Program offers .unique exposure by Cherie Currie While many students have partic- ipated in internships, most however are not familiar with their counter- part - externships. The University's externship pro- gram provides an opportunity for undergraduates to shadow alumni for at least one week in places all over the country. The Student Alumni Council, which founded the externship pro- gram last January, questions students about their career goals and then tries to arrange externships with Univer- * sity graduates corresponding to the students' interests. Because of the program's flexibil- ity, the rest of the arrangements, such as housing and transportation, may be arranged between the student and the alumnus. In the past, SAC has successfully paired students with such alumni as an architect in Boston, a television news reporter in Cincinnati, an at- *torney in Detroit, and a publicity di- rector for the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Sangita Rao and Meredith Davis, both University students and founders of the program, described externships as a unique experience for students to gain valuable insights into various career opportunities and to see what can result from a Uni- versity education. Rao and Davis said that because alumni are enthusiastic and eager to establish liaisons with University undergraduates, they view the pro- gram as a way to forge better stu- dent/alumni relations. Danny Bley, an LSA senior, de- scribed his experience with enthusi- asm. "It was great. It gave me in- sight into the profession I'm inter- ested in and into the industries that are related. It was an opportunity to meet people for possible future jobs." Clifford Craig, a University alumnus and a practicing surgeon in Boston, said, "(The program) gave me a perspective on what medicine means to me. A lot of times when you are involved in something, you don't take the time to reflect on it. "The program also gave me the chance to give back to the Univer- sity and keep in contact," Craig said. The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 11,1989 - Page 3 Stockwell speaks on his experience in the CIA by Britt Isaly Ex-CIA agent John Stockwell denounced both the past and present practices of the Central Intelligence Agency last night in front of a packed Michigan Union Ballroom. "Bush put the 'C' back in CIA," Stockwell told the crowd. "Now it is all covert, whereas Reagan had made it all overt." Stockwell, hired by the CIA in 1964, quit after 12 years on the job because of the injustices he believed the CIA was committing in such countries as Vietnam, Nicaragua, Angola, Afghanistan and Iran. Stockwell said that for 26 years the CIA "was training the police (of, Latin America) and supervising them in the technique of torture as a means of population control." The CIA "reports that there were 175 projects in the MK Ultra Pro-, gram in which the CIA was experi- menting on American peoples and population groups with disease and drugs," Stockwell said. "They put light bulbs in a subway in NY that, would make people have vertigo so they wouldn't see straight... they slipped people LSD mickeys and then filmed them when they went weird... Some of these diseases were viral diseases that greatly, closely re- sembled AIDS." Stockwell discussed a wide array of topics ranging from CIA opera- tions with drug smugglers to the agency's alleged involvement with the assassination of President John Kennedy. He alleged that the CIA was in- volved in the infamous French Con- nection, with the U.S. "flying in arms... (and) flying out drugs" and that the CIA also smuggled heroin. out of the Golden Crescent in Afghanistan, "the largest source of heroin in the world today." Stock- well slammed the CIA for these drug-related operations, calling them highly unconstitutional. Perhaps the most controversial subject was Stockwell's assertion that the CIA was responsible for the murder of John Kennedy and then covered up the events of the 1963 assassination. He said the Secret Service helped plan the ambush. "They gunned him down and killed him. They were not willing to wait, this right wing shadow gov- ernment [the CIA], until the demo- cratic process could put someone of their choice into office," Stockwell said. "They were faced with Kennedy, John, and then after him quite possibly Bobby, and then, God knows, Teddy Kennedy after that." "And that, simply put was an American Coup d'etat." Phillips P. Moulton, author of Ammunition for Peace-Makers: Answers for Activists said of the speech: "He didn't give any indica- tion of a solution to all this... Isn't it true that these evils are so inte- grally linked to the CIA that we can get rid of the evils only by abolish- ing CIA-type operations?" DOUG USHER/Daily, John Stockwell, former CIA agent, speaks on the CIA's alleged involvement with drugs, the Kennedy assassination and about his+ experience within the CIA before a packed Union Ballroom audience. 1 Snowboarding club offers winter alternative 4 by Mike Fi-tzgibbon Snow skiing and ice skating won't be the only fun and fast sports to enjoy this winter. For the recently formed University Snowboarding Club, fun is a few inches of snow, and fast is a five-and-a-half-foot long, 10-inch-wide board that looks like an oversized, rudderless water ski. Club President Rick Shick, an LSA junior, said the sport started about seven years ago in Vermont and California. The original snowboard was called a Snurfer, and had a rope leading from the front tip so the rider could steer it. Today's models integrate snow ski materials with neon skateboard graphics for a more advanced Franck crac] by Ruth Littmann Laughtrack host and comedian Tom Franc] doesn't waste wall space on Miller Beer or Mot ley Crue posters. "In my apartment, I have a wall where I pu pictures of comedians I admire," he said. "ThenI cut out bubbles - like the kind they have in comic strips - and I have the comedians talking to me." "Tom, be ethical," says the picture of Wayn Cotter. "Be hip," says the picture of Denni Miller. The picture of Steve Martin remind Franck to "Be funny." "Be motivated" is one command Franc] doesn't need from his idols. "I've wanted to be a stand-up comedian sinceI was eight years old," he said. board. "I've skied all my life," Shick said, "but in high school and around here, I got bored of skiing. There was no place to go." "Thrashing" is how club vice president Rich Hong described the experience of snowboarding. Hong, an LSA sophomore, borrowed the term from skateboarding. He said of the two sports, "There's not much in common, except stance." In snowboarding, he said, "You're feet are locked-in, so you rely a lot more on upper body movement." Hong has been a member of the club since its start last February. The "originality" of snowboarding first attracted him, but now he boards for the sensation: "When you're flowing back and forth, it's a really good feeling." Skiers may be "a little faster," he said, but snowboards offer types of maneuverability unavailable to skiers. "They're a lot more fun in powder, especially going over moguls." "The first couple times you do it, you spend a lot of time on your butt," said Shick, but falling forward, in the other direction, can be more hazardous. "The biggest danger is wrist injuries from people breaking their falls with their hands," Shick said. Shick has never been injured, but he says he is careful and wears knee pads. "Snowboarding is safer than skiing," he said, "because you're not going to twist one leg since both legs are attached to the same board." Shick taught himself how to snowboard in the Arboretum as a first-year student. Bavarian Village, a local ski shop, carries snowboards costing between $350 to $450 with bindings, but Shick says its possible to rent them for only $6 an hour at the Mt. Brighton ski slope just north of Ann Arbor. The Snowboarding Club is planning an exhibit of the sport in the basement of the Michigan Union October 23, from 9:30 am to 3:30 pm. There will be a video, snowboards, and club members on hand to answer questions. ks them up at Franck, now a junior working toward his k Bachelor of Fine Arts in sculpture, got his first t- chance to perform comedy during his first year in Ann Arbor, debuting at the University Club's it biweekly amateur comedy-night, Laughtrack. I "I was a freshman when I saw Laughtrack for in the first time," Franck reminisced. "I thought g 'Wow!' but there's no way in hell that I'm going to do this." Franck pauses and grins, his smiley- e face T-shirt grinning with him. s But then an Epiphany, Franck met a woman s who refused to go out with him. "I got up there at Laughtrack and did a lot of material about this k girl. Not bad stuff," Frank smirks, "but not all nice stuff either." I Franck insists that Laughtrack is the ideal place to spark a comedy career, because Laugh- answer questions. Laughtrack track is so well run and "with 100 of your friends in the audience, it's difficult to bomb." Encouraging potential student comedians to put aside shyness and debut at the University, Franck points out that he, in fact, is very intro- verted. Stand-up comedy, he says, is the best remedy for shyness. Franck, whose jokes range from cartoons to playground games, remarked, "(Comedy) is also an excuse for me not to grow up." "Ive got so far to go," Franck mused. "I'm doing comedy because I really love the craft. I don't mind starving for a few years to get really good at this." Tom Franck willhost Laughtrack tonight at 10 p.m. at the University Club in the Michigan Union. Admission is $3 with student ID. I UM News in The Daily 764-0552 THE LIST Hungarians fear instability as What's happening in Ann Arbor today Meetings U-M Students of Objectivism - discussion at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Welker Rm. U-M Asian Student Coalition - 7 p.m. in Rm. 2413 of Mason Hall U-M College Democrats - second mass meeting of the semester; Ann Arbor City councilmember Liz Brater will speak; 7 p.m. in Rm. 2240 Mason Hall; old and new members welcome Asian Student Association - 7 p.m. in Lane Hall Commons Rm. Special Olympics Partners' Club - mass meeting; 7 p.m. in Union Pendelton Rm. Shorin Ryu Karate Club - 8:30 p.m. in the CCRB; beginners welcome Speakers Max von der Grun - discussing and reading from his works Jeff Stryker (Public Health) and Sally Payton (Law) - speak on "Technology and Medicine"; form 3:30-5 p.m. in Rm. 1005 Dow Prof. R. Erikson (MSU) - speaks on "Chaotic Markov Chains"; 3:30 p.m. in Rm. 1443 Mason Hall Prof. Robert Zajonc - "The Face: A Window of Emotions"; 8 p.m. in Rackham Amphitheatre Furthermore 2333 Bursley; 8 p.m. - 1:30 a.m. or call 763-WALK U-M Women's Lacrosse - practice from 9-11 p.m. at Tartan Turf National Coming Out Day Information Table - sponsored by the Lesbian and Gay Men's Rights Organizing Committee; 8 a.m. to noon in the Fishbowl Jonathan Richman - two shows 7:30 and 10:30 p.m. at The Ark; tickets $12 in advance call 665-4755; tickets more at the door Women of the University Faculty - buffet tray dinner at 5:30 p.m. ; followed by a lecture by Diane Schwartz on "Malaysia: A Southeast Asian Paradise" at 6:30 p.m.; additional information at 998-7080 or 747-0178 Museum of Art Fine Arts Videotapes - a tape on Picasso (1 hour, 20 min.); shown at noon at the University museum Women in Communications - 4 p.m. in Rm. 2050 of the Frieze Bldg. Beans & Rice dinner - a chance to support groups which do direct aid in Central America, especially SANCTUARY; 6 p.m. at Guild House Socialists BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) - Some opposition politicians said Tuesday that compromises made at a historic Communist Party congress, at which the party was dissolved and a new Socialist Party formed, would cause political instability. The four-day congress that ended. Monday overwhelmingly approved a new party line calling for "a consti- tutional state based on a multiparty system where the source of the power is the will of the people ex- pressed in free elections." A manifesto adopted by the congress pledged commitment to democracy and a break with the Leninist mold. But it remained un- clear whether and how fast the new PERM PACK PLUS $35.99 I Includes shampoo, I I professional cut & blowdry I I (Reg $50) I I (Long Hair Extra) Exp. 10/25/89 ~~------ ~ ~- ~~~~~~~~~~ I TEN TANNING VISITS $22.95 (Reg $25) I I We've Doubled Our I I Tanning Facilities! I Exp. 10/25/89 replace party will divest itself of nants of Communist rule. The congress elected Re ers, formerly Communi chairperson, as president of party. It named a 25-memb( ium, where reformers are it jority. Nyers, speaking at a about 600 people Tuesday, some problems when he "some still feel that the nists are incapable of dem tion." Meeting reporters after said that "major changes are for the party to win the trust." Zoltan Biro of the op Communists all rem- Hungarian Democratic Forum ex- pressed skepticism about the politi- zsoe Ny- cal changes. st Party "I do not consider fortunate the f the new agreement between the various er presid- forces, although I am glad that the n the ma- left wing of the party, which does not wish to accept democracy, can- rally of not feel at home in this successor admitted party," Biro told the Mai Nap news- said that paper. Commu- He was apparently referring to the ocratiza- congress' decision to reject radical re- formers' demands that diehard Marx- ward, he ists be shut out of the party. required "The best solution would have people's been a clear split, with the left wing of the party going off on its own," ?position Biro was quoted saying. $45per person gets you an unlimited weekend lift ticket, and we'll throw in Friday night's skiing absolutely free. This special rate, available to groups of 20 or more, gives you 33 hours of skiing!! Turn your free Friday into a fabulous ski weekend. Let us assist you in locating area motels who offer great weekend lodging rates. We'll even provide a complimentary lift ticket for , the group leader with every 30 paid. Get organized and get skiing . .. call Randy.- today for more informa-.' tion at 1-800-321-4637 or 1-616-378-2911. MOUNTAIN RESORT Ski FREE Frida y nites! Announcing: Sacred Scripture, Our Traditions, and Contemporary Ethics a lecture series First lecture: "Scripture as a Resource for Ethics Today" presented by Prof. William Spohn, SJ, Ph.D. from the Jesuit School of Theology at Berkeley Friday, October 13, 1989 4:00 pm Modern anana aefninan Danm I National Coming Out Day Rally and March - sponsored by Lesbian and Gay Men's Rights Organizing Committee; begins at nnnn on the T~rin II~tLIIIIIP'IUE