hour lunches over there. And they locked the door of the office (during lunch) so you couldn't get back in. After an hour, I got bored but I couldn't get back into the office," she said. "They are more naturalistic. They see other qualities in life. (Business) is not as important," she said. "(Understanding) happens on two levels," said Lynda Sun, President of AIESEC and an LSA senior. Both THIS WEEK AT GUILD HOUSE 802 MONROE ANN ARBOR, MI 4810,4 NOON FORUM Friday, January 24 8:00 p.m. Ann Fitzpatrick, Debbie Stone, Michael Malefakis, and Mary Drost, U of M Students: "Sanctuary: A Moral and Legal Struggle" January 20 8:00 p.m. GUILD HOUSE WRITER'S SERIES Keith Taylor and Marc Sheehan Mcosponsored by the Michigan Student Assembly ATARI 520 ST , Available now af CHELSEA COMPUTER (above Bivouac) 334 S. State St. 663-0090 foreigners and Americans learn about each other as they interact, she said. BEFORE Julie Starkel, an LSA junior, went to France, she thought "all Frenchmen wore berets, ate French bread, and drank wine." Besides American misconceptions of the French, American tourists have created misconceptions of Americans, she said. "Ever since the war, American (tourists) think they own the world," she said. Some American tourists will walk down the middle of the main boulevard in Paris, stopping all traf- fic, just to take a picture, she said. ''We're trying to fight that image,'' she said. "TOURISTS come and go and don't give a good impression of what Americans are like," said Sun. "My roommates (from France, who were also in AIESEC), said to me 'Wow, you Americans actually do have a sense of style and dressing.' " Besides the opportunity to learn about different cultures, AIESEC of- fers students practical business ex- perience. "Traveling to exotic places... when you're young and idealistic, it's great fun," said Business Prof. Gun- ter Dufey, adressing the group last Tuesday. But now with the globalization of financial markets "the dimension (of international business experience added to your general training is essential," he said. "The international game is a big part of life and should be part of education," said Dufey, an ALESEC participant from Germany 23 years ago. "This is true whether we work somewhere else (outside America) or in Midland, Michigan. It's amazing the business transactions you can do with two TV screens and a couple of phone lines," he said. Even those students who don't go abroad receive valuable training. Greg Dufour, an AIESEC member and an LSA senior, tries to persuade area companies like Burroughs, whose headquarters is in Detroit, to take in foreign students. "From speaking with and learning from various managers, I've learned a lot about their organization and cor- porate structure," he said. "It's been a world of experience whether I go on a traineeship or not," he said. AIESEC plans to have a mass meeting Feb. 3 in Hale Auditorim at 7:00 p.m. PUT US TO THE TEST! January 22 6 - 8 p.m. RICE & BEANS NIGHT $2 requested Proceeds for material aid to Central America. 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 fauty wo prepare you to go out and serve your 1 community well. Feel good about yourself and your career. Take advantage of the chiropractic opportunity. Send for more information NOW! ----- --- - -------) Yes, send me information on a career in I:chiropractic. Iname___________________________' ad-dress ' Iphone _________ m Career Opporuity Spartanburg, SC 29304' I'E (803) 578.8770290I ENGINEERING STUDETS ENT cash in on your hard work before graduation.. . and open the door to a top career in Engineering Management. For highly qualified students in Engineering, Physics, Chemistry, Mathematics or hard sciences, the Navy's Nuclear Power Pro- gram offers the opportunity to earn over $1000 per month.during your final year in college. For especially qualified persons, this benefit may be available for the final two year of college. After graduation, you will receive graduate level training valued at $30,000 and begin work as a technical manager with immediate responsibility and authority. This is the only program of its kind in the world. To qualify you must be between the ages of nineteen and IN BRIEF COMPILED FROM ASSOCIATED PRESS AND UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL REPORTS U.S. may abduct terrorists WASHINGTON - The administration, struggling with a strategy to combat terrorism, has considered abducting terrorists abroad and bringing them to the United States to stand trial for crimes against Americans, The New York Times reported yesterday. The Times said the option has arisen in the course of what has become a sometimes contentious debate within the administration on counter- terrorism tactics but has yet to receive approval from senior officials. That internal debate has been marked by rare public disagreement over appropriate responses to terrorism, with Secretary of State George Shultz advocating military reprisals and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger taking a more cautious line. The White House had no comment on the newspaper report. Without confirming the debate over kidnapping fugitives, State Depar- tment legal adviser Abraham Sofaer told the Times that there are instan- ces that could justify "bending" the rules of international law that stand in the way of such extraterritorial action - if innocent people were not threatened and the operation "had a reasonable chance of success." Tutu helps U.S. honor King South African Archbishop Desmond Tutu joined yesterday in events honoring the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. as Americans of all races remembered the slain civil rights leader on the eve of the first national holiday marking his birth. A candlelight memorial service was planned last night at King's tomb. in Atlanta, in advance of today's official holiday. His widow, Coretta Scott King, was to place a wreath at the tomb today. Tutu was among those scheduled to participate yesterday in an inter- national conference in opposition to South Africa's apartheid system at Atlanta's Ebenezer Baptist Church, where King was pastor. He also spoke earlier at Ebenezer's yesterday morning service. Today's scheduled observances included "Living the Dream," a musical celebration by several top recording stars and others in Washington, New York City and Atlanta. Performers will include such people as Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Quincy Jones, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Patti Labelle and more, with Harry Belafonte and Bill Cosby as co-hosts. Reagan may transfer CIA role in defector cases to FBI WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration, unhappy with the CIA's handling of former Soviet KGB agent Vitaly Yurchenko, may reduce the agency's role in defector cases and give primary responsibility to the FBI, informed sources said. "I think it's a great move," said a senior White House official, who con tended that defectors invariably have been able to establish much closer relations with FBI personnel than CIA officers. The official, who insisted on anonymity, said the proposal has been un- der consideration for some time and was given additional impetus by Yurchenko's surprise decision to return to the Soviet Union in November after three months in CIA custody. White House spokesman Edward Djerejian acknowledged that procedures for dealing with defectors are being reviewed but declined commeit on the options under consideration. FBI and CIA spokesmen refused to discuss the issue. Tunnel may link France, U.K. LILLE, France - The leaders of France and Britain are expected to announce today that 31-mile twin rail tunnels have been chosen to achieve the nearly 200-year-old dream of a permanent transport link across the English Channel. President Francois Mitterrand and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher meet in this city southeast of Calais to reveal their decision. The tunnels, privately financed, would cost $3.3 billion at current prices and would open in 1993. Terminals would be near Calais and Dover in England, where a rail tunnel was begun in 1973 but was halted under a British Labor gover- nment austerity program. Vehicles would travel on special rail cars, and high-speed trains would halve the Paris-London time to under four hours. The largest civil engineering project in modern Europe, it would employ about 40,000. workers during seven years of construction. Yesterday's newspapers in Britain, where the "Chunnel" has aroused far more interest than in France, said two weeks of tough negotiations ended with agreement for the Channel Tunnel Group-France Manche consortium, known as CTG. Lesotho prime minister says S. Africa tried to oust him JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Lesotho Prime Minister Chief Leabua Jonathan, missing from public view since soldiers surrounded his office six days ago, emerged from seclusion yesterday and accused South Africa of trying to oust him. In interviews with the South African Broadcasting Corp. and the British. Broadcasting Corp., Jonathan said he remained in complete control of, the government of the tiny mountain kingdom that is surrounded by South Africa. South African Foreign Minister Roelof "Pik" Botha has accused Lesotho of harboring black guerrillas responsible for at least one of a: series of bomb and mine attacks, which have claimed 14 lives since Nov 26. Botha charged guerrillas are being trained in Maseru, about 3 mile$. from the border. Meanwhile members of tribal factions angered over a beer hall dispute fought with sticks and iron bars yesterday at Kloof gold mine west of Johannesburg, killing seven black miners and badly injuring 39, police said. Vol XCVI -No.77 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. S S t~aerials c o s a n l " o e t d a p e t~ s . byRsaflcB " Low ourly ost lcaios IMPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER, LTD. TEST PREPARATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1938 Call Days, Evenings & Weekends 662-3149 203 E. 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