The Michigan Dail Vol. XCI, No. 31-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Thursday, June 18, 1981 Ten Cents Sixteen Pages U.S. hedges on Iraq raid From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The ad- ministration acknowledged yesterday Iraq is seeking a nuclear weapons aity but disagreed with Israel's claim that its raid on Baghdad was necessary because Iraq was on the verge of building an atomic bomb. "We don't agree with that position of Israel," Undersecretary of State Walter Stoessel told a joint hearing of two House foreign affairs subcommit- tees. STOESSEL STRESSED the ad- ministration is in no hurry to decide whether Israel's June 7 raid was defen- sive, as it claims, or offensive and thus Reagan won't be 'rushed into a decision' on Israel a violation of arms sales agreements with the United States. "We don't want to be rushing into a decision," he said. Stoessel said Washington "cannot be but dismayed" by the raid's damage to Middle East peace efforts, including complicating the mission of U.S. special envoy Philip Habib and "embarrassing" Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin said Sunday the attack was self-. defense because Israel had "absolutely sure information from the best and most reliable sources" that Iraq inten-. ded to use the reactor to develop nuclear weapons. REP. STEPHEN Solarz, (D-N.Y.), told Stoessel "I am amazed and ap- palled-" at the administration's cautious assessment. He asked sar- castically if the administration believes Iraq needs peaceful nuclear energy when the country has so much oil. And Rep. Robert K. Dornsn,b(K- Calif.), said congressmen have been briefed. on "a very specific assessment" by U.S. intelligence as late as last Feb. 27 on Iraq's weapons capability. But Ronald I. Spiers, director of the State Department's bureau of in- telligence, said a U.S. intelligence report "did not reach the conclusion that Mr. Dornan ascribed to it that Iraq had decided to develop nuclear weapons." ON OTHER aspects of the raid, Stoessel testified that "We cannot but be dismayed by the damage" the raid did to U.S.-Mideast peace efforts. "Clearly the action Israel has taken has increased the hostility of Arab nations, has'heightened tensions in that regard," Stoessel said. Mid-east conflic8ts are occupying the time of the United Nations this week. Yesterday the U.S. negotiated directly with Iraq trying to avoid a political con- frontation in the U.N. Security Council on a resolution about Israel's raid. U.S. AMBASSADOR Jeane Kirk- patrick met repeatedly with Iraqi Foreign Minister Saadoun Hammadi to discuss chances for a compromise resolution in the Council. She said she was still hopeful for a consensus and would continue her efforts. The Council heard more speakers on the fifth day of its debate on the Israeli attack, but real action remained behind the scenes where diplomats were trying to formulate a resolution acceptable to both Iraq and the United States. Hoping for an agreement, Mrs. Kirk- patrick twice postponed her statement to the Council. "THE SPEECH is a lot less impor- tant than findinga consensus", the U.S. ambassador told reporters. "Discussions with Hammadi are still going on actively." The non-aligned delegates prepared an eight-point resolution as a basis for the negotiations. Sea trials AP Photo' The nation's first Trident submarine, the USS Ohio, sets out on her maiden voyage yesterday. Anti-nuclear protesters who dove into the water in Groton, Conn. and swam to the shipyard in an effort to block the Trident's voyage were arrested. See story, Page 9. MBA vs. BBA: Goal determines 10 decision By MARK GINDIN Daily staff writer While the bachelor of business administration degree (BBA) may be a very good value, ifa person's ambitions lie in the fast lane of corporate ascension, the master of business administration (MBA) may be the best choice, according to a placement officer in the University's School of Business. The BBA teaches more of the "nuts and bolts" of business, while the MBA goes further into business policies and corporate strategy, which are both long- run, comprehensive concepts, said the director of the Business School Placement Office, Peggy Carroll. HOLDERS OF AN MBA degree usually have more maturity, self-confidence, and drive than a BBA graduate does upon graduation, said Carroll. Businesses are aware of the differences when they begin recruiting graduates, she said. For instance, most consulting agencies, a major part of the public accounting service offered by many firms, only hire MBA graduates because of their maturity, said James Rumbsa of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell, & Co., a Detroit accounting firm. About half of the students who graduate with a BBA degree go into public accounting, Carroll said, because the field offers the supervision, teamwork, and feedback that most younger, less experienced graduates need. COMPETITION FOR jobs requiring MBA graduates has increased because the degree "is becoming more common now than it was 10 years ago," said Carroll, adding that students are realizing" it is necessary in order to move up to the top. Retailers, such as Hudson's and Lord & Taylor department stores, put the BBA graduates into management training programs for two years to aquaint them with the store operations, Carroll said. They often find this method is cheaper than hiring an MBA, she added. "THE TREND IN banking is to look at BBA's "more than in the past," said Carroll. Banks often have training programs that end up being cheaper than hiring an MBA, she said, but the trust and com- See BOTH, Page 4