Scholars assess business degree ALMA, Mich. (AP) - A program in international business offered by Alma College continues to attract students to the tiny central Michigan school, despite a growing debate about the value of the degree. Alma is one of the few colleges that offers an international business degree. Other schools with a similar program includes the University of South Carolina, Arkansas State and Pall State. ? Many scholars agree that international experience is necessary if U.S. companies are to be ompetitive in the world economy, put some academicians are Fhallenging the worth of a degree in international business. "Companies prefer business hmajors who have competence in nterational as well as other areas," laid Gunther Dufey, group chairperson of the international business group at the University of ;Michigan. "We discourage people From going into a purely nternational business curriculum." Of the 14 people expected to graduate from Alma's program this sprmg, only one so far has found a ;ob in international business. None ;of the 70 students who have graduated from the program since ,1981 are working abroad. Bomb Continued from Page 1 beginning of the flight and was just trying to hassle the flight attendant when she asked him to move his camera. Later when he screamed 'we are going to die' most people ihought that it was a joke," Abensohn said. The pilot announced that the plane was undergoing mechanical difficulties and would have to land in Indiana. John Ashton, director of security ~or.American Trans Air told, The ,Detroit News that because the pilot was notified of the threats while the Splane was moving down the runway it was impossible for him to abort the takeoff. When the flight landed in Indianapolis, Pierson was arrested by ,FBI agents who escorted him fron ,the plane. "It was just like a spy movie," said Steve Yaung, LSA sophomore. "Two men in dark glasses came onto * the plane and took this guy away. 4Nobody suspected that there was a 'bomb scare so everybody was taken :by surprise."' Once on the ground, the passengers were directed off the plane dnto a terminal while the FBI and ;bomb squad dogs searched the plane for two hours. After the search, Pat White, a supervisor of operations for American Trans Air came into the terminal to address the crowd. "We are pleased to inform you ,that no explosives were found on the Plane and we will be ready to board *hortly," she said. Sandy Houston, an American Trans Air passenger service representative, spoke to a group of students who had reservations about e-boarding the plane. "The plane would not take off if there was an explosive on it," she said. 4. The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 6, 1989-Page 3 'Parking amnesty' to begin March 28 BY KRISTINE LALONDE If you ignore parking tickets - stuffing them in the garbage or the glove compartment instead of paying them - you're not alone. The city of Ann Arbor is waiting for payment on $3.5 million worth of tickets. But a "parking amnesty" program is going to allow ticket holders to pay 50% of the ticket price. Ann Arbor City Council mem- bers expect the program will gener- ate about $350,000 to help alleviate the city's estimated deficit of $2.8 million. "It allows the city to make a big dent in our fiscal budget difficulties," said councilmember Larry Hunter (D-First Ward), the resolution's sponsor. "It sort of does something nice for the people who have to pay all the time." Ann Arbor's 15th District Court judges opposed the resolution, say- ing it would encourage disrespect for the law. But the council passed the bill with a 7-3 vote. Ticket debts may be paid between March 28 and May 1. Hunter has proposed that four temporary cashiers be hired to handle collec- tions on weekdays from noon to 8 p.m. at City Hall. Payments may also be mailed. The council has pledged to crack down on those who do not take ad- vantage of the amnesty and continue to ignore their tickets. Ticket holders may be served court summonses, have their vehicles towed, or not have their driver licenses renewed. The program will only apply to tickets issued before Jan. 1, 1989. Associated Press The Rev. Jesse Jackson shows his support for the International Association of Machinists union strike against Eastern Airlines during a rally yesterday near the Atlanta airport. Eastern Airlines rendered helpless as pilots walk out City council to mandate recycling., MIAMI (AP) - Eastern Airlines warned its pilots they risked their future by honoring picket lines in the 2-day-old Machinists strike, which cut flights drastically, stranded weary passengers at airports and threatened to expand to a nationwide transportation snarl. Eastern pilots, who virtually shut down the money-losing carrier by honoring picket lines of the striking Machinists Union, are risking not only their careers but "the very existence" of the airline, said Eastern spokesperson Robin Matell. "By continuing to stay out, the pilots are committing economic suicide," he said at a news briefing. Eastern was hit with a strike at 12:01 a.m. Saturday by the Machinists union. About 8,500 mechanics, baggage handlers and ground crews walked out over Eastern's demand for contract concessions, escalating a 17-month union-management battle at the nation's seventh-largest airline. Eastern ordinarily schedules 1,000 flights with 100,000 passengers daily. On Saturday just 85 flights took off: expectations were for 125 flights, Matell said. Nineteen had gone by 2 p.m. EST, the pilots said. The strike threatened to spill over into a union sympathy action against as many as 12 commuter railroads around the country , which could create rush-hour havoc this morning, especially in the New York metropolitan area. Strikers planned picketing at commuter railroads and received assurances no -ail workers would cross their lines. But U.S. District Judge Robert Patterson yesterday signed a temporary order blocking sympathy strikes by workers at three railroads in the metropolitan New York area, said spokesperson for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The order was not made public immediately. Ed Yule, general chairperson of the United Transportation Union which represents conductors and railworkers on the Long Island Rail Road and Metro-North Commuter Rail Road, said his workers intend to obey the law. But he said he has asked the railroads to have any pickets removed. If his members try to cross picket lines, Yule said, "they could get their heads bashed in, they could get their cars turned over, they could get their families threatened." And Transportation Secretary Samuel Skinner, interviewed on NBC's "Meet the Press" said that if the situation warrants, the Bush administration will propose legislation eliminating provisions in the Railway Labor Act that allow secondary picketing. BY KRISTINE LALONDE A proposed city ordinance may soon make taking out the garbage a little more complicated. The ordi- nance would prohibit certain items from Ann Arbor's local landfill and require residents to separate recy- clables from their garbage. The ordinance itself has not been passed but last week the council re- solved to implement the ordinance by this spring. "It's very complicated to get the ordinance drafted. We have to put it in a form the city can work with," said councilmember Liz Brater (D- Third Ward), the resolution's co- sponsor. The city council voted to imple- ment a mandatory recycling ordi- nance by mid-April. The resolution followed the adoption of the Solid Waste Task Force Report, which outlines ways to ease the city's solid waste disposal crisis. The report calls for four new recycling centers to be scattered throughout the city, a composting facility for yard waste, and research into a variable waste fee. A variable fee would create a sliding scale for garbage pickup. One way for implementing the fee would be a limit on the amount of garbage cans per household; if the limit is exceeded a charge would be assessed. Brater said the people of Ann Arbor - which has the highest re- cycling participation rate in the state - are behind recycling. "There's a general overwhelming support for comprehensive recy- cling," she said. The ordinance would include only limited punitive measures, such as small fines. Mike Garfield, Envi- ronmental Issues Director at Ann Arbor's Ecology Center, said the or- dinance would be more educational than punitive, like Michigan's seat- belt law. The Ecology Center offered a proposal on mandatory recycling last year which will serve as a starting point for the council. Despite growing numbers, Moslems still fight stereotypes Railroad officials BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS S .slam may surpass Judaism as the nation's largest minority religion by the turn of the century, but American Moslems still are struggling to find their place in a nation that has long defined itself as "Protestant, Catholic, Jewish." The U.S. publication of Salman Rushdie's "The Satanic Verses", a novel some consider blasphemous, is to many of the nation's estimated 3.5 million Moslems only the latest example of how acceptable anti-Moslem prejudice has become in America. "The eight years they lived under Reagan were not easy years. The enemy moved from being the 'evil empire' of the Soviet Union to Islam." said Yvonne Haddad, professor of Islamic history at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. "I've seen the prejudice. It's almost American to bash Islam." Nor has their exclusion from the American reli- gious landscape ended with Reagan's departure, accord- ing to Moslem leaders. There were neither Moslem participants nor any mention of Islam at an Interfaith National Prayer Service after President Bush's inaugu- ration. "We felt a bit insulted but blamed it on their igno- rance rather than discourtesies," said Mohammed Mehdi, a co-chair of the North American Interfaith Network and-secretary general of the National Council on Islamic Affairs. The service was organized by a National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving committee. Ever since interfaith support was drummed up for World War I, with Protestant, Catholic and Jewish leaders showing unprecedented cooperation, the portrait of the nation as consisting of three basic faiths has been implanted on the public mind. Moslems have settled in America since the 19th century, but tremendous growth did not take place un- til the 1960s and 1970s when relaxed immigration rules and a jump in Islamic students related to the oil boom coincided with a movement by Blacks to Islam. No one knows how many Moslems there are in the U.S. estimates range from 2 million to 10 million, but many scholars and religious leaders say Haddad's estimate of between 3 million and 4 million is most reliable. If that estimate is correct, there are more Moslems in the United States than two of the nation's most in- fluential denominations, the 3-million-member Pres- byterian Church and the 2.5 million-member Episco- pal Church. Because of higher rates of immigration, births and conversions among Moslems, there also is substantial agreement with Haddad's assessment that if current demographic trends continue the nation's Moslem population will be larger that the Jewish population "possibly by the year 2000, definitely by 2015." The nation's Jewish population is estimated at 5.9 million. But growing numbers have not meant growing re- spect for Moslems, who still must contend with pub- lic perceptions of them ranging from "camel jockeys" to more dangerous stereotypes fostered by American anger over the Ayatollah Khomeini in Iran. look into LONDON (AP) -The driver of a passenger train that hit another train and killed ive people said yesterday he ran through a red light before the collision, but there is evidence he tried to stop, a British Rail official said. Gordon Pettitt, general manager of British Rail's Southern Region, said investigators found signs of "severe brake application" by David Morgan before his train rammed the other train Saturday. Morgan was one of 94 people in- jured when his train, travelling from Littlehampton to London, hit a London-bound train, traveling from Horsham. Authorities said the Hor- sham train was crossing from the slow track onto the main line when crash when it was struck from behind. Thirty-one victims were hospitalized yesterday, 10 in'serious condition, Scotland Yard said. "The safety of our signaling sys- tem does obviously depend on drivers stopping at red lights. It did not stop." Pettitt added. "We have a system of multiple signaling where a driver gets an indication of a red light three sec- tions back." Pettitt said investigators were looking for anything that might of- fer an explanation for the crash. He said there was no evidence of sabo- tage and that the signaling equip- ment at Purley Station, outside London, appeared to be working properly. Broke From Break? Need a Grant? .i I THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Play Your Cards Right... Be A Blackjack Dealer at: Vlichigras 1989 Gambling~, Games, and a Good Time" Meetings Asian American Association - Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw Ave, 7 pm. U of M Fencing Club - Coliseum, 6-8 pm. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate- Do Club - 1200 CCRB, 7:30- 8:30 pm. Beginners welcome. For information, call Steve at 930- for Education Conference. Hunger Information Table - MUG 9 am-6 pm. English Peer Counseling - Help with papers and other En- glish-related questions. Room 4000A Michigan Union, 7-9 pm. Sponsored by Undergraduate En- glish Association. Peer Writing Tutors - 611 Church St. Computing Center, 7- I! i v /- Earn $5.00 to $6.50 per hour Earn Bonuses Enjoy flexible evening hours Speak with University Alumni Casinn Mazz MPting- w I, i o III ' 11