The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 10, 1990 - Page 7 Mother Teresa to *continue her duties CALCUTTA, India (AP)-Mother Teresa, whose wish to retire was re- jected by nuns from around the world, said yesterday her re-election as head of her charity was part of God's "own plans." The balloting was to have been a vote to choose a successor to the frail, 80-year-old nun who is known as the "saint of the gutters" for her work with the destitute and the poor. "I was expecting to be free, but God has his own plans," Mother Teresa said when she met reporters for the first time after Saturday's election. The Nobel Peace Prize laureate withdrew her decision to step down as superior general of the Missionar- ies of Charity after ballots were c.st by 103 delegates summoned from missions around the globe. Calcutta's Vicar General Mon- signor Francis Gomes, who presided over the secret balloting, said Mother Teresa had little choice but to accept the unanimous vote. Mother Teresa said she had been firm on stepping down until the bal- loting forced her to change her deci- sion. "These things cannot be de- cided beforehand," she said. In March, Pope John Paul II said he was bowing to Mother Teresa's wish to retire from the top post of the order she founded. He had rejected her earlier requests-to step aside. Mother Teresa suffered a nearly fatal heart attack a year ago. She re- turned to work but asked for retire- ment within a few months. Asked if she would slow down her pace of work, Mother Teresa replied: "We have sisters who are ca- pable of helping." She said she would continue to travel according to the needs of her group. Along with Mother Teresa, four aides were elected. Sister Fredrick, a Maltese nun who previously was head of the charity's U.S. chapter based in Washington, was elected as Mother Teresa's deputy. Mother Teresa was elected to a further six-year term. New computer program may aid law students by Amy Quick You finally made it - law school. But after all of the excellent un- dergrad work, LSATs, law school applications and essays, you discover the dreaded truth: you're a closet slob. You can't get organized. Your notes are scribbles that continue up the sides of the paper. The page in the middle of the briefs on Hadley v. Baxendale is missing, and the coffee just spilled all over your tort notes. But there is hope. Numina Group, a student-run Chicago-based company, is marketing Legal-Eze, computer software designed specifi- cally to assist law students in orga- nizing their notes and budgeting their study time. For students that enjoy working with computers, the the group's Chief Operating Officer, is currently attempting to market the program to the University Law School. A group of University law stu- dents has been experimenting with the software and based on their reac- tions, the University law school will consider purchasing it for law stu- dents' use. However, law computing center system analyst Ted Graham has ex- pressed doubts about the program. He said although he believes a com- puter program designed for law-stu- dents is a good idea because there are few, if any, he pointed out that many law students are not interested in computers and tend to use only word processors. The program puts notes in a data 'When I first began law school, I was overloaded with information. All that was suggested to me was a word processing program that was totally inadequate' -David Gray Legal-Eze Creator One more line Mikami Sumitaka waits in yet another line at Ulrich's Bookstore. After waiting a substantial amount of time, he was waited on by a cheery book clerk who bestowed a large amount of costly books upon him. Auto-workers GM near end of negotiation Strike likely DETROIT (AP) - A lack of public rancor may hide an undercur- rent of trouble as contract negotia- tions between the United Auto Workers Union and General Motors Corp. enter their final days before a possible strike. Economic uncertainty stemming from the Mideast crisis and the out- wardly calm atmosphere since the talks began in mid-July haven't changed views of some labor ob- servers that a strike at the world's largest automaker is likely. The union's contracts with GM, Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp., covering more than 450,000 active employees, expire at midnight Fri- day. An average of 88 percent of the union membership voting in special local elections last week gave the UAW authorization to call a strike against GM. The union is continuing a tradi- tion called pattern bargaining, and chose GM as its target. The UAW plans to use a settlement with GM as a pattern for agreements with Ford and Chrysler. About 300,000 GM workers are covered by the national UAW contract. The UAW last struck GM in 1984 - a one-week walkout that shut all of the automaker's assembly plants and its technical center in Warren, Mich. Ron Glantz, an auto analyst with Dean Witter Reynolds in San Fran- cisco, late last week held to his fore- cast of months ago that the UAW would hit GM with a two-week strike. At the end of July, the union had about $770 million in its strike fund. "At the least, you're going to have wildcats," Glantz said. "As wa. saw when that Flint fuel tank factory went down, one strike can be awk- ward" UAW Local 659 last month struck GM's AC Rochester West parts plant in Flint for six days. The result was the temporary idling of seven assembly plants left without parts. Union officials who head the union team at GM, have said that walkout was over local issues and was unrelated to the national negoti- ations. GM and tAW negotiators have remained mostly behind closed doors since talks began July 18. In the few updates company and union officials have given, com- ments have centered on how hard the bargainers are working and how much progress is being made. "We've been doing some good work and I'm pleased with the way negotiations have gone up to this point," said UAW Vice President Stephen Yokich, who heads the union team at GM. "Before anybody gets the wrong idea, I've been in negotiations like this and you run into the brick wall and you're on strike nine days later," he added. "And I've been in negotia- tions where you thought you were in the ditch and bang, you're out of the ditch and you have a settlement." program might be something to consider. David Gray, a first-year law stu- dent from IIT/Chicago-Kent College of Law, first thought of the idea to create software that catered specifi- cally to law students. "When I first began law school, I was overloaded with information. I wanted a computer program that would help me organize all my work. All that was suggested to me was a word processing program that was totally inadequate," Gray said in a press release. Gray's classmate, Glenn Spence, had had similar problems. Working together, they decided which software functions they thought would be ideal for law students. Spence and Gray joined forces with computer programmer George Chis, and soon Legal-Eze became a reality. With University graduate busi- ness student John Ringlein, Spence and Gray formed Numina Group. The group began marketing the software in August, and Ringlein, base and organizes them alphabets= cally and by class, subject, and due date. It also: gives a chronological list4ot all briefs for the year or for one class at a time allows students to customize or make changes to the default list of case briefs by adding the sections; sources, classes and subjects desired enablesthe student topri,ten; tire briefs quickly prints an entire course outling at the end of the term has a time analysis function which charts time studied foreach class Graham also said some of the functions don't seem very useful. "I don't think the pie chart is likely to change how much time students study, and most students are pretty organized with notes by the time they get to law school." However, first-year law student Glenn Forbis said, "I do all my briefs on my PC anyway. H AVE EVER WANTED TO Rebel faction captures Liberian President during skirmish BE PART OF A HUMOR MAG? NAW STUPID THE GUS BEHIND -d G . .L. \; t t t1 i , Y,. MONROVIA, Liberia (AP) - A rebel faction shot President Samuel Doe in both legs and captured him Sunday during a battle in the capital's port, the British Broadcasting Corp. reported.. More than 60 people, including dozens of Doe's bodyguards, were killed in the fighting between the Doe loyalists and rebels led by Prince Johnson, the BBC World Service reported. It said the battle took place outside the headquarters of a West African task force in Mon- rovia. Doe had left his fortified seaside mansion to pay an unscheduled visit to the commander of the West African task force, Lt. Gen Arnold Quainoo of Ghana, the BBC's corre- spondent in Monrovia reported. Johnson and some of his fighters followed Doe, and a quarrel erupted, the BBC report said. The two sides then started battling with riles, ma- chine guns and grenades. Johnson's rebels wounded Doe in both legs and carried him off to their base camp, the report said. Johnson called the BBC and de- clared himself president of Liberia until an interim government can be installed. Rival rebel leader Charles Taylor of the National Patriotic Front has also claimed the presi- dency in the past. The BBC said Johnson pledged to put Doe on trial. Earlier, Doe and Johnson had called an informal cease-fire between their forces. Rebels in the 8-month-old civil was have accused Doe of nepotism, stealing millions of dollars of state money. They also hold him respon- sible for the deaths of thousand of civilians killed during the civil war. Liberia's civil war began Dec. 24, when Johnson helped lead rebels loyal to Taylor in an invasion from Ivory Coast. In March, Johnson broke away to form his own faction. Doe had been holded up in his fortified mansion in Monrovia. Sunday's capture of Doe came after Taylor's rebels launched their own attack against some of the 3,000 soldiers in the West African force at the port Saturday. The task force had called for relief agencies to return to Monrovia and promised to assure their safety. U.S. Marine helicopters Saturday flew in four workers from the U.S. Agency for International Development and officials of the Belgium-based Doc- tors Without Borders and the Feed the Hungry programs. The war has left Monrovia with- out running water and telephone communications. Very little food had made it to the capital, a city of 400,000 people, for about two months. Well, if you'll settle for the Gargoyle, here s you chance. We re desperately seeking writers,./ photoggraohers, humorists, artists, business-type- ir %. r thinkers, ao/or cartoonists to make us powerful :.::.;";'.' %r, again, Even if you're just curious (and you are), please stop by our mass meeting, next Sunday at 2.00. or any of our weekly Sunday meetings at our THE ground floor office n the Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard. And if you act now, we it even MGA throw in this fabulous spagherti soinner--t scesMAGAZ dices.Student u icctis Ann Aroor " ic -~,c- t I'S ' a 021 This is your last chance! There are only a limited number of 1990 MichiganEnsian yearbooks available for sale. - - f1 ' ,. 1' p t Catch all the facts in Kickoff Books may be ourchased at the I i 6 I .,