Pollack to oppose .Baker in 1988 (Continued from Page 1) person there can be," Pollack said. Pursell could not be reached for a comment. Pollack listed environmental issues as her main concern right now. She said the legislature must work to impose more stringent punishments for corporations which illegally dispose of their toxic wastes. It is currently possible to make millions of dollars by running illegal landfills, according to Pollack. "Those companies that care to dispose of waste in a responsible way are at an economic disadvantage," Pollack said. "If you send corporate executives to jail, even for a short time, you will get their attention." Pollack also gave her views on the 1988 presidential election. She said although there is no clear leader among the Democratic candidates, the Republicans have set themselves up for a defeat through a lack of organization. The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, teptember:9, I98/ - Page 5 Peace Corps recruits members on campus By HENRY PARK A Peace Corps recruitment meeting of almost 60 people in the International Center last night concentrated on the requirements for Peace Corps job applicants, but issues of politics and culture simmered beneath the surface. "I came because I think that especially in the Reagan era...it's real difficult to look forward to a post-college career with a clear conscience," said Dan Orlowski, a senior. Orlowski added that he had not decided what he thought of the Peace Corps: "whether it's a CIA-front, which is what a lot of people are saying or is the only job you can do if you have any heart." After a 25 minute film on Peace Corps projects around the world, a former Peace Corps volunteer in the audience commented in the question and answer period, "I think there are a lot of misconceptions about the CIA (and its relationship to the Peace Corps)," said Peter Simonson, a first-year graduate student in anthropology. Later Simonson, who was a Peace Corps volunteer in the Dominican Republic from 1984 to 1986 said that he had heard of only one instance of CIA involvement. According to Jennifer Metzler, who also worked in the Dominican Republic from 1985 to 1987, "someone in the CIA wanted to work on a Peace Corps project" in the Dominican Republic in 1986. The two Peace Corps volunteers involved allowed the C I A' s participation thinking that the country director approved the project according to both Metzler and Simonson. Simonson stressed, however, that as soon as the Peace Corps director in the Dominican Republic found out, he stopped the project. As for charges in the March issue of The Progressive that the Peace Corps operations in Belize are marked by cultural arrogance and a strong business orientation, University Peace Corps representative Louise Baldwin said the Belize director "was not the best of country directors." She added that the number of political appointees of Reagan are being curtailed: "Now country directors have to have Peace Corps experience." Daily Photo by DAVID LUBLINER Peace Corps workers (l-r) Louise Baldwin, Julia Harrison, and Laurie Stroud conducted a recruiting meeting last night at the International Center. Baldwin, a Corps counselor at the University and Detroit-based recruiters Harrison and Stroud showed a film and led a discussion in an attempt to get students to take part in the toughest jobthey'll ever love. i Thirteen years ago, personal computers had 8-bit data paths and held a paltry 64K RAM. ThirtpInv tarc frnm nnur urhn mnrc So we're having a kick-off event, to give any interested students, regardless of mninr A head start There will he a nresen- Thursday, October 1st at 7 p.m. Chrysler Center Auditorium Bnnisteel Rlvd.. North Camnus I