The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 25, 1992- Page 7 Russian nuclear reactor leaks gas MOSCOW (AP) - A Chernobyl-style nuclear power re- actor near St. Petersburg leaked ra- 'dioactive gas yesterday, but Russian atomic energy officials said the small amount that escaped into the atmosphere posed no threat to the public. Despite the official assurances, some St. Petersburg residents took precautions, including keeping chil- dren indoors. Swedish experts who visited the Leningradskaya plant last year had urged it be closed immediately be- cause of safety concerns. U.S. offi- cials said yesterday they remained worried about the safety of all Soviet-built nuclear plants. Since the Chernobyl disaster spewed radioactivity across Europe in 1986, serious questions have been raised about aging and poorly designed reactors, poor mainte- nance and operator errors at nuclear. plants in the former Soviet Union. Despite those concerns, Russia must rely heavily on its nine nu- clear power plants because of per- sistent energy shortages. Three of the plants - with 11 reactors - share the same design as the Chernobyl station. Russian officials said filters ren- dered the radioactive gases and io- dine harmless yesterday as they es- caped from the reactor building. Soviet nuclear plants do not have Atlantis mission to examine Earth atmosphere, ozone Radioactive gas escaped into the atmosphere yesterday from the nuclear reactor hall of the Leningradskaya nuclear plant, about 50 miles outside St. Petersburg, Russia. sealed structures designed to con- tain leaks from reactors, which are mandatory in the United States and other nations. More serious leaks occurred at two other Soviet plants last year, But the Finnish government said only one of its monitoring stations detected a "minute" rise in radiation at high altitudes yesterday, while others registered no increases. Foreign experts agreed with 'There was no panic at the factory, but just to be on the safe side we recommended that our staff take three drops of iodine in a glass of milk.' -Nikolai Pinchuk chief engineer at an electrical equipment plant but neither caused contamination Russian officials that it appeared outside the plants, said Yuri the incident was not too serious. Rogozhin of the State Atomic "There is no danger at all," said Security Commission. Larisa Khudiokova, a mayoral Neighboring Finland appealed spokesperson in St. Petersburg, a for international action to improve city of 4.5 million people 50 miles the safety of Russian nuclear plants. east of the plant in Sosnovy Bor. Still, school officials ordered kindergartens to keep children in- doors today and advised parents to put iodine in their children's milk. The thyroid glands of young chil- dren are particularly vulnerable to radioactive iodine but can be made less susceptible with doses of nor- mal potassium iodine. "Just to be on the safe side, I did not allow the kids to be taken out- side in the afternoon and gave each half a pill of iodine," said Olga Morozova, principal of Nursery School No. 2 in St. Petersburg. Nikolai Pinchuk, chief engineer at an electrical equipment plant, said, "There was no panic at the factory, but just to be on the safe side we recommended that our staff take three drops of iodine in a glass of milk." CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) - Atlantis roared into orbit with seven astronauts yesterday on the first shuttle mission devoted to the environment. The expedition should provide the most thorough look at the Earth's atmosphere, including the fragile ozone layer. The crew quickly turned on the scientific equipment in the cargo bay and launched into more than a week's worth of research. The in- struments clicked on and began sending back data. Scientists on the ground were "quite happy, eager and ready to go to work," said Harry Craft, manager of NASA's payload project office. Atlantis rose from its seaside pad at 8:14 a.m., a little late because of low clouds over the emergency land- ing site at Kennedy Space Center. The twin solid rocket boosters re- sembled a falling star as they peeled away and dropped into the Atlantic. "It doesn't look much better than it did to me this morning," said NASA Administrator Richard Truly. "It was a beautiful launch and I was delighted to be down here for it." Dozens of Belgians gathered to see Atlantis off with the first Belgian to fly in space, Dirk Frimout. The spectators included Princes Philippe and Laurent, nephews of Belgium's King Baudouin. NASA's attempt to launch Atlantis on Monday was halted be- cause of hydrogen and oxygen leaks that appeared in the engine com- partment during fueling. Officials determined the leaks posed no threat. Astronaut David Leestma re- ported the external fuel tank was venting as it fell toward Earth. Mission operations director Lee Briscoe said that while unusual, it caused no major concerns. The eight-day flight, commanded by Charles Bolden, is the first of 46 shuttle missions to be dedicated to atmospheric research. All but one of the 13 scientific instruments in the cargo bay are studying Earth. Scientists are especially inter- ested in the ozone layer, which is being eaten by manmade pollutants. 'it doesn't look much better than it did to me this morning. It was a beautiful launch and L was delighted to be down here for it.' - Richard Truly NASA administrator The stratospheric layer protects Earth from dangerous ultraviolet rays. "It's surely on time that we do it now," Frimout said in a pre-flight interview. Atlantis' voyage 184 miles above Earth is part of NASA's Mission to Planet Earth to study the environ- ment from space. Researchers from seven countries are participating. The astronauts also plan to spend1 their few spare moments talking via ham radio to school children around the world. CLASSIFIED ADS PERSONAL **ATTENTION: Supreme Course Transcripts, the LS&A lecture notetaking service, has notes for these winter term clas- ses avail. at Michigan Book & Supply, 317 S. 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** PERSONAL PREGNANT? Are you or someone you care about pregnant and not in a position in your life to be a parent? Please help a loving couple become a loving family.. Call collect 313/360-0223. SHABBAT AT CHABAD. Home made shabbat dinner. Friday 6:30 pm. Call 99- LEARN. TAKE CONTROL! Conquer bad habits & more w/Hypnotherapy. Call 741-5040. MINIATURE CONDOMS!!! LITTLE RICHARDS condoms for underachievers- pkg of three ABOUT THE SIZE OF A U.S. NICKEL NOVELTY FUN $3.00 INCLUDES TAX + SHIP Creative Home Productions PO BOX 8074 Ann Arbor Mi 48107 incredibly witty things to say included ***SANDI'S WORDPROCESSING*** Fast, reliable, near Campus. 426-5217. BIG M TYPING- Term Papers, Dissertations, Letters. Fast and reasonable. 996-13$3. RESUMES, APPLICATIONS, AND DIS- SERTATIONS. 10% new customer discount. 761-8842. GONG PLACESh ST UDENT SERVICES HELP WANTED EARN $6-$9/HR working right here in Ann Arbor. COLLEGE PAINTERS is currently filling painter and foreman positions for the summer. Must be willing to work 40+ hours per week. Experience helpful but not necessary. CALL 769-4877. EARN UNLIMITED INCOME mailing cir- culars at home - free info. Write: Desktop Ventures, 628 Packard #1, A2, MI 48104. EST. B'HAM AREA Asphalt Maintenance Business for sale. Cust. list & equip. Great for college student. 647-2616. 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. CHILD CARE AND TRANSPORTATION assistance needed for 2 children weekday mornings 6:45-8:45 AM and some weekday evenings 5:30-7:30 PM. Reliable transporta- tion and references required. Flexibility and excellent wages for right person. Call 663- 3784 evenings and weekends. CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY INTERNSHIP: Training positions at University of Chicago residential treatment center for emotionally disturbed children and adolescents. BA + some exp. required. Sum- mer or permanent positions avail. Informa- tional meeting Wed. March 25, 7:00 pm at the Union Welker Rm. COLLEGE GRADS WANTED for New Business Company! Call 313/259-2126. GLOBAL RELEAF OF MICHIGAN is looking for volunteers to help coordinate and plant at neighborhood tree plantings. Train- ing provided. Call 1-800-642-7353 to volunteer. INDIVIDUALS WANTED local ice cream routes. Above average earnings. For more information. Please call, 313/232-2002 or 1- 800-875-2227. JUGGLERS, MAGICIANS, MIME wanted for International Fest. MLB, April 14, 1-3. 747-0759. 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. 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 hrs./week. Begin now or May. 665-4842. NEED A SUMMER JOB! Work outdoors- Rochester Hills, Livonia. Earn $5-7/hr. Call Student Painters at 1-800-543-3792. HELP WANTED SUMMER GROUNDS SUPERVISOR. Large housing development seeking person experienced w/ grounds maintenance & equipment. Must have previous exp. in supervision, planning, & directing staff. Posi- tion opening in Apr. Running to Nov. Apply now at Forest Hills Cooperative. 2351 Shadowwood Dr. Ann Arbor. E.O.E. 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. SUMMER JOBS: Earn avg. $6000. Build resume. Travel, gain exp. Call 677-4769 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. SUPPORT WOMEN'S RIGHTS Prochoice coffeehouse Wed. March 25, Halfway Inn East Quad 8-11. TEACHERS NEEDED 1992/93 school year for the Jewish Cultural School. A progressive Jewish Sunday school. Call 665-5761 and leave a message. GMAT INQUI 337 E. Liberty / GRE/ LS RE TODAY AT YI 662-3149 ACTORS & CREW NEEDED for stage and film production in June. Call Geoffrey at 930-6929. People of color strongly en- couraged to audition. ADOPTION - Devoted father, full-time mother seek newborn to join family. We promise your baby love & understanding, a good education & fun. Supportive Sgrandparents. Legal. Call Bev & Howard col- lect- 914-235-3917. Beginning with your very first set of FREE diagnostic tests. Ronkin will give you the skills, practice, caring and support you'll need to clear a path straight to thet Graduate School of your choice. And you'll have the satisfaction of being your best. Call Ronkin today. ANN ARBOR 741-1699 WE'LL MAKE SURE You MAKE IT. LSAT * GMAT a GRE MCAT LSAT CLASSES START APRIL 22 & MAY 12, GRE CLASSES START APRIL 13 & MAY 5, GMAT CLASSES START MARCH 31, APRIL 16 & MAY 7. Small Classes. Big Scores." Score More With The Princeton Review. Call (3133 663-2163 for more information. THE PRI NCETON HELP WANTED 100,000 SUMMER JOBS OUTDOORS: National Parks, forests, fire crews, ski resorts, scenic lodges. Send SASE for free details: Sullivan's, 113 E. Wyoming, Kalispell, MT, 59901. ADDICTION TO CIGARETTE SMOK- ING IS MORE POWERFUL THAN AD- DICTION TO HEROIN. If you are an ex- smoker and would like to help other students quit, please call University Health Service at 763-1320. Ask for Janet Vielasko or Gen Stewart. 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. ASSEMBLE PRODUCTS AT HOME Easy work! top pay! guaranteed! 1-800-881-6000, ext. 4160. 7 days. BAKERS NEEDED, early a.m. hours, will train, start $5.25/hr. Full time, apply in person, 1306 S. University. CAMP COUNSELOR Have the summer of your life and get paid for it- Top 3 camp organizations in the Pocono Mountains of NE-PA. Positions in all areas- water and land sports, fine arts and outdoor adventure. Call 1-800-533-CAMP, 215/887- 9700 PA, 151 Washington Lane, Jenkintown, PA 19046. 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. CAMPAIGN STAFF - If you are intelligent, articulate, and interested in seeing our politi- cal system work for the people we can offer you political experience and career oppor- tunities in progressive change. $300-450/ week, 1:30/10 p.m. Call the Michigan Citizens Lobby for interview 663-6824. COUNSELORS Prestigious co-ed Berkshires, MA summer -,..: ,..: - .:.- THE COLOR WORKS COLLEGIATE PAINTERS Needs students to help operate our painting business in the following areas this summer: Troy, Rochester, St. Joe, Muskegon, Farmington, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Midland, Holland, Battle Creek & Toledo. Positions available in sales & production mgt. Earn $5000 during summer. Call 1-800-477-1001. WANTED: MALE ART & ENGLISH MAJORS for a Psychology experiment on the emotional quality of sounds at U of M. The experiment takes 2% Hrs. & pays $15 upon completion. To qualify, must have nor- mal hearing & be right handed. To sign up call 763-4215. WE'RE LOOKING FOR A RESPON- SIBLE PERSON to care for our 2 1/2 yr. old in our home on M + W 3-7, Sat. 9-1. Min. commitment May-Aug. Previous experience & references necessary. 662-3062. 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, dissertations, resume- writing & graphic capabilities. 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. EBUSKESS SERVICESV TYPING: Resumes, cover letters, & applications. A2 Typing. Call 994-5515. GOING PLACES CHEAP AIRLINE TICKETS BY MIS E-Mail cheapjickets@um for info. EUROPE SPECIALS London fr. $448, Frankfurt fr. $498, Moscow fr. $760, Paris fr. $464, Eurail pass $280. Purchase tickets by 3/31/92. Call Dan or Claudia-REGENCY' TRAVEL, 209 S. State St. 665-6122. ORIENT SPECIALS: Tokyo fr. $921, Taipei fr. $1026, Hong Kong fr. $1016, Bangkok fr. $1111, Seoul fr. $1033, Sin, gapore fr. $1094. Ask for Dan or Claudia. $129 or $189 anywhere in USA on Con- tinental Airlines! AMEX card & Contintental voucher. Ask for Irene or Ann at REGENCY TRAVEL 209 S. State, 665-6122. STUDENT TRAVEL BREAKS AT STAMOS TRAVEL Best European/Greece airfares, 663-4400. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED TO BUY, USED MAC COM- PUTER compatible with campus computers. Call Carol 426-2785. MUSIC HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO. Not just guitars. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Repairs. Lessons: Pay 4, get 5. TICKETS WANTED: TWO U2 TICKETS. Detroit, Toronto, Chicago, or Cleveland. Tom 662- 4073. NEEDED: ONE TICKET to NCAA Semi- finals in Lexington! Please call 747-3926. UM SWEET 16 TICKETS for sale. Call Dennision 763-7008. 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 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. AFRICAN-AMERICAN woman scrips, writer needed for VAMP's Beat of Dis Content. For more info. call 761-9748. OPEN AUDITIONS! BEAT OF DIS CON- TENT multi-media performance on racism. For more audition info. Call 761-9748. SELF TRANSPORTATION IN ORDI NARY LIFE. Eating the "I"-1st book show- ing Gurdjiell. Work in Action. "Rare Insider's Glimpse"- Yoga Journal. "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. ROOMMATES **FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for 2 bdrm. apt. near Law School. May lease, $275/person + util. Ldry., pkng., furn., new carpet and kitchen. Ellen at 677-1425. FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED for single room in nice 6 Bdrm. house, close to campus. May-May, $295/Mo., Prkng., 769- 4509. SHARE 2 BDRM. TOWNHOUSE M/F $335/mo. Leave name & # ONLY. Call 761- 0631. UI GUMBY'S PIZZA la w Eu U U Delivery Drivers Wanted -Flexible Hours " * *Take home 100% of * your Pay Daily -Earn $5-8/hr. * U Call 663-3333 .. ... ..... . ., I . RUN YOUR OWN BUSINESS: Student Sprinkler is now hiring for summer manager positions selling & installing Toro under- Sround sprinkler systems. Earn up to 10,000. In Detroit suburbs. Call 663-8613. t 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 naid $55 ner ac- U U.mi i r I m