I Page 2 -- The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 23, 1987 Career fair draws record attendance By ROSE MARY WUMMEL The eighth annual Alternative Career Fair attracted record crowds to its speeches and workshops at East Quad this weekend. According to Phillis Englebert, organizer of the weekend and graduate student in Natural Resources, "I feel that this year there were more participants, more energy, than any of the other years."v The Alternative Career Fair attempts to help students interested in "alternative careers." Among the careers discussed were working for lobbying groups, teaching in schools for disabled children, and working as a doctor for the Red Cross. Ben Noble, LSA sophomore, said "We once called them careers for social change, but alternative careers are no longer limited to those lines." Englebert attributed this year's turnout - twice the previous record - to Friday night's speakers, featuring David Weir, director for the Center for Investigative Report - ing. The twelve workshops, held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sat - urday, each drew about 30 people. Most participants were graduating seniors and University graduates. According to Englebert, "The workshops were much more prac - tical this year." The workshops addressed both specifically career-oriented skills and ideas on how to apply these skills in a progressive manner. Each student who participated in the fair was asked to fill out an evaluation. And according to Jolie Spring, a Residential College senior and fair organizer, student response has been extremely positive. Spring said the only students who seemed disappointed were those looking to find a specific job rather than direction and inspiration. Nazi rally encounters stiff opposition By STEVE BLONDER and MICHAEL LUSTIG A group of about 25 white supremacist neo-Nazis marched to 'the Federal Building Saturday, and were chased away by more than 100 hecklers. One observer was injured and a demonstrator was arrested. Carrying red flags emblazoned with swastikas and a Confederate flag, and wearing camouflage fa- tigues and SS uniforms, they chant- ed "White power" and "White rev- olution; that's the solution." Robert Brown, an engineering senior, taunted the group on the steps of the Federal Building, shouting at them and twice drop - ping his pants to bare his buttocks. Police officers moved in to surround the Nazi group as the crowd of hecklers grew. One of the demonstrators was arrested and charged with felonious assault after he slashed a heckler on the chin with a piece of metal. The Ann Arbor Police were un - aware of and unprepared for the Nazi rally last weekend. "They had no (parade) permit. They were not expected," said Lt. Harold Tinsey. BUSINESS 1~ Copy Sale ! Order any number of reg. copies, full or self serve and receive an equal number for just 1*/copy. Feedable originals. 201b. paper. Coupon can be used 5 times. Expires 4/30/87 DOLLAR BIL L COPYING 611 CH U RCH 665-92M() OPEN 7 DAYS Nazi (Continued from Pag She said that beca Germans "are the son ters of a monstrous G of Hitler, Himmler an they must take the lead against anti-semitisr zionism. Born in Berlin in 19 Think You 're P Free Pregnanc Completely Conk Family Life & 529 N. Hewitt, Y Call: 434-3088 (A hunter speaks e1) was unaware of the Nazi war crimes ause today's until she moved to France in 1960 s and daugh- and married a Jew. "No one at home ermany, that opened my eyes to what happened 3 Eichmann," between 1933 and 1945," Klarsfeld d in the fight said m and anti- Klarsfeld first gained attention in 1968 when she publicly slapped the 39, Klarsfeld face of former West German regant? Chancellor Kurt-George Kiesinger, y Test and identified him as a Nazi fidential propagandist. -rvices She is also responsible for track- Ypsilanti ing down former Gestapo chief ny Time) Klaus Barbie, "the Butcher of Lyon." I C ^oijnon 1 colinon 2 coupon 3 coupon 4 coupon 5 ,vuyvi l %,vupvi f c %,vuvvI I j %,vuNvl I -t tvuvvl i J m PARS ONS. SCHOOL OAF DESIGN Special Summer Programs Parsons in Paris: 6-week program June 30-August 13, 1987 Painting, drawing, art history and the liberal arts. Paris and the Dordogne countryside or Siena, Italy. Fashion In Paris June 30-July 30, 1987 Fashion illustration, a history of European costume and contemporary trends in French fashion. Slide presentations, museums, studio and retail outlets, guest lectures. Photography in Paris June 30-July 30, 1987 The aesthetics and craft of photography. Lectures, gallery visits and shooting assignments. Architecture and Design in Paris June 30-July 30, 1987 European decorative arts and the history of French architecture. Parsons faculty and staff members of the Musee des Arts Decoratifs. Parsons in Great Britain June 30-July 30, 1987 A new program co-sponsored by the Cooper-Hewitt Museum. Architecture and decorative arts in London. Four excursions to nearby country homes and towns.. Parsons in Italy June 30-July 30, 1987 Contemporary Italian design and the history of Italian architecture. Rome. Florence, Venice and Milan. Parsons in Japan July 23-August 22, 1987 Fashion and textile design and a history of Japanese crafts. Workshops, visits to studios, museums and retail outlets in Tokyo, Takayama and Kyoto. Presentations by well-known Japanese designers. Graphic Design in Japan July 23-August 22, 1987 Survey of contemporary Japanese graphic design and traditional influences in Tokyo and Kyoto. Workshops, gallery and studio visits and presentations. Parsons in West Africa June 30-July 25, 1987 Ceramics, fibers, metalsmithing, photography. archaeology or traditional African art and architecture. The Ivory Coast and/or Mali (811-8122/87). Bank Street/Parsons June 29-July 31, 1987 A joint three-summer master's degree program with the prestigious Bank Street College of Education. The curriculum examines educational supervi- sion and administration with a visual arts focus. College Session in New York June 22-July 23, 1987 Full-time study in a specified art and design area. Drawing. painting, ceramic and textile design, communication design, photography. environ- mental design, illustration, fashion illustration or fashion design. Pre-College Session in New York June 22-July 23, 1987 A full-time opportunity. For high school students considering college majors in drawing, painting, ceramic and textile design. communication design. photography, environmental design.nillustration, fashion illustration, fashion merchandising or fashion design. Introduction to art and design also available. Pre-College in Israel June 15-August 11, 1987 A new program offered jointly with the Bezalel Academy of Arts & Design. Promising high school students visit major historical sites. Emphasis on ar- chaeology and drawing or photography Pre-College in France July 15-August 12, 1987 High school students of artistic promise visit Paris and the Dordogne region. College-level drawing and painting. with lectures in art history and prehistoric archaeology. All foreign programs include air transportation, land transfers and accom- modations. Dormitory arrangements for New York programs are available. Selected programs are offered with undergraduate credit, graduate credit and no-credit options. For additional information, please return the coupon below or call (212) 741-8975. You are invited to a lecture "THE SOVIET PRESS TODAY" by Sergei Dovlatov MONDAY, MARCH 23- 8:00P.M. RACKHAM AMPHITHEATRE, 4th FLOOR Sergei Dovlatov was born in 1941 in Ufa, Bashkiria, USSR. After graduating from a Leningrad high school, he worked in the metal industry and briefly attended Leningrad University. He was drafted to serve as a guard in strict- security camps in the Komi Republic and later worked as a journalist. In 1978, Mr. Dovlatov emigrated from the USSR. His books, none of which have been published in the USSR, include "Invisible Book" (Nevidimaia kniga), "The Craft" (Renes lo), and "The Compromise" (Kompromiss). His stories have appeared in THE NEW YORKER and other magazines and he has served as editor of a major Russian-language weekly in New York City. Cosponsors for this lecture are Dept. of Communications, Col- lege of LS&A, P.A.C./Stadium Educational Fund, and CREES. This lecture is the final lecture for University course 312 and the public is cor- dially invited to attend. Viewpoint Lectures presents Margaret Papandreou First Lady of Greece "TOGETHER FOR PEACE"M IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press reports Aquino admits policy failed BAGUIO CITY, Philippines - Speaking form a bomb-damaged grandstand, President Corazon Aquino said yesterday her peace policy has failed and she ordered the military to crush Communist rebels and rightist plotters. "God knows I have tried," she said at graduation ceremonies at the Philippine Military Academy. "But my offers of peace and reconciliation have been met with the most bloody and insolent rejections by the left and the right." She vowed to eliminate the foes of freedom here before leaving office, and complained that America was just giving advice instead of the aid it promised. The government-run Philippine News Agency said the week just ended was the bloodiest of the year, with 108 people killed in more that 30 politically motivated incidents. Tutu calls for cease-fire JOHANNESBURG, South Africa - Archbishop Desmond Tutu said yesterday after his first formal talks with the African National Con - gress that he asked the guerilla group to consider acease-fire, but ANC leader Oliver Tambo refused. Tutu spoke at an airport news conference on returning to Johan - nesburg from two days of talks with ANC leaders at their head quarters in Lusaka, Zambia. The ANC, outlawed in South Africa, is the largest guerilla org - anization fighting to overthrow this country's white-led government. "I was asking them to review their own position, whether they ought to consider the renunciation of the armed struggle, in order to throw the ball back in the court of the South African government," said Tutu, the black leader of South Africa's Anglican church and a top opponent of apartheid. Soviet expert questions U.S. sincerity on arms reductions MOSCOW - Veteran arms control negotiator Viktor Karpov said yesterday the United States may be trying to scuttle breakthroughs in medium-range missile talks with demands about short range nuclear weapons and with other proposals. "There is increasing evidence that the United States does not really desire the elimination of medium-range missiles in Europe, that the 'zero option' was a bluff from the very outset," Karpov said. Elimination of medium-range missiles in Europe, the so-called "zero option," was first- proposed by President Reagan in his first term. Progress toward an agreement was blocked by Soviet-U.S. wrangling over U.S. deployments of medium-range missiles, announcement of the U.S. "Star Wars" research program, and other issues. Roberts meets donation goal ORLANDO, Fla. - A millionaire dog track owner said yesterday he'll go on television to personally give $1.3 million to evangelist Oral Roberts, but Said the gift has nothing to do with Robert's claim that he might die if he didn't reach a fund-raising goal. Roberts said in March 1986 that God had given him a year to raise $8 million for scholarships so Oral Roberts University's medical- school graduates could afford to be missionaries in Third World coun - tries. Benefactor Jerry Collins is not a follower of Roberts and Said he's donating the final $1.3 million to help the medical program, not be - cause of the pioneer television evangelist's statements that God would "call him home" at the end of March if the fund-raising drive failed. EXTRAS Beaver suspected of reptile impersonations in Texas IRVING, Texas (AP) - Residents alarmed by toothey creatures lurking in a lake near an apartment complex were told. the animals were neither alligators nor crocodiles, but beavers. "Yeah, it's beavers," said Steve Asbeck, an animal control officer who investigated reports that an alligator or crocodile had found its way into the channel off Towne Lake. But Asbeck and Mike Potts, a former alligator hunter from Florida who now lives in Arlington, said they had found no sign of such a beast. "I did see beavers," Potts said last week. "Unless you know the finer points of 'gator watching, you see something dark, two or three feet long, with its head gliding through the water, it's a pretty easy mistake to make." Some residents insisted the experts were wrong. "I don't buy the beaver bit because I've seen the alligator,"-said Brian Martin, who lives in a nearby apartment complex. Martin said the animal' had not reappeared since crowds began gathering nightly looking for the animal. "I'll go to my grave saying I saw a reptile resembling an alligator out there," Martin said. Of he ichtigau iBMW vol. XCYVH-No. 117 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 sub - scribes to Pacific News Service and the Los Angeles Times Syndicate. Editor in Chief...............................ROB EARLE Sports Editor.................,SCO'T G. MILLER Managing Editor............AMY MINDELL Associate Sports Editors............DAREN JASEY News Editor..- -.........PHILIP 1. LEVY RICK KAPLAN Features Editor..........................MELISSA BIRKS GREG MOLZON NEWS.STAFF: Elizabeth Atkins, Eve Becker, Steve ADAM OC1LIS Blonder, Rebecca Blumenstein, Jim Bray, Brian Bonet, JEFF RUSII Scott Bowles, Paul Henry Cho, Dov Cohen, Rebecca SPORTS STAFF: Jim Downey, Liam Fiaherty, Allen Cox, Hampton Dellinger, Leslie Eringaard, Martin Gelderloos, Kenneth Goldberg, Chris Gordillo, Shelly Frank, Pam Franklin, Stephen Gregory, Edward Haselhuhn, Julie Ilollman, Walter Kopf. Rob Levine, Kleine, Steve Knopper, Vibeke Laroi, Carrie Loranger. Jill Marchiano, Ian Ratner, Adam Schefter, Adam Michael Lustig, Jerry Markon, Edwin McKean, Andy Schrager, Scott Shaffer, Pete Steinert, Douglas Volan, Mills, Tim Omarzu, Eugene Pak, Melissa Ramsdell, Peter Zellen, Bill Zolla. Martha Scvctson, Wendy Sharp. Louis Stancato, Steven Tuch, David Webster, Jennifer Weiss:Rose Photo Editors.............SCOTT LITUCHY Mary Wumel A.NDI SCIIREIBER Opinion Page Editors..................PETER MOONEY PHOTO STAFF: .eslie Boorstein, Karen Handelman, HENRYPARK Dana Mendelssohn, John Munson, Darrian Smith, OPINION PAGE STAFF: Muzammil Ahmed, Tim Grace TsaL Bennett, ceter Ephross, Paul Honsinger, Tim Huet, Lisa Jordan, Jeffrey Rutherford, Caleb Southworth, Business Manager..............MASON FRANKLIN Arlin Wasserman, Mark Williams. Sales Manager.............................DIANE ,BLOOM Arts Editors....................REBECCA CHUNG Finance Manager ............REBECCA LAWRENCE SETH FLICKER Classified Manager ........... GAYLE SHAPIRO Books.......................SUZANNE MISENCIK Assistant Sales Manager........ANNE KUBEK Features................ .ALAN PAUL Assistant Classified Manager...............AMY EIGES Film................. .....KURT SERBUS DISPLAY SALES: Karen Brown, Kelly Crivello, Irit Music..................................BETH FERTIG Elrad, Missy Hambrick, Ginger Heyman, Denise Levy, Theatre......................LAUREN SCHREIBER Wendy Lewis, Jason Liss, Jodi Manchik, Laura ARTS STAFF: V. J. Beauchamp, Lisa Berkowitz, Martin, Mindy Mendonsa, Scott Metcalf, Carolyn Marnie Criley, Karin Edelson, Kaywin Feldman, Rands, Jackie Rosenburg, Todd Samovitz, Laura March 24, 1987 7:00 pm 4%11 Pendleton Room, Michigan Union STUDY IN LONDON, SUMMER 1987 Comparative Health Care Systems: The British National Health Service Classroom, Field Trips and Individual Placements JULY 6 - AUGUST 7, 1987 at THE UNIVERSITY OF LONDON 6 undergraduate or graduate credits An opportunity for health professional students to study a different approach to health care delivery. , A r'Udf Am V ,F. , VTTI\Td Parsons School of Design, Office of Special Programs 66 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011 Please send me information on the following special summer programs: LI OF OF F- Parsons/Paris Fashion/Paris Photography/Paris QI nI Parsons/West Africa Bank Street/Parsons College/New York 4 I