The Michigan Daily- Thursday, March 19, 1992- Page 7 Mich. Rep. Wolpe admits to bad checks DETROIT (AP) - U.S. Rep. Howard Wolpe, the latest member of Michigan's House delegation to ac- knowledge writing bad checks, says the House Sergeant at Arms twice told him his account was clean. Wolpe (D-Lansing) said in a statement that he is "surprised and angry" to learn that he had written eight checks totaling $720.75 on in- sufficient funds. "I take full responsibility for not having done a better job of my own personal accounting," Wolpe said. "At the same time, I am angry about the House Bank policy that did not notify members when they overdrew on their accounts." Wolpe was the 11th member of Michigan's 18-member House dele- gation to acknowledge writing checks on insufficient funds. Rep. Bob Davis (R-Gaylord), the third-biggest abuser of the House bank, admitted this week that he wrote 878 bad checks totaling nearly $350,000. Davis continued his trek across the Upper Peninsula yesterday to meet face-to-face with constituents about the banking scandal. Davis's 11th District covers all of upper Michigan and the northern quarter of the Lower Peninsula. Wolpe said when the General Accounting Office report detailing the overdrafts by members of Congress first gained publicity last fall, he asked then-Sergeant at Arms Jack Russ to check his account . Muslims bombed Israeli embassy Islamic group takes BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) - An Islamic fundamentalist1 group in Beirut claimed responsibil-l ity yesterday for the Israeli Embassy bombing that killed 12 people, in- jured more than 250 and reduced the building to chunks of concrete and1 twisted metal.I The death toll seemed likely tol rise. Rescuers worked with picks and shovels and eventually switched to1 cranes and front-end loaders as the possibility of finding survivors faded. responsibility for Argentina bombing An embassy spokesperson said five Israelis were missing and be- lieved dead in the rubble. Tuesday's explosion at the French-style embassy near the city's central business district was caused by a car bomb containing 220 pounds of explosives, said Interior Minister Jose Luis Manzano. The blast instantly collapsed the four-story structure into a pile of concrete, metal pipes, wood beams, brick dust, broken glass and bodies. In Beirut, the pro-Iranian Shiite Muslim group Islamic Jihad said an Argentine convert to Islam carried out the attack to avenge the Feb. 16 killing of a Shiite leader and his fam- ily in an Israeli air attack in Lebanon. "We hereby declare with all pride that the operation ... is one of our continuous strikes against the crimi- nal Israeli enemy in an open-ended war which will not cease until Israel is wiped out of existence," a com- munique said. AID Continued from page 1 assistant vice-president for academic affairs. Ruser agreed with Holmes' assessment, claiming that the government is contradicting itself with these proposed changes. She said in the past over $100 mil- lion in fellowship programs have been set aside for spe- cific minority groups, and now the government is at- tempting to restrict how colleges and universities ap- propriate that financial aid. Michael Lieberman of the Anti-Defamation League supported the race-neutral provisions proposed by the Department of Education. "Our position is that it is a bad idea to have even one exclusive scholarship that goes to students on the basis of race," Lieberman said. But he said no exceptions to donate funds to a spe- cific minority group, regardless of the motive, should exist. Taking action to redress past discrimination will make "floors become ceilings," he added. "Once administrations have filled these scholarships, they think they have done a good job of minority re- cruitment," Lieberman said. As a result, after minimum funds are dispersed to minorities, colleges lessen their efforts to attract a di- verse student body, he added. Raymond Mullins, president of the Ypsilanti-Willow Run branch chapter of the NAACP, disagreed with Lieberman. "I do not see any harm in the government taking remedial action," he said. Affirnative action is needed in these circumstances to ensure everyone a chance for an education, he added. ACE is concerned that the Department of Education's efforts to legally encourage minority-en- rollment will have the opposite effect. "Under the proposed guidance, much minority-tar- geted financial aid would have to be given to non-mi- norities. In all likelihood the number of minority stu- dents receiving financial aid from all sources would be reduced at a significant number of institutions," said Robert Atwell, ACE president, in a written statement. Holmes said that if changes are ratified after a four- year grace period, those who oppose the provisions will most likely file an appeal to block their implemention. The discussion of changes in financial aid stem from the 1991 Fiesta Bowl, when bowl officials had diffi- culty attracting teams to play the New Year's game be- cause Arizona had refused to make Dr. Martin Luther King's birthday an official holiday. As motivation, the bowl committee offered potential candidates $100,000 in minority scholarship money to any team willing to play. In reaction, Michael Williams, assistant secretary of civil rights at the Department of Education, said schol- arship money earmarked for a single minority violated the federal anti-discrimination law outlined in Article VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. The Department of Education's five-point plan, de- signed simultaneously to increase minority enrollment in colleges and to remain within the legal bounds of the civil rights act, has drawn criticism. "I suggest there are clear alternatives in ways of viewing legally what they ought to do, and these views ought to be heard loud and clear in Washington, D.C.," Holmes added. Taxation without compensation Nick Karamanos and Mary Bishop, Vita Volunteer Tax Assistants, offer free help to Medical Center employee Long Jin yesterday. IE CHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADS HELP WANTED SWIMMING INSTRUCTORS and Wilder- ness Trip Leaders needed-Camp Arowhon is located in Algonquin Park, N. Ontario. Oldest Co-ed camp in N. America. M/F, 19 or older, C.P.R., (WSI) on campus interview. Call Jeremy 995-9180. FAST FUNDRAISING PROGRAM. Fraternities, Sororities, Student clubs. Earn up to $1000 in one week. Plus receive a $1000 bonus yourself. And a FREE WATCH just for calling 1-800-932-0528 Ext. 65. ONE-WAY DETROIT-DENVER/SAN FRAN. 3/23. $150 or best offer. 747-8145. ORIENT SPECIALS: Tokyo fr. $921, Taipei fr. $992, Hong Kong fr. $1016, Bangkok fr. $1111, Seoul fr. $1033, Sin- g apore fr. $1094. Ask for Dan or Claudia. $129 or $189 anywhere in USA on Con- tinental Airlines! Bring AMEX card & Con- tintental voucher. Ask for Irene or Ann at REGENCY TRAVEL 209 . State, 665- 6122. **ATTENTION: Supreme Course Transcripts, the LS&A lecture notetaking service, has notes for these winter term clas- ses avail, at Michigan Book & Supply,r317 . State: Anthro 101, Anthro 161, Anthro 362, Aos 123, Astro 101, Astro 111, Comm 103, Econ 201, Geology 100, Geology 102, Geol- ogy 106, Geology 123, History 161, History 333, History 366, History of Art 272, Lin- guistics 211, Poli Sci 353, Poli Sci 396, Psych 170, Psych 331, RC 262, REES 396, Slavic 396, Soc 393, Soc467, Soc 468, UC 262. **Study Smart** SUENT RVCES FREE GMAT DIAGNOSTIC' TEST AT B- SCHOOL ON MARCH 24. 5:00 PM Sponsored by Alpha Kappa Psi Register by calling Ronkin 741-1699 Must register by March 23, 1992 -Ne STUDENT SERVICES. There are hundreds of questions on the GMAT, GRE and LSAT. This checklist will help you answer all of them. Kaplan tmakes a tpep anaauent. I v ,th 150 eante and thomna da o aa ,edu. th odds are «e i be ready to a& when and wchest you Hood us m Obe dthe Kaplan d hlps youmamapyur im Diagnosc ten an d conseling hep you re'ognizea -tlng eon. before they hur your petfon°'°.e- V Kapla enthen ao.f ls th ',ae. V Ou cournsareompetiowd --aed and offer the aompite peparation that hateped smore sudo ge maso the schaoo of tchert &irz than anyonce eas Kaplan is the induaty leader. S53 yeaha of eapruence and 2 million grsduazea prove Nrve beand amousm it takes to halp June classes forming now. Call or visit today ! 337. E. Uberty 662-3149 Kaplan Test Prep E The Answer 1"ttolraH.& F-6- LC W HELP WANTED $200 DAILY stuffing envelopes for major corp. Free supplies. Rush LSASE to: USTB Marketing, Dept. M218, P.O. Box 4203, Bryan, TX 77805. 20-30 HOUR CO-TEACHER wanted for Enchanted Forest Day Care. A progressive, group home day care. All year round $6/ hour. Must be open to alternative philosophies. Call 769-2597 2:00-3:00 or after 5:30. 30 SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE- Resort near Lake Michigan. June 5 thru Labor Day. Send SASE to: Mary C. Ott, Sunny Brook Resort, 68300 CR 388, South Haven, MI 49090. 616/637-4796. ABLE DISABLED WOMAN WRITER seeks strong reliable woman to aid with meals, personal care, some driving. Must be cat lover. Various short shifts available. Call 662-2734. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries. Earn $5,000=/month. Free transportation! Room & Board! Over 8,000 openings. No experience necessary. Male or female. For employment call 1-206-545- 4155 ext. 1529. ATTENTION: jugglers, clowns, & caricaturists are needed for MICHIGRAS, a UAC event, the evening of FRI.,April 10. Priceis negotiable. For INFO CALL UAC@763-1107 and leave a message. BUS BOYS WANTED. Good food and pay. Call 761-5578 between 5:30-6pm. Ask for Kathy. CAMP COUNSELORS- M/F. Outstanding slim down camps: Tennis, dance, slimnastics, WSI, athletics, nutrition/dietetics. Age 20+. 7 wks. CAMP CAMELOT ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES AT MASS, PA, CALIF: Contact: Michele Friedman 947 Hewlett Dr., No. Woodmere, N.Y. 11581, 1-800-421- 4321. COLLEGE GRADS WANTED for New Business Company! Call 313/259-2126. CRISIS COUNSELORS- Help out in the hard times ahead as a volunteer counselor at S.O.S. Crisis Center, lend a hand in respond- ing to personal & family conflicts, homelessness, hunger, suicide, & substance abuse. Call 485-8730. ELP WANTE D EARN $5-7 PER HR. THIS SUMMER WORKING OUTDOORS this summer in your hometown area, in Troy, Royal Oak, Ann Arbor, Romeo/Shelby Twp. Triple "A" Student Painters is hiring students to fill painter & foreman positions. EXPERIENCE helpful, but not necessary. Call 1-800-543- 3792 for more Information. FRIENDSHIP, MONEY, & INSIGHT. Earn $10 in 1-hour study of friendship among women. Learn about this ongoing study of relationships done in the UM Psych. Department. Call Danny McIntosh at 973- 0859 for more information. Women only. GOLF COURSE HELP WANTED: Pro Shop/Bar & Gr'l/Rangers. Apply on Satur- days between :00 - 3:00. Brookside G.C. 6451 Ann Arbor - Saline Rd., Saline, MI. (313) 429-4276. KTCHN. REMODELING CO. LOOKING for door to door flyer dist. for surrounding res. communities. $4.50/hr. Set your own hrs. Req. own trans. & desire for outd. exercise. Send name, addr. & tel. no. to Sue Mayer, Sales Mgr. Doors & Drawers 2467 Bishop Cir. E. Dexter, Mi 48130. LOOKING FOR A MALE who has recovered from anorexia and would be will- ing to do an interview for a psychology research paper. Will pay $15 for approx. 1 hour. Call LeAnn at 763-5052. MALE DANCERS - exp. for Mondays "Ladies Night" in Flint. 313/743-5470, ask for Hall or George 2pm-7pm. MOTHER'S HELPER FOR 2, 9 and dis- abled 6 yr. old. Own car needed. Min. 20 hrsweek. Begin now or May. 665-4842. RECEPTIONIST, WEEKENDS, needed for UM Botanical Gardens to greet visitors, handle admissions. Experience, references necessary. Send resume to lobby recep- tionist UM Botanical Gardens 1800 N. Dix- boro Rd. Ann Arbor 48105. RESEARCH ASSIT. position avail. @ The Dept. of Psychiatry. 30 to 40 hours a week, $6 to $7, depending on experience. Must have own transportation and willing to do clerical type duties. Ideal for social science graduate who likes to work independently. Send resume to Dr. Gupta @ 0704 CFOB or call 763-2544. WANTED: .49 People Who Need to Lose Weight In The Next 30 Days 30 day money back guarantee If you don' t ,,ed to loweweigsooy o , love does all Shari: (313) 726-0319/(313) 625-885 RESIDENT CAMP COUNSELORS NEEDED June 15 - Aug. 15 in all areas: horses, sports, waterfront, arts & crafts, modern dance. Camp located in Plainwell, MI. Staff recieves training, valuable exp. & weekends off. Contact Marcie 1-800-788- 4919. for Info. RUN YOUR OWN BUSINESS: Student Sprinkler is now hiring for summer manager positions selling & installing Toro under- ground sprinkler systems. Earn up to 10,000. In Detroit suburbs. Call 665-5390. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for a well es- tablished infertility clinic. If you are a male between 21-40 years of age and a graduate student or a professional 5'9" or taller we need you. Donors will be paid $55 per ac- ceptable specimen. For further information please write P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, Mi. 48106. SUMMER JOBS ACT NOW! Works Corp. is seeking highly motivated university/col- lege students to manage their own summer businesses. If you are entrepenuerial, can manage people, and are excited by a challenge. Call 1800-238-3254. cTNW1kV 1k4AA *R.TAd V1L AET'P f1Cfl1 Tlt I m MMMA Delivery Drivers Wanted -Flexible Hours -Take home 100% of your Pay Daily -Earn $5-8I hr. Call 663-3333 a a r GUMBY'S PIZZA J SUMMER MGMT. JOBS.AVP INC. is looking for ambitious students who are responsible, org., & willing to accept a challenge. We offer comprehensive mgmt. training, exc. earning potential + 1st hand bus. exp. Ltd. openings 616/384-8755. TEACHERS NEEDED 1992/93 school year for the Jewish Cultural School. A progressive Jewish Sunday school. Call 665-5761 and leave a message. WARM RESPONSIBLE person sought to care for our delightful 3 year old son 15- 20hrs./week in our home. References required. Beg. May, year commitment preferred. 996-0072. Leave message. WILLOWTREE APTS. IS CURRENTLY hiring for seasonal positions. *Leasing agents *Pool Attendants *Grounds Attendant Please call 769-1313. Ask for Betsy. BUSINESS SERVICES ARE YOU RESUME CLUELESS? Ex- perienced resume writer. Will write and print your resume. Call 668-8927. COLLEGE CLEANERS: 705 N. UNIVER- SITY ST. Professional dry cleaning. Shirts. 662-1906. NITEWORD - Papers, reports, resumes, presentations, graphics. Specials. (Answering machine) 971-0427. OFFICE PRODUCTS OUTLET: Largest selection of used in Washtenaw, Livingston, & Lenawee counties. 4-drawer files from $39, chairs from $5, computer furniture from $29, desks from $19, bookcases from $19, IBM reconditioned Selectrics II from $159, & much, much more. Free delivery. Call 313/ 475-1130. PAPERS, ARTICLES, RESUMES. Wordprocessing, editing, text formatting off disk. Professional and helpful. 741-4475. TYPING: Resumes, cover letters, & applications. A2 Typing. Call 994-5515. GOING PLACES CASH PAID! for your AIRLINE MILEAGE AWARDS call Jim at 998-0518 today! CHEAP AIRLINE TICKETS BY MTS! E-Mail cheap tickets@um for info. MUST SELL ONE WAY TKT. Detroit to Newark 5/1 Very cheap! Call Kevin 761- 8894. STUDENT TRAVEL BREAKS AT STAMOS TRAVEL Best European/Greece airfares, 663-4400. MUSIC D O P E-Ann Arbor's best DJs - NO LIE! Now for hire for all occasions 741-8269 HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Lessons: pop, folk, blues, rock and classical, not just guitars. THE TIME FLIES-Classic Rock Band is now available to play your parties or other social engagements. Call 747-6163. TICKETS ROUND TRIP TO HAWAII from Detroit $800 OBO, Call Marc at 741-8186. PHANTOM OF THE OPERA TICKETS, 2 together, 3/29, $120 both neg. 741-1166. DESPERATELY SEEKING 1 good U2 ticket. Call Shane:769-9390. Leave message. PLANE TKT. 1-way, Detroit-Boston, May 6, 3 pm, $125, neg. Jeff 994-5485. ROUNDTRIP DETROIT/LA 3/25-3/29. Female. $383 firm! Call 996-9065. ANNOUNCEMENTS EUROPE THIS SUMMER? Jet there anytime for $169 from the East Coast, $229 from Midwest(when avail.)(reported in Let's Go! & NY Times.) Airhitch. 212-864-2000 THE CENTER FOR Education of Women offers a support group for non-traditional un- dergraduate women over 23 years old. The next meeting is Thursday, March 26 from 6:30-8:00 pm in CEW's conference room, 330 E. Liberty. Feel free to just attend or call Pat Soellner, 998-7080 for more information. ALPHA OMICRON PI DANCE CONTEST Thursday, March 19 6:00 p.m. at Nectarine Ballroom benefits to National Arthritis Research Foundation SELF TRANSPORTATION IN ORDI- NARY LIFE. Eating the "I"-1st book show- ing Gurdjiell. Work in Actior. "Rare Insider's Glimpse"- Yoga Yournal. "Major Step"-Charles Tart. After Ousponky's Search-an important Gurdjiell writing-Miguel Serrano. NOT SOLD IN BOOKSTORES. 6"x9" Notes, index, bib. 368 pgs. $22.95. Arete, Box 58, Fairfax, CA 94978-058. Free Brochure avail. HADASSAH RUMMAGE SALE Sunday, March 22 10:00-5:00 pm Monday, March 23 9:00-12:00 pm At the Ann Arbor Community Center 625 North Main St. JURORS NEEDED FOR MOCK TRIALS at the Law School: March 30, April 1, 2,7,8, & 9. Sign up for one or more. Call 763-4319. ROOMMATES MALE ROOMMATE WANTED- Sept.- Sept., close to campus CHEAP RENT! Single in 5 bdrm. apt. call 764-0710. QUIET FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for next yr. in 2 bdrm. apt. on S. Forest. Pkng. ml. Call 665-9828 or 996- 9572. SHARE 2 BDRM. TOWNHOUSE M/F $335/mo. Leave name & phone #. Call 761- 0631. LSAT* GMAT -GRE* MCAT Test Preparation Graduate School Selection & Application Assistance Ann Arbor " 741-1699 We'll Make Sure You Make It. LSAT CLASSES START APRIL 22 & MAY 12, GRE CLASSES START APRIL 13 & MAY 5, GMAT CLASSES START APRIL 16 & MAY 7. TUTORING AVAILABLE EIn A £il A RII A T L O U. Junge Safari Trek Why vacation in Every-Day-Land when you can discover EXOTIC ' P0 TAKE CONTROL! Conquer bad habits & more w/Hypnosis. >$50. Call 741-5040. CRUISE LINE - Entry level. On board/ landside positions available, year-round or I. I I i I I