8A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, April 4, 1996 Crash leaves execs working to plan ahead for tragedy NATION/WORLD Los Angeles Times The crash of Commerce Secretary Ronald Brown's plane yesterday in Croatia represents the nation's larg- est ever loss oftop- level executive tal- ent in a single trag- edy, leaving a void at several compa- nies. A dozen execu- tives from the tele- communications, banking and con- lamoa grateful I make the C - Dx Chief executi struction sectors were among those trav- eling with Brown to offer expertise, products and services to help the war- ravaged former Yugoslavia begin re- building. Their presumed loss cast a pall over the business world and espe- cially over employees at the affected companies, many of which a day earlier had been giddy at the prospect of land- ing business in the struggling region. At Parsons Corp. in Pasadena, Calif., employees were in shock as they awaited news about their chief executive, Leonard Pieroni. Officials of Guardian Industries Corp. in Auburn Hills, Mich., were behind closed doors much of the day as they absorbed the potential loss of David Ford, a senior executive who had planned to donate 23 metric tons of glass to Sarajevo for windows in new office and apartment buildings. The tragedy spotlights the need for succession planning and the risks inher- ent in executives' traveling into remote and politically unstable corners of the world asthey reach forbusiness in today's increasingly global marketplace. "The reality is, executives do briously have to fly to- gether, and didn1'tsometimes these things happen," trip,"said Jack Groban, manag- aniel Bannister ing director of ive of DynCorp A.T. Kearney, an executive search firm in Los An- geles. Most corporations, he and other experts said, do not do a good job of succession planning to cope with such loss. As in past cases of such corporate loss - affecting companies, from Donald Trump's gambling and real es- tate empire to Walt Disney Co. to In-N- Out Burger to Chevron Corp. - there will undoubtedly be a flurry of activity as companies attempt to prepare for tragic eventualities. But once the shock phase has passed, Groban said, compa- nies will return to their old ways. Bechtel, the big San Francisco engi- neering firm, confirmed that one of its executives was scheduled to be on the plane. P. Stuart Tholan, was president of Bechtel Europe, Africa, Middle East, Southwest Asia, a unit with oversight of company markets throughout the region. Based in London, the Philadelphia na- tive had been with Bechtel 33 years. He oversaw the company's monumental AP PHOTO Commerce Dept. employee Jennifer Schoen (left) consoles employee Kristine Breti at the department in Washington. work in reconstructing Kuwait's oil pro- duction facilities after the Gulf War. Another California executive on board was Ian Donald Terner, founder and president of Bridge Housing Corp., a nonprofit builder of low-income housing based in San Francisco. One executive reacted to the news with an awkward mix of relief and sadness. Told of the crash at a gathering in Fairfax, Va., which he had chosen to attend in lieu of accompanying Brown, Daniel Bannister became ashen. He, pulled out a dog-eared itinerary for the trip that still happened to be in his breast pocket and fingered it nervously. Bannister, the chief executive of DynCorp, a high-technology services company, was among 15 U.S. execu- tives Brown had invited to accompany him on the trade mission to Bosnia and Croatia, but Bannister canceled at the last minute. Three other executives, in- cluding Alfred Checchi, co-chairman of Northwest Airlines, did not board the ill-fated plane. "I am obviously grateful I didn't make the trip," Bannister said in a stunned monotone. "I deeply regret what has happened." Of course, it doesn't take a headline- grabbing plane crash to drive home the need for corporate succession planning. A heart attack, a traffic accident or an act of violence can rob an organization of its leaders. After Frank Wells, Disney's presi- dent, died in a helicopter crash while on a ski trip in April 1994, Chief Executive Michael Eisner took on his responsi- bilities. Entertainment industry observ- ers contended that the added burden might have contributed to Eisner's need for emergency heart surgery a few months later. While on his hospital bed, a chastened Eisner reportedly began composing a list of possible successors. After a 1991 plane crash in Malay- sia killed a dozen Conoco Inc. em- ployees, including four senior execu- tives, the company saw remarkably little disruption -because the Dallas- based oil company had a succession plan in place. Irvine, Calif.-based In-N-Out Burger lost its president, Richard Snyder, when his small plane crashed in a field in late 1993. Snyder, son of the company's founders, was only 41 but had made plans for such an event. UNABOMBER Contin'ued from PageIAM The Unabomber also spoke out against the advancement of technology, say- ing in his manifesto that "technology is a more powerful social force than the aspiration for freedom." In the manifesto, the Unabomber said leftists, including those in high positions at universities, will use tech- nology "to oppress everyone else if they get it under their own control." Allen Shield, who passed away in 1989, also advised Kaczynski on his dissertation while he was at the Univer- sity. Shield was associated with a group of mathematics professors who urged those in the field not to take jobs that would benefit war research. Shield, along with 73 other profes- sors from around the country, signed a Sept. 16,1967, statement that said: "We urge you to regard yourselves as re- sponsible for the uses to which your talents are put. We believe this respon- sibility forbids putting mathematics in the service of this cruel war." Retired mathematics Prof. Maxwell Reed, who also served on Kaczynski's doctoral committee, said he had no memory of Kaczynski's dissertation. Reed said he served on approxi- mately 50 doctoral committees in 50 years, and remembered all but 10 of the dissertations. "(Kaczynski) was working on a very tough area that did not interest me," Reed said. He said Kaczynski's field of study has no application in the creation of bombs and weaponry. "This is the purest of the pure," he said. Kaczynski was born in Chicago in 1942 and attended 200-student Ever- green Park High School in the city's suburbs. He graduated one year early, with the class of 1958, and went on to get an undergraduate degree from Harvard University in 1962. In the 1962-63 school year, Kaczynski lived in East Quad's Prescott House, Room 300. In 1963-64, he lived in Prescott Room 239. Kaczynski also lived at 408 Thompson St. and 529 South Forest Ave. while at the Univer- sity. - Daily Staff Reporters Matthew Buckley, Laurie Mayk, Alice Robinson and Will Weissert contributed to this report. U.S.: Force may be use& inLibyaa ISMAILIYA, Egypt (AP) - In a implicit threat to use military force Defense Secretary William Perry sai yesterday the United States would no allow Libya to complete what Ameri can intelligence agencies belie large underground plant to produc chemical weapons. Perry said he shared evidencenclud ing photographs, with Egyptian Presi dent Hosni Mubarak during private talk: yesterday in Cairo. p "I discussed a variety of evidence w have," Perry said. He would not be mor explicit except to say it includeditelli gence photographs. "They demonstrate that the Liby are not now producing chemical w ons, but they have an extensive pro gram under way to develop a chemica weapons production facility," Perryto reporters in an impromptu intervie near this city on the Suez Canal., Asked if the United States would al low Libya to complete the plant, Pr said firmly, "No. I don't want to com ment further on that, but the answer i no." He was pressed to say whether t Clinton administration was consider ing using force to stop the projec which Libya has said is part of a hug irrigation system. "I wouldn't rul anything out or anything in," he re plied. He would not say how close U. intelligence believes Libya is to begi ning chemical weapons production atth plant, saying that would reveal classifii information. "It is not imminent,' said. U.S. intelligence agencies say th Libyan plant is under construction a Tarhunah,40 miles southeast of Tripoli The Tarhunah facility was report edly designed to replace a plant a Rabta, 55 miles southwest of Tripoli The Rabta plant was reopened las fall, five years after a suspicious fir and Libya insists it manufactures p maceuticals. China denies chii neglect Los Angeles Times BEIJING - In a lengthy report o the status of China's 300 million chil dren - one-fifth the world's total the government yesterday acknowi edged "much room for improvement,' particularly in the areas of rural eduta tion and care for the disabled. But the report released here b China's State Council strongly de allegations by a New York human rig r organization that infants admitted t state orphanages are victims of system atic neglect resulting in many unneces sary deaths. The Jan. 7 study by Human Right Watch, titled "Death by Default," cite government statistics to show that mor than half of the children admittedt state orphanages ultimately die there The Human Rights Watch report based largely on documents provi by a whistle-blowing former physicia at a state orphanage in Shanghai wh recently emigrated to the UnitedStates stirred international concern. More re cently, it has faced a backlash fro adoption groups in the United State and Europe that have questioned th statistical and ethical foundationso the 331-page document, which',.Wa based on 1989 statistics. China last year became the lai source ofadopted children to the Unite States. Pursuing a career in Athlede Ad miist-aton? Gain valuable experience by joining Team Blue The Michigan Athletic Department's Student Volunteer Intern Program. Ponor Event 900 Old Rawsonville Rd National 94 N. 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