The Michigan Daily-Thursday, September 10, 1981--Page 9-C Turning a buck in a University town By ANN MARIE FAZIO its amazing what some people will o to make a buck these days. Sorge people opt for traditional desk, jobs Others, like Ann Arbor freelance advertising agent Nancy Anderson, choose slightly more unconventional lines of work. WHEN NOT pursuing her normal business routine, Anderson heads Moody Balloons, a company that delivers special occasion greetings-in a d6zeh helium-filled balloons. "It's really neat going in places hEeI make people happy," Anderson aid "of the business. Her customers hair. used the messengers (who costume themselves in Miss Piggy outits, as mime clowns, or in bikinis) to ask people out on dates, and to give or acc.ept marriage proposals. ODeUniversity student, who asked to reiaii anonymous, found another way to :plake people happy and pad his o tbook as well. The art major said qe;uid to pay for his art supplies by maiufacturing and selling fake IDs. The student said he began making the doei3ents for himself and friends wlin:he was 16, and found out there was a market for the same service in Art Arbor. "I MADE $800 in 12 days," he boasted. The art student quit the fake ID trade after a near brush with local authorities. "It's too dangerous," he , explained. "The money isn't worth get- ting thrown in jail." In an ironic twist of fate, he added, he currently checks IDs in a local bar. Those who couldn't get a copy of one of the bogus documents to quaff a few beers in a local bar can at least satisfy their Sunday morning hunger cravings. University graduate Curt Feldman will deliver bagels, lox, cream cheese, and The New York Times to customers' doorsteps every Sunday for a 90a delivery charge, plus the cost of the food and the newspaper. FELDMAN SAID HE bought the bagel route last March from another student because, "I thought it would be profitable and kind of fun." Bagels aren't Feldman's sole source of income. He also publishes a guide to local restaurants named I Eat, Therefore I Am, along with a calendar of the same name. In addition, he designed a Rose Bowl t-shirt. While bagels satisfy some hunger cravings, Wiggy the Clown might satisfy cravings for laughter. Wendy Sheperd, 28, has been clowning around C-,. i-/- 14 holds "funny face" workshops at schools and day-care centers. "I go in, transform myself (into a clown), and talk about clowning," Shepard said of the classes and workshops. "I just don't entertain" the children, she addes. "I interact with them." Shepard does most of her clowning for charities, although she said the profession could be profitable. "I like to do it for the fun," she explained. "If I do too many jobs for pay, I have to stop and do some for charity or else I'll feel bad. It's a give-and-take type deal." LSA SENIOR Ellen Guay also brings smiles to faces after she's made them "prettier." Guay, an English major, has been conducting skin care and make-up workshops in dormitories, apartments and houses since last summer. She reports to a manager responsible for the products she sells, but is in charge of her own presen- tations. "I was tired of waitressing and being a secretary," she said of her decision to enter the field. "I like being my own boss." Guay said the job fits her time schedule, and it allows her to make money while having fun. "I can never say I've left work feeling tired or overworked," she added. Another student who enjoys being his own boss is engineering junior Andy pI4* Ann Arbor parties, hospitals, and store openings since 1977. SHEPARD, WHO SAID being a clown is something she has wanted to do all of her life, also teaches a clown class for the city's recreation department and King, who "pretties up" term papers instead of faces. King said he enjoys typing term papers almost as much as his student customers do. "I get to read all about all kinds of different and really interesting subjects," he said. ANN AROBORITES who want the fast, reliable, door-to-door service of a bicycle courier service have Freewheel Express at their disposal. The company was founded in May 1977 by Reuben' Chapman, an avid local bicyclist. Chapman, who got the idea for a bicycle delivery service when discussing "small scale approaches to the ecology program," contracts other cyclists to deliver packages within Ann Arbor city limits. One cyclist is 23-year-old LSA sophomore Debby Shields. She began - working with Chapman last May, but has also made bicycle deliveries in San Francisco. "It's a good way to be outdoors, have fun, and make good money," she said. Shields' equipment includes a 5-speed . bicycle, a trailer to pull packages (which can be as heavy as 200 pounds), and warm, rain-proof clothing. Then ex pore. the Peoples ; rFood Coop. n~oni-plrofit everyone.. e to Shop. - )od Co-op >ppmng facilities, plus-- !eds. (Quality cheeses,; irect -from -farm products.; a juices and nut butters 'old goods, organic garden ppgfcti pl esQalit cheses 'Traditional' employment levels down BY JENNIFER MILLER Finding a job in this area isn't any easier than it is in most other places, with thousands of students - not to mention permanent residents - looking for anything from eight to 40 hours per week. And the difficulty is even more acute now. A survey conducted last spring by the Office of Student Tem- porary Employment showed that student temporary employment at the University was down 10.6 percent for fall and winter terms. This year, "There may not be as many (jobs vailable) as in the past," according to Nancy onginate, the office's coordinator. BU T IN addition to pounding the streets and poring over the help wanted ads, the University offers several resources worth looking into. One good place to check for a part-time job is the dormitory system. The dorms hire about 900 students throughout the year, according to Leroy Williams, assistant director of Housing Information. These jobs can be coor- dinated to fit a student's schedule, and they are only as' far as a walk down the stairs for many students,. Williams said. A student can get a job in the dorm cafeteria, brary, at the desk, or in the housekeeping depar- tment. Applications can be given directly to the supervisors in each dorm. One of the benefits of working in the dorms, Williams said, is "working with friends." THE STUDENT Temporary Employment office's bulletin boards, located in the Michigan Union and on the second floor of the Student Activities Building, are also useful resources for job listings. The office updates the boards every day with both University and off-campus listings. Clerical, technical, service/maintenance, and research-related jobs are among those regularly Interspersed among the typical babysitting and waitressing jobs are openings for sound technicians, bagel deliverers, and models. posted on the office's job-opening boards. Students choose the jobs that interest them, and then make contact with the employers. Many of the departments and schools in the University also list available jobs outside their of- fices. They are usually looking for students within the department, and these jobs can provide an excellent chance to work with a professor or gain some job skills in a specific field. AREA RESTAURANTS, businesses, and bookstores normally add on extra help for the fall and winter terms. Some advertise in the papers, but others may just put a sign in a window - this is where pounding the streets is useful. Students eligible for financial aid may also be able to obtain a work-study job by applying at the Finan- cial Aid Office. Many businesses are eager to employ work-study students because the federal government covers most of their pay. However, "I think work-study funds might be tight again this year," said Longmate, of the Employment Office. THIS FALL, THERE will be a job fair for all work- study students. They will have a chance to talk to prospective employers and set up interviews, thus saving time looking through the work-study listings. Some of the more bizarre jobs can be found in the classified ads of local newspapers. Interspersed among the typical babysitting and waitressing jobs are openings for sound technicians, bagel deliverers, and models. One ad last summer sought "NEW AND EXPECTANT mothers ... for modeling. . . $200 per half day." Whatever the job, Longmate says seekers should "be aggressive. on t give up the first week or two." There IS life after Dooley's (Continued from Page 4) to explore. What follows is a mini guided tour of just a handful of off- campus spots of interest. David's Book Store - David has done a little bit of everything over the years, including running an earlier edition of his book store. Located at the corner of Liberty and State, the place provides what other used book stores, like the Wooden. Spoon, merely promise. It looks like an explosion in a library, and ~ut, of the wreckage any number of 0rasures are liable to be plucked. But it takes a bit of hunting. Fast Food Forever - Take Washtenaw out in the direction of Packard and you'll see a vista of all- night burger shacks and pizzerias that is a neon sign-maker's dream. There are the usual biggies like McDonald's and Taco Bell, but wedged in at un- suspected moments are unique one- *hots, where the best eating of all is found. And thank God for A&W, the per- fect place to go after a jaunt on the putt- putt course, also found in this junk food jungleland. -Vbterans Park - A half dozen baseball fields, haloed at night by banks of ample bright lights. On certain days in the summertime this place, ldcated on Maple between Jackson and Dexter, is like a circus ringmastered by Rube Goldberg. Those are the best times - when every diamond is filled Cith ballplayers, the whole stretch of the parkway a wonder of colorful, ant- like movement. Briarwood - You think you've seen Dawn of the Dead? Welcome to the land of the living dead: a monument to seventies mall construction, with a nice little babbling brook that provides natural muzak. Some of the highlight: of the mall: Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour, where the people who wor will gladly spill ice cream on the floo any hour of the day, Ypsilanti - Many locals would like you to believe Ypsilanti is one of those places you just don't talk about. A black sheep. The idiot next door you just ignore. Don't believe them! Ypsi has better pizzerias than Ann Arbor, lots o OCITIZEN e good little theatre and music projects, s and a lack of the kind of pretentiousness s which makes the head hurt when one n encounters it in Ann Arbor. All this, k plus a giant phallic tower greeting you r on your way in! One could go on. Something might be said about the splendid skateboarding hills on the West Side of town, about the e pleasures of the Blixt Gallery. But enough is enough. The best way to find 'tout about this town is to take it on your- s self, to look in the corners and crevices f that interest you most. E- IS IN!N This ultra thin quartz watch sweep second hand. Superbly crafted, supremely accurate. ~. _ 44-7026-80 (yellow, leather strap) Only five more to go ... and you'll have all your books. Just a little more fighting through crowds, searching shelves, and 0 running around, and you'll be done. Of course, the people who went to Ulrich's are home drinking coffee. An Urlich's helper took their class lists, got their books, and handed them over. It didn't cost them ary more, either. Maybe you should try Ulrich's, too. .rte . /ELCOME 7 -V STUDENTS Chet~ea Thoro'c nn ci mh thine nq nn nvPrnne Citizen. I