Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, February 11, 1993, Page 6, Image 6

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    Boston College robbed rival of names
NATIONAL
NEWTON. Mass (AP) —
Boston College. which prides
itself on teaching business
ethics, has admitted one of its
administrators stole the names
of likely applii^nts from a com
peting university
Tho action by Dole M. Hamel, assistant dean at BC's
Carroll Graduate Sc hool of Business, has drawn protests
from the rival school. Northeastern University, and
scrutiny front an accrediting agency
Hamel has offered to resign. He didn't return phone
calls Wednesday.
The development is the latest measure of the cut
throat competition for graduate business students as the
applicant pend shrinks
The number of institutions awarding master's degrees
in business administration shot front 389 in the mid
1970s to nearly 800 bv the end of the 1980s But the
number of students taking the Graduate Management
Admissions Test to enter business school has been
foiling steadily since 1989. according to the Education
al Testing Service, which administers the test
Hamel has been assistant dean for enrollment man
agement at BC's business school since resigning last
month from Northeastern, where he worked for three
years os director of the high-technology master's pro
gram at the College of Business Administration.
BC concedes that Hamel took with him names of
prospective business school applicants who were being
courted by Northeastern Northeastern officials say
there were at least 600 names on the list.
All of the prospective applicant&were sent an invi
tation to tour Boston College's campus in Newton on
Thursday. Some invitations also went unintentionally
to Northeastern business faculty.
This situation could have profound ramifications for
the competitiveness of our MBA programs." David P.
Boyd, dean of Northeastern's business school, said in a
TMi situation could haw
profound ramiflcmttonr for th*
— David P Boyd.
dean of Northeastern business school
confidential letter sent to faculty Monday.
"This attempt to antic* our prospects is a very serious
offense, which has financial, ethical and legal implica
tions," Boyd wrote. He wouldn't comment further
Wednesday.
BC spokesman Doug Whiting argued Hamel's actions
had occurred without the knowledge of the university's
administrators. He conceded Hamel gathered names of
applicants while he was working at Northeastern, but
said he did so on his own time.
Whiting said BC officials are considering Hamel's
offer to resign
Northeastern spokesman Mary Breslauer said, "Clear
ly. Boston College is admitting that he used our data
base That somehow he did it on his nights and
weekends stretches the imagination."
Charles Hickman, director of projects and services for
the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Busi
ness. which accredits business schools, said the matter
may become an issue when BC comes up for reaccredi
tation in 1998. or sooner
' How can you teach ethics to students when the insti
tution itself doesn't appear to practice ethical behav
ior?" he said.
Breslauer said. "It's perfectly expected that to get
ahead in one's career, one moves from school to school,
and to increasingly higher positions The issue is what
you throw in your briefcase on the way out the door."
Thousands honor
Ashe at funeral
RICHMOND. V*. (AP) — Arthur Ashe was buried
Wednesday, remembered more for his decency and
compassion than for ail he accomplished in tennis.
“Arthur left us with a better world to live in today.
But most of all. we are here today because Arthur
touched our lives with the most powerful emotion
of all — love," former Davis Cup teammate Charlie
Pasarell told 3,600 mourners as he fought beck tears
at a three-hour funeral service.
"No man loved humankind more than Arthur did."
Pasarell said.
Ashe. 49, the first black man to win Wimbledon
and the U.S. and Australian Opens, died Saturday
of AIDS-related pneumonia.
The service was held at the Arthur R. Ashe Jr. Ath
letic Center, a sports arena Richmond built in 1981
and named after its native son.
Ashe left Richmond in 1961 because of the con
straints of segregation, and went on to become the
world's top-ranked tennis player.
He then used that success to become an effective
worker on behalf of human rights, children and.
recently, AIDS awareness. Ashe believed he con
tracted the disease from a blood transfusion related
to open-heart surgery he underwent in 1983.
“Arthur Ashe was |ust plain better than most of
us." New York Mayor David Dinkins said.
Dinkins turned to Ashe’s 6-year-old daughter, sit
ting with her mother, Jeanne, and said, “Camera,
sweetheart, your father's most precious legacy to you
is not paid in coin but in kindness, a good name and
the affection of millions of people who never met
you. but who will do almost anything for you because
of the goodness and decency of your father.”
Oregon Daily Emerald
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SIMMER
EMPLOYMENT
Glacier Bay National
Park, Alaska.
We will be visiting the University of Oregon
February 15th
offering summer employment
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See your Career Planning Center for details.
ALASKA SUMMER JOBS^N
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Recruiting Date: February 17, 1993
Sign Up Now At: Student Employment Office
Room 12, Hendricks
EOEj
THE EARLY EDUCATION PROGRAM, INC.
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The Early Education Program, Inc. is a private, non-profit,
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