The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 24, 1992 - Page 5 Students fear recession job slump, crowd CP&P office by Ilona Greenfield As the recession drags on and the unemployment rate slowly rises, many students say they perceive that the "Land of Opportunities" is becoming a "Land of Disappointments." As LSA senior Jeff Paul com- mented, "The recession is still here, 'The recession is still here, and the job market is not as large as people said it would be. Things don't seem to be getting better.' - Jeff Paul, LSA senior and the job market is not as large as people said it would be. Things don't seem to be getting better." Students said that they are feel- ing frustrated because of the reces- sion. LSA senior Jennifer Trabin said, "Companies are saying that they would have hired me a few years ago, but now they can't. Most don't know if they're hiring yet." Some students, such as Engineer- ing senior Allan Dewey, said they are considering changes in the future. "If this were a normal time in the economy, I would just apply to the aerospace companies. Now I'm thinking of going into consulting, graduate school, or another technical field," Dewey said. Career Planning and Placement (CP&P) Director Deborah May said that CP&P is the busiest she has seen it in her 10 years working at the center, largely due to the pressures of the recession. "It's always been wild, but not as wild as this year," she said. "It is not unusual to come in on an afternoon and not be able to find a seat." May said that students feel un- duly worried. She said she is trying to encourage students to take this nervousness and "translate it into action." The first step of this action, ac- 'cording to May, is to determine "who are you, what are your skills and values, what might be out there for you in terms of career opportunities." May said that despite CP&P's efforts, the number of companies that recruit on college campuses has dwindled. According to a Northwestern University report, 54.5 percent of the 259 companies surveyed cut the number of college campuses from which they recruit. May said the University has ex- perienced a 12 percent drop in busi- ness recruiting, and added that some campuses have experienced as much as a 30 percent decrease. May said that because of mergers and foldings of many Fortune 500 Companies, their recruiting strength has dwindled. Because firms can no longer eas- ily afford to come to campuses, May said, many students are ieeing anx- ious and threatened. CP&P has sponsored 197 pro- grams since September to teach stu- dents how to conduct their own off- campus job search, May said. She added that workshops designed for first-, second-, and third-year stu- dents have become increasingly popular. Despite all the efforts that CP&P is making, many students say they feel an intense crunch searching for a job. Students now more than ever feel that they have to be pre- 'It's always been wild, Rackham symposium but not as wild as this Brinkley Messick speaks during a symposium on ethnicity and nationalism year. It is not unusual in Rackham Auditorium yesterday. to come in on an afternoon and not be" able to find a seat.' LD S recognizes - Deborah May, CP&P director professors, Tsfor pared - even over-prepared - when applying for a job. Nonetheless, the process contin- ues as students research and apply for various positions and pursue possible career options. Even though students such as LSA senior Jim Davis feel "pretty leery and scared," they are spending more time than they had ever imag- ined going after the job they desire. extraordinary effort by Crystal Gilmore The Learning Disability Society (LDS) - a support group for stu- dents with learning disabilities - recently recognized 40 University professors and TAs for taking time to help students with learning disabilities. Asher Stoller, an LDS member, said the purpose of the awards is "to let teachers know that students appreciate their help and to let other students know about the soci- ety." Todd Handel, co-chair of LDS, said he nominated "teachers who realized what difficulties the stu- dents had and willingly gave extra time to help out." Chemistry Professor Marian Chu Hallada and Business Professor Carleton Griffin were among the 40 University professors and TAs rec- ognized by LDS. Hallada said she didn't consider her efforts extraordinary. "The dis- abled students I have met have not been particularly demanding." She said most students are cooperative and she does whatever possible to help there learn. Griffin said he has had students with a wide variety of needs. He has allowed some students to tape record his lectures and has given other students extra time to take tests. Handel said other teachers al- lowed students to see their lecture notes or arranged for students to get the notes from a classmate. LDS members said approxi- mately 60 University students are registered with Services for Stu- dents with Disabilities as having a learning disability. Stoller explained that certain students learn differently. "History of Art teachers are very 'The disabled students I have met have not been particularly demanding.' - Marian Chu Hallada, Chemistry professor good with people with LD" because of their right-brained teaching styles, Stoller said. He added instructors in other de- partments also try to be helpful, but sometimes are unaware of the challenges faced by LD students. He said some instructors "did not know about it until they had me." However, he said the University is giving more support to students with learning disabilities. LDS gives recognition awards to any teacher who has been nominated by a student with learning disabili- ties. Emily Singer, the LDS founder, said the society does not turn anyone down for the award. Don't trust much about history After finally seeing Oliver Stone's much-ballyhooed movie JFK, I'm not sure whether I agree with Stone's theory or not. This puts me in the minority - most of the people who saw the film are ready to either canonize or incarcerate Stone. What bothers me about the entire controversy surrounding the movie is not who is right and who is wrong, but the unwillingness of constituents on each side to accept the Matthew possibility of being wrong. Rennie In JFK, Stone says the assassina- tion of President John F. Kennedy was the result of an intricate conspiracy involving everyone from then-Vice President Lyndon Johnson on down. Lee Harvey Oswald, the man charged as Kennedy's lone assassinis portrayed as the fall guy for the whole network. The investigation into the conspiracy theory was initiated by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison, played by Kevin Cosner in the movie, after he found several disturbing inconsis- tencies in the Warren Commission's official report. Stone has used his dramatic license to lend more credibility to Garrison's hypothesis. I don't know what really happened in Dallas on that historical November day. Neither does Stone. Neither does Garri- son. And neither does the Warren Commission. The Warren Commission could have pulled off oneof history's biggest lies. Or Oliver Stone could be a grandstanding leftover from the '60s who never met a conspiracy he didn't like. I'm not ready to take either source as gospel, but we would be foolish to dismiss either without consideration. The pervading fear is that our generation, which was not around when Kennedy was assassinated, will take Stone's movie as history. Stone is not qualified to be a historian, people say, because he lets his personal biases cloud his judgement. My question is: Who doesn't? We have a tendency to regard all history as completely objec- tive, never considering that historians are not immune from the biases which affect everybody else. You and I could watch the same event take place right in front of us and could come away with different accounts of what happened. If these discrepancies are conceivable, why should we expect such pristine objectivity from historians who write about long-removed events? At one point in the movie, Assistant D.A. Bill Broussard yells at Garrison, "How the hell do you know who your daddy is? 'Cause your mama told you so." Nearly all the truths we hold dear require a certain amount of blind faith. How do we know anything? Because somebody told us. Maybe in a history book. Maybe in a movie. No historical account should be exempt from scrutiny. No we shouldn't blindly accept Stone's theory just because of its glossy presentation. But nor should we buy the Warren Commission report just because it came from our government. The license to write history, to shape how future generations will remember the past, is an immea- surable power. Whomever we grant this power to must be monitored closely. Stone closes his production with the following message: "Dedicated to the young, in Watch out, Wayne Lorie Seck, a junior majoring in chemistry, steals a hockey puck from Rodney Gleason, an engineering sophomore, leaving him to watch her drive to the goal. MSA Environmental Issues Commission becomes official Bush requests funds to clean Great Lakes by Nicole Malenfant The Michigan Student Assem- bly's former environmental ad-hoc committee became an official com- mission Jan. 14 as the result of a student referendum last November. The new Environmental Com- mission hopes to use its formal recognition to expand its ongoing goal of uniting environmental groups on campus, educating stu- dents, and communicating students' environmental concerns to MSA, said Commission Chair Nena Shaw. Shaw petitioned to upgrade the commission's ad-hoc status last fall. It was put on the ballot during the November election, and passed by a 3-1 margin. MSA President James Green said the referendum returns demon- strated that students believe the student government should be in- volved in environmental issues. Shaw said environmentalism has become such a big issue on campus that tenth ctnrdent-. anrd faulnty want to incorporate it into all aspects of the educational experience. "By having the Environmental Commission on MSA, we will be providing students with another outlet to become aware of the issues and problems facing the environ- ment today, and how this relates to each student individually," she said. The commission began as a part of Jenifer Van Valey's 1990 presi- dential campaign, and has grown due to increased participation and inter- est. Although it was not an official part of MSA until Jan. 14, the group has remained active. The commission includes mem- bers from groups such as Environ- mental Action, Recycle-UM, Rain- forest Action Movement, GREEN, and PIRG-UM, and meets weekly to discuss environmental issues and fu- ture projects. "This way we keep the groups networking," Shaw said. Ivor Kiwi, a member of En-Act, agreed that this networking is bene- firial_ "It gives nnity to the envi- ronmental movement on campus," Kiwi said. "We all have common goals," added Dan Rabinovitch, a PIRG-UM member, "so why not all take a piece of it and work together?" Green said he believes that the group has been able to achieve an unusual degree of cohesion and unity and that it is a model for other groups wishing to unite for a common cause. Besides sharing responsibility for projects, the commission also plans to have another mug sale this year in order to promote using recyclable cups. It is also currently working on a plan to make the Michigan Union more environmentally sound.. Environmental groups on cam- pus have also begun planning to come together for Earth Day '92. Kiwi and Rabinovitch stressed that they hope to get other groups and people aware of, and involved in the commission. WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- dent Bush is requesting $61.1 mil- lion to clean up the Great Lakes in his fiscal 1993 budget, a 16 percent increase over this year's allocation, the White House said yesterday. If approved by Congress, it would be the second straight big in- crease in spending on Great Lakes programs. Congress and the administration agreed on a $19 million increase for fiscal 1992, bringing the Environ- mental Protection Agency's Great Lakes budget to $52.6 million. An EPA official who spoke on condition of anonymity said the Great Lakes budget request contin- ues a five-year initiative announced last year by Administrator William Reilly. He promised to fight pollution on a comprehensive basis, simulta- neously working to stop discharges directly into the water and protect- ing the lakes from airborne toxics, instead of the piecemeal approach used in the past. The spending proposal also would allow continued implemen- tation of the Great Lakes Critical Programs Act of 1990. The law set deadlines for completing a variety of programs that had been languish- ing, including strategies for clean- growing at a more rapid rate than the rest of the agency ... it's not small potatoes," the official said. The budget proposal drew cau- tious praise from Sen. Carl Levin, (D-Mich.), and Mark Van Putten, director of the National Wildlife Federation's Great Lakes Natural Resource Center in Ann Arbor. Both have criticized the EPA's handling of Great Lakes cleanup in the past but have said the agency's performance is improving. "If the report is accurate, this is good news for the Great Lakes and for the millions who depend on this vast freshwater resource," said Levin, who sponsored the 1990 law. He said he wanted more details of the budget request before comment- ing further. "Assuming it's all true and that there aren't cuts in other programs that benefit the lakes ... we're very pleased," Van Putten said. The fund- ing increase comes as the EPA is making the Great Lakes a bigger pri- ority, "and both are long overdue," he said. Van Putten said he hoped the spending increase indicates the ad- ministration is committed to break- ing a logjam on setting federal wa- ter quality standards for the lakes, which the Critical Programs Act . 1