01 Page 2 -The Michigan Daily -Monday, March 13, 1989 Careervision BY ANDREW KAPLAN Choosing the right career may be the most important decision a person ever makes, and 'It looks now, two new resources will help make that it's unus choice easier.-ts CareerVision Information Centers and Ca- specific reetVision magazine have appeared on 286 col- employe lege campuses throughout the country, including, i s as of last January, the University's. ind ryc CareerVision information comes in two forms. First, there is the new Information Center located at the University's Career Planning and Placement office in the Student Activities Build- ing. sophomore 1L The information center consists of eight for CareerVi binders of information surveying the job market about career: and job openings in the business, engineering, arent any and computer industries. aren't many Secondly, there is CV magazine which con- ting out of c tains informative articles about careers ranging ent jobs." from acting to business. Articles included in the monthly and first edition, which debuted in February, were mtolntlyaltd "The Best First Jobs," "Careers for a Black Mar- udentse alt ket," and "Living vs. Surviving in the Big te mo Cities." The magazine has regular articles on "The mo topics such as salaries and entrepreneuring. most recruit e sBrooke Kam The purpose of CareerVision, said LSA CareerVision gives nicely put together, and ual because it combines information on specific rs and on - the entire as well.' - Jeanne Miller, CP&P librarian Lisa Roth, the campus representative sion , is "to inform college students s available in the job market. There other magazines for people just get- ollege to make them aware of differ- the magazine will be available bi- [is directed mainly towards college hough those in high schools may be well. st competitive schools and those ed at (are on our mailing list)," said nin, College Relations Manager for n. ob insight The magazine will be free to students. Isam Yashruti, Circulation Director for CareerVision, said that about 5,000 copies of the magazine will be sent to CPP for further distribution. Asked if there had been any student reaction to the new CareerVision Information Center, Librarian Jeanne Miller replied, "I haven't heard anything.good or bad. It looks nicely put to- gether, and it's unusual because it combines spe- cific information on specific employers and on the entire industry as well." "This magazine takes a closer look at particu- lar areas of study and areas of interest and shows people who have succeeded in their careers," said LSA senior Adena Greenberg. "I think this is a good magazine, I really do." "I think this would be most helpful to seniors who are undecided about their future careers," said LSA senior Fariba Mirafzali. "I like the way it integrates all the different aspects that you would look at when trying to make a career choice." The only drawback to CareerVision seemed to be in its CPP In formation Center. As of now, no binders for liberal arts students are available. But Miller believes that these will soon follow. "It may be that (business, engineering and comput- ers) were the easiest to start with," she said. Weekend focuses on women artists B, AMANDA NEUMAN AND SARAH SCHWEITZER Women have been kept from progressing as professional artists and college professors because they lack role models and encouragement from instructors, an artist said Fri- day,. "When I was in school, you could. become an elementary school teacher, but you didn't even think of becoming a professional artist or an art professor if you were a woman," said H. Terry Braunstein, the keynote speaker for the annual Women's Weekend at East Quad, whiich this year celebrated women's corntributions to art. "When I was in graduate school, 95 percent of the students in my IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and staff reports classes were male and I only had one woman professor... which shows how women didn't realize they could become college professors." Speaking of her own difficulties in~pursuing a career in art, Braun- stein said she worked in cramped conditions in a one-room apartment for the first few years of her career. She never bothered to get a studio, ' because "I didn't feel like my work would be taken notice of; like my art was not of value," she said. Braunstein showed slides of her work, including examples of her paintings, photo montages, and col- lages. Braunstein graduated from the University's School of Art in 1964, and is currently a fine arts professor at California State University at Long Beach. Her work has been on display in museums and galleries across the country and in Japan and Paris. Some of Braunstein's art was ex- hibited Saturday in East Quad. Four series of her collages and montages were presented as well as four of her unusual "books" - damaged or un- usual books which Braunstein trans- forms by adding unique designs and cut-outs. "Perception becomes what the viewer wants to see," said Braun- stein, who met with students at the art show. Her idea was "to capture the mystery of pop-up books." One such book was called "Life and Death", which displayed images of life and death on facing pages to represent a cycle in which both enti- ties are significant. Works by other various women student artists, including Braun- stein's daughter, Samantha, were also displayed at the exhibit. Megan Barber, a junior in the Residential College and co-coordina- tor of the show, said such feminist art "celebrates women and shows a need for women to show their art." Women are slowly becoming more of the art world, and artists like Braunstein embrace art head on, un- afraid of science, the family, and women's place in the world, she said. Other events in the weekend in- cluded a forum for women's litera- ture readings and a coffee house fea- turing female performing artists. House Ethics Cmte. to deliberate alleged ethics violations by Wright WASHINGTON - Members of the House Ethics Committee begin jury - like deliberations this week on six broad allegations of ethics violations against House Speaker Jim Wright in a case with particularly touchy political ramifications. Of the six counts, sources say two charges - that Wright skirted House outside income limits by making bulk sales of a book in lieu of accepting speaking fees, and that he used a luxury car and Fort Worth condominium without paying for them - have emerged as most promi- nent. In addition, the 12 member panel - six Democrats and six Republi- cans - has been reviewing flow charts which present Wright's financial transactions with business partners, including his formation of an in- vestment company, Mallightco, with longtime friend and partner George Mallick. The ethics committee meetings, held under exceptionally tight secrecy, are to decide whether to recommend disciplinary action against Wright for the series of alleged misdeeds. NASA prepares for Discovery liftoff CAPE CANAVERAL - Buoyed by a flawless countdown and a forecast of perfect weather, NASA was set to launch space shuttle Discovery on today with five astronauts and a cargo that includes a $100 million satellite and four crippled rats. The satellite is the final point in an orbiting communications network that will keep the shuttle and other orbiting spacecraft in almost constant radio contact with the Earth. The four rats are part of an experiment on the effects of weightlessness on the healing of injure bones. Yesterday's fault- free countdown was in sharp contrast to the troubles that plagued NASA in getting Discovery ready for the mission. The flight originally had a Feb. 18 target date, but a series of faulty or suspect parts delayed the launch four times. Liftoff of the first shuttle mission of 1989 was scheduled for 8:07 a.m. EST. Launch- time weather forecasts called for clear skies, gentle winds and mild temperatures. Eastern Airlines reopens routes MIAMI - Eastern Airlines rolled out planes for renewed service on seven Latin American routes yesterday and continues to lure bargain hunters to its Northeast shuttle in an effort to rebuild despite a week- old strike. The company ballyhooed the reopening of the routes as a new start for the airline while blaming its cash crisis on pilots honoring Machinists' picket lines. Eastern filed for bankruptcy protection last week. Pilots and flight attendants unions have honored Machinists' picket lines, which went up when the 8, 500- member union refused to grant $125 million in concessions to the money- losing airline. "Today, Eastern is up and flying," company President Phil Bakes said yesterday in a statement. "With this, we begin building the great airline we've always known Eastern could and should be." Author says Hebrew translation of manifesto will be educational " JERUSALEM - A Holocaust survivor's Hebrew translation of "Mein Kampf" has touched off a controversy over whether the book, which in- spired the slaughter of 6 million Jews, should be published in Israel. "It's not easy to get someone to publish a book that is connected to H-itler," said Yaron, who spent the past 18 months translation the first volume of "Mein Kampf." So far, Yaron has not found a publisher. Yaron, a retired educator, argued yesterday that a Hebrew edition of Adolf Hitler's manifesto will educate young Israelis about the evils of the Nazi regime and is a warning against racist ideology. EXTRAS 'Hairy' attention results in arrest ELYRIA, Ohio - News reports about a man who threatened to sue a teacher for cutting his son's hair got the attention of police who arrested him for failing to complete a court sentence on an unrelated matter. Jack Kotnik was arrested last week on a bench warrant issued in Jan- uary 1988 for allegedly failing to attend classes as part of a drunken driv- ing sentence. The arrest came after news reports about Kotnik's 7-year-old son and a first-grade classmate had their "tails" - a long lock of hair hanging from the nape of the neck - cut by their teacher Katherine Abba. Sharon Kimble, the mother of the other boy, said she and her husband had decided to press assault charges, against the teacher, claiming the youngster was bruised while being held down to have his hair cut. The teacher has been suspended pending an investigation. Abba said she had cut the students' hair as a disciplinary measure. 0 6 I! it 0 r t Iranian paper says van bombing was FBI plot -NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - An' Iranian newspaper yesterday blamed the FBI for the bombing of a U.S. Nayy captain's van and said Wash- ington tried to implicate Iran in the attack to justify deportation of Ira- nifii students. The English-language newspaper Kayhan International linked the al- leged U.S. plot to Western anger at Avatollah Ruhollah Knomeini's or- der that author Salman Rushdie be killed for his new novel, "The Sa- tanic Verses," U.S. officials said Saturday the bombing of the van, driven by the wife-of the Navy man who mistak- enly ordered the destruction of an Iranian passenger jet, was being in- vestigated as a possiblo terrorist at- tack. The bombing "will not be the last attempt to implicate Iran" over the Rushdie controversy, Kayhan International said in an editorial summarized by Iran's official Islamic Republic News Agency. The newspaper noted that one day before Friday's bombing in San Diego, a U.S. Senate hearing was held at which an FBI official said thousands of "zealous" Iranian stu- dents in the United States pose a great threat to Americans. Therefore, the editorial said, Iran 'was not surprised when "the Federal Bureau of Investigation said that it was investigating possible Iranian involvement" in the bombing. In Washington, FBI spokesperson Kathy Kennedy dfnied the allegation and added, "we have never made any linkage to Iran since this incident happened." "We haven't gotten to the point (in the investigation) where we could make such a linkage," Kennedy said. Iran's Parliament speaker, Hashemi Rafsanjani, has alleged that western governments may carry out terrorist attacks and link them to Iran in retaliation for Khomeini's death order against Rushdie. -'': . f. e a 3 wl GET iI. The Personal Column Mlr"1At !11ILA5SfttD At- ,.' as long as Palestinian culture is suppressed.. BOYCOTT the Israeli Philharmonic Orchestra's performance, JOINUS INA CANDLE LIGHT VIGIL to protest Israel's denial of Palestinian human rights place: HILL AUD:RrUM time: Marei 14, 7:00pm s° . -paid by PSC- MSA Continued from Page 1 Bell believes the regents would like to see MSA "communicating with students, networking with stu- dents, getting student involved, - speaking on behalf of students at every place a student question comes in., McBain added. Bell, an LSA junior, has served on MSA for two years in every position from volunteer to his pre- sent post as Communications Committee chair. McBain, also an LSA junior, is serving out his first term as an LSA rep., and is also the chair of the newly formed MSA- Student lrganization Development Communications Committee chair this past term. The committee has implemented several "important" programs such as a safety sympo- sium and an MSA publicity drive. Bell stressed that the committee has completed all the projects "under budget." "My committee had the largest number-of volunteers on it, whereas I'4 'i i I I "They want to see MSA become other committees were scraping and an organization again, instead of Center Consulting Task Force. scrapping to get people to join what it is now, a disorganization." Bell is proud of his record as them," Bell said. anemdianB I I I I I Print or type your copy as you would like it to appear in the box below. leavin' for the summer? (ACTUALSIZEOFAD) I stayin'for the summer? I I NAHME I ADDRES.S I I PHoNrE I I I I j Mail or bring In person to: Student Publications Bldg.I i ~bet£k Cuu 1ailg The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the fall and winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. Subscription rates: for fall and winter (2 semesters) $25.00 in-town and $35 out-of-town, for fall only $15.00 in-town and $20.00 out-of-town. The Michigan Daily is a member of The Associated Press and the Student News Service. 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Opinion Staff: David Austin, Bill Gladstone, Susan Harvey, RAie Hudson, Marc Klein, Daniel Kohn, David Levin, Karen Miller, Rebecca Novick, Marcia Ochoa, Hiary Shadroui, Gus Teschke. Sports Staff: Steve Cohen, Andy Gottesman, David Hyman, Mark Katz, Jodi Leichtman, Eric Lemont, Taylor Lincoln, Jay Moses, Miachael Salinsky, John Samnick, Adam Schefter, Jeff Sheran, Doug Volan, Peter Zellen. Arts Staff: Greg Baise, Mary Beth Barber, Ian Campbell, Beth Colquitt, Sheala Durant, Brent Edwards, Greg Ferland, Michael Paul Fischer, Mike Fischer, Robert Flaggert, Forrest Green, Liam Flaherty, Margie Heinlen, Brian Jarvinen, Alyssa Katz, Leah Lagios, D. Mara Lowenstein, Lisa Magnino, Kim f1c Ginnis, Kristin Palm, Jay Pinka, Jill Pisoni, Mike Rubin, Lauren Shapiro, Tony Silber, Chuck Skarsaune, Usha Tummala, Pam Warshay, Nabeel Zuberi. Photo Staff: Alexandra Brez, Jessica Greene, Julie Holman, Jose Juarez, Ellen Levy, Liz Steketee, John Weise. i