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June 03, 1984 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1984-06-03

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Page 4 - The Michigan Daily - Sunday, June 3, 1984
Awards honor active stwdens

-IN BRIEF
Compiled from Associated Press and
United Press International reports

(Continued from Page 2)
academics, she said she still has time
for a social life. "I've been real
fortunate - a lot of my friends are
involved in the same things Iam."
Deaver said the Student Achievement
Award "was very special because it
kind of brought all the loose ends
together and made me realize that, yes,
I'd been a success in college."
ACHIEVEMENT Award winner
Terrence Bates has a different
explanation for his involvement.
"I feel fortunate to have what I do
have in terms of skills or abilities and I
should try to help people who aren't as
fortunate," he said. A junior in the
University's masters program in
accounting, Bates tutored and
counseled first-year accounting
students and has participated in
recruiting visits to high schools.
Bates admits recognition is nice "but
it means so much more to have the
people you're helping get some
benefit." He said he feels helping in the
Volunteer Income Tax Assistance
Project and tutoring are important and
he will continue both in the fall. In
addition, Bates, who has financed all of
his college education, will be an
accounting TA and secretary/treasurer
for theFinance Club.
ALSO IN the University's masters
program in accounting, achievement
award winner Stuart Mills has served

as vice president and president of Beta
Alpha Psi, a national accounting
fraternity. As vice president, he
organized 10 prefessional presentations
in one term _and as president coor-
dinated eight different committees
while supervising all chapter functions.
"My theory is that I get a lot out of it.
it's for me," said Mills. "Also, it's
just like Adam Smith's theory of the in-
visible hand. If everyone contributes,
then everyone benefits."
Although the awards were ap-
preciated by the winners, a few
suggestions were made for im-
provements in the system.
One winner said that President
Shapiro's absence from this year's
ceremony diminished the importance
of the awards. Another mentioned that
the nominations forms should be
distributed throughout the campus so
more deserving students can be
recognized.
The Office for Student Organizations,
Activities, and Programs (SOAP), will
hand out the awards next spring. The
office is already working at getting
together a more comprehensive list of
student groups, said Evashevski. Her
successor, David Mitchell-Yellin of the
SOAP office, said his goal is to get in-
formation about the awards out earlier
in the term so there will be more time
for people to nominate students for the
awards.

Lebanon to reopen
crossings
BEIRUT, Lebanon - The new
coalition government yesterday said
it will reopen two crossings between
Beirut's Moslem and Christian sec-
tors on Monday despite persistent
hostilities between rivalniilitias.
Lebanese police and French truce
observers will take over positions at
the two gateways in advance of their
opening in order to separate the
militias, Information Minister Josef
Skaff said after a meeting of
President Amin Gemayel and Prime
Minister Rashid Karami.
Iran rejects U.N. resolution
ABU DHABI, United Arab
Emirates - Iran yesterday rejected
a U.N. Security Council resolution
blaming it for attacks on shipping in
the Persian Gulf and warned the
vote could further destabilize the
strategic waterway.
The Security Council resolution
called for ahalt to attacks on neutral
commercial ships in the Gulf -
which borders on Saudi Arabia and
Kuwait, both Iraqi supporters.
Police hunt for jail escapees
WARRENTON, N.C. - More than
200 lawmen with shotguns and
bloodhounds searched a 300-mile
wide ares of two states yesterday for
four fugitives from death row who
were among six men to escape a
Virginia prison.
Two fugitives were caught Friday
afternoon while eating snacks and
sipping wine in a Warrenton laun-
dromat.
The six killers, convicted of 17
murders among them, escaped from
the Mecklenburg Correction Center
in Boydtown, Va., Thursday night.
NATO missile
deployment delayed
FRANKFURT, West Germany -
The government said yesterday it
fears Moscow might interpret the
Dutch delay in deploying new
nuclear missiles as a sign of
faltering resolve in NATO, and
initial reaction indicated other
Western allies also may be worried.
The Dutch Cabinet agreed to ac-
cept an undecided number of
medium-range cruise missiles in
1988, but NATO called for 48 missiles
to be stationed on Dutch soil by 1986

as part of the alliance's plan for
deploying 572 U.S.-built Pershing 2
and cruise missiles in Western
Europe.
New England storm
continues
A rainstorm blamed for 18 deaths
on its slow drive across the country
made a U-turn over the Atlantic and
parked yesterday over soggy New
England, where swollen rivers
neared their crests after forcing
thousands from theirhomes.
The storm pelting New England
had moved 150 miles into the Atlan-
tic on Friday, but then backed up
and stalled yesterday over Nan-
tucket with winds gusting past 40
mph and moderate to heavy rain.
In Massachusetts, an estimated
4,000 people evacuated at the height
of the flooding began returning
home, but rain and high winds
yesterday forced cancellation of a
parade of tall sailing ships in Boston
Harbor.
Guerilla leader
undergoes surgery
CARACAS, Venezuela -
Nicaraguan guerrilla leader Eden
Pastora underwent emergency
surgery yesterday for burns and
shrapnel wounds suffered in a bom-
bing assassination attempt and was
in satisfactory condition, doctors
said.
Doctors at the private
Metropolitan Clinic in Caracas said
they removed bomb fragments and
treated first and second-degree bur-
ns that Pastora suffered over 43 per-
cent of his body, mainly on the chest,
right hand and left leg.
Officials honor conmmandos
ROME - Under the solemn gaze
of decorated veterans, top officials
of the United States, Canada and
Italy unveiled a plaque yesterday
honoring the U.S. and Canadian
commandos who led the Allied
liberation of Rome 40 yesrs ago.
The ceremony was held in front of
the U.S. Consulate in Rome, which
was used as the headquarters of the
U.S.-Canadian First Special Service
Force that swept into Rome on June
4, 1944, after a nine-month battle in
which Allied forces suffered about
300,000 casualties.

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