Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, July 9, 1983 Flipping burgers can open career doors By VICKI LAWRENCE year, plus' bonuses and benefits. Ar Q: Lately, I've been interested in the assistant manager might start at field of restaurant management. around$12,000. What's the outlook for restaurant Restaurant chains or large cor managers, how much do they make, porations in the hospitality industry of and what do I need to do to get into the fer opportunities for further advan field? cement. A regional manager in such ar n it f- - n CAREERS A: The foodservice industry employs more than eight million people, making it the nation's leading retail employer. The industry as a whole has weathered the recession remarkably well and stands poised on the brink of rew growth. The National Restaurant Association projects that the field will need 250,000 new employees each year to keep pace with its expected expan- sion. Salaries for a manager range from approximately $15,000 to $126,000 a organization earns from $19,000 to $55,800,-while the chief executive officer can earn $100,000 a year, plus many benefits and perks. The most direct route into restaurant management is to get a bachelor's degree in food service management. But liberal arts students are not out of the running, if they are willing to get experience in the field. This is where all those part-time jobs at McDonald's and summers serving dinners at a resort come in handy. Careers will appear every Saturday. Lawrence works at the University's Career Planning and Placement Of- fice, a department of Student Ser- vices. Terrorist claims Soviet link in Pope's shooting ROME (AP) - Turkish terrorist Mehmet Ali Agca, in a surprise encoun- ter with journalists, said yesterday that Soviet secret police and "Bulgarian services" took part in the attempted assassination of Pope John Paul II. Agca, who is serving a life prison term for the 1981 shooting of the pontiff, made the allegation as he emerged from police headquarters where he had been questioned in another case. The independent Italian news agency AGI quoted Agca as saying, "I have been several times in Bulgaria and in Syria .. . And in the attack against the pope even the KGB (Soviet secret police) took part." In film shown later on national television, Agca again was asked who was involved in the attempt against the pope, and if they included the KGB. He said, "Yes, the KGB." It was the first time Agca spoke to reporters about the plan to kill the Polish-born pontiff, who was seriously wounded when the Turk shot him as he was visiting pilgrims in St. Peter's Square on May 19, 1981. Earlier, Italian press reports had said Agca told investigators the plot to kill the pope involved Bulgarians acting under instructions from the Soviet secret police. In the unexpected exchange with the journalists, Agca was asked if he knew Sergei Ivanov Antonov, an official of the Bulgarian national airline who was arrested in Rome last November on charges of complicity in the shooting. "I knew Sergei, he was my accom- plice," Agca said. Antonov, 34, has denied involvement in the attack, but investigators have told reporters they believed he had played "an active role" in the attem- pted assassination. Antonov's lawyers immediately filed a complaint against officials for allowing Agca to speak with reporters on matters involving cases under in- vestigation. Press reports have speculated that the Russians wanted the pope eliminated because of his support of Poland's outlawed Solidarity labor union. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports State jobless rate rises LANSING - Michigan's adjusted unemployment rose from 14.9 percent to 15.2 percent last month, running counter to the national trend and disappoin- ting some economic observers. Two top government economists, however, disagreed yesterday on whether the increase indicates Michigan is lagging behind what is generally recognized as a national recovery. Michigan's unadjusted joblessness dropped from 14.7 percent to 14.6 per- cent. Nationally, adjustment unemployment dropped one tenth of a point to 10 percent. Michigan's rate was the highest among the nation's 10 largest states. Michigan Employment Security Commission director S. Martin Taylor said conditions were fairly stable. Manufacturing employment was virtually unchanged, while there was seasonal growth in construction, retail trade and service industries. Federal Court bans 'squeal rule' WASHINGTON - A federal appeals court yesterday struck down the Reagan administration's controversial "squeal rule" that would require federally funded clinics to tell parents when their teenage daughters get bir- the control aids. In the highest court ruling so far on the issue, the U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals for the District of Columbia declared the "regulations are unlawful" because they "contravene Congressional intent." A three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld U.S. district judges in New York and Washington who had barred such a rule from taking effect early this year. Judge J. Skelly Wright, writing for the court, noted the regulations "are at the center of a great whirlwind of public controversy." Congress clearly wanted teenagers to be able to seek birth control advice in confidence, the court said. To require that parents be notified, Wright said, would "undermine both Congress' specific policy of confidentiality and its overriding concern about the escalating teenage pregnancy rate." Five hostages freed in Sudan KHARTOUM, Sudan - Sudanese troops stormed a rebel camp in southern Sudan yesterday and freed five hostages including two Americans held cap- tive for two weeks, the Sudanese news agency reported. The report said 18 of the rebels and one soldier were killed, but all five hostages "are safe and in very good health." It said they are in Juba, a regional capital in southern Sudan. Army troops "conducted a successful military operation early yesterday morning against outlaws in Boma, southern Sudan, and safely freed all hostages," the agency said. The hostages were captured June 24-25 with six others, including a mother and her three children and two mission planes, near the Boma National Park by a group calling itself the Liberation Front of Southern Sudan. The other six were released with one of the planes on June 27 and flew to Nairobi, Kenya. The guerrillas threatened to kill the remaining hostages unless they were given the equivalent of $95,000 in Sudanese currency, shoes, shirts and pants for 150 men, medicine and publicity for their rebellion against the Sudanese government. But they repeatedly postponed their deadline. Reagan seeks openness in campaign book controversy WASHINGTON - President Reagan said yesterday he would take any ap- propriate action, including firing members of his staff, if the Justice Depar- tment finds "any evidence of wrongdoing" during his 1980 campaign. Earlier, he ordered senior aides to "cooperate fully" with the probe, and said, "everyone in the administration, including myself, is available for questioning" by the FBI. The president, leaving for a weekend at Camp David in mid-afternoon, said he told aides during a surprise appearance at their morning meeting that "we must get the truth" over how his campaign obtained a debate briefing book and after documents from the Carter White House. "I told my staff that I wanted everyone there to hear directly from me that they were to make themselves available to add any information whatsoever, take it and tell it to the FBI, the Justice Department," Reagan said. Palestinians protest for Arafat MIDEAST - Helmeted Israeli riot police hurling tear gas and firing shots into the air charged a crowd of rock-throwing Palestinian demonstrators showing support for guerrilla chief Yasser Arafat yesterday after Moslem prayers in Jerusalem. The violence on the Temple Mount - venerated by both Moslems and Jews - flared hours after military authorities fired the Palestinian mayor and city council of Hebron and clamped an around-the-clock curfew on the West ank town. The agency said the demonstration in Jerusalem's walled Old City was in- tended to show support for Arafat in his flight to retain control of the PLO. Applicants decrease for fall (continued from Page 3 The University is currently under a is not currently being considered, Mims five year budget cutting plan to save $20 said. But she added that "there will un- million. Cutting enrollment, however, doubtedly be changes." LIBERAL ARTS MAJORS ... You're Needed All Over the World. Ask Peace Corps volunteers why their ingenuity and flexibility are as vital as their degrees. They'll tell you they are helping the world's poorest peoples attain self sufficiency in the areas of food production, energy conservation, education, economic development and health services. And they'll tell you about the rewards of hands on career experience overseas. They'll tell you it's the toughest job you'll ever love. PEACE CORPS