The Michigan Daily-- Tuesday, September 15,1992- Page 7 Latino-Hispanic Heritage month theme stirs debate CLASSIFIED ADS by Mona Qureshi Daily Staff Reporter Mixed emotions surround the theme of the University's Latino- Hispanic Heritage month celebra- tion, titled "500 Years After: The Emergence of a Cultural Mosaic." In an effort to recognize the im- portance of events during 1492 - particularly Spain's coming to America - Hispanics on campus and around the United States are anxious as to where they should stand on the issue. "We're split on how to celebrate Spain. Some Hispanics want to glo- rify Spain, but some people want to recognize all the bad things the Spanish did - like genocide of na- tives," celebration organizer and third-year Inteflex student Gina D'Acunti said. Carlos 'Acevedo, a member of the advisory council for the Office of Minority Affairs (OMA), said the theme reflects a sad time for many Hispanics, but the "cultural mosaic" the theme mentions is a reason to celebrate. "We tend to see groups' segrega- tion. It's like you have different dots of many different colors - blue, red, green and so on. When you have one set of colors, you're no longer a mosaic. The theme follows in recog- Hispanic Heritage Month highlights These are some upcoming highlights in Hispanic Heritage Month, which begins today. SEPT. 15: "Cultural Diversity in Higher Education Curricu- lum," opening ceremony, Antonio Flores, direcir of support services, Michigan Department of Education. Michigan League Ballroom, 7 p.m. SEPT. 19: "Celebrate Michigan - Round Table Discussion, Curing Health: Michigan at Work," Surgeon General Antonia Novello. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8:45-10 a.m. SEPT. 19: Welcome to New Latino/a Students, a mini- conference coordinated by Sigma Lambda Gamma Latina Sorority. Michigan Union, Pendleton Room, 1-4 p.m. SEPT. 22: "What Does 1492 Mean For Me?" Coordinated by Ximena Ziniga. William Monroe Trotter House, 7-9 p.m. SEPT. 24: "Latino Identity on the Verge of the 21st Cen- tury," panel of U-M and guest professors. Rackham Amphithe- ater, 7-9 p.m. Reception following in East Conference Room. SEPT. 29: Theatrical production featuring Marga Gomez, a Latina lesbian comic and performance artist. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, 8 p.m. limp WNTED WANTD ANNUNCEMET . " LT D DA DT. Tninm ns -- .--- SECRETARY PART-TIME morning at a foreign language school next to campus. Call 994-1456. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for a well-es- tablished infertility clinic. If you are a male 21 - 40 years of age and a graduate student or a professional 5'9p or taller we need you. ,Donors will be paid $55 per acceptable specimen. For further information please write P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. SHORT TERM CAREGIVER NEEDED for children at Beth Israel Congregation during weeks of Sept. 27 & Oct. 4. Flexible hours. Call 485-1163 for info. SKI POSITIONS: Ski Lodge in Alta, UT. Seasonal only. 11/01/92 - 4/25/93. Salary, room and board, and ski pass. For application please call (801) 742-3000 between 8:30 to 4:30 MT, any day, or write to Alta Peruvian Lodge, PO Box 8017, Alta, UT 84092. SORORITY NEEDS BUSPERSONS $4.00/ hour + meal. Call Beverly Coyan at 665-5071. SORORITY SEEKS bus people. Great' food, relaxed atmosphere. Call 761-5578 be- tween 5:30 &6:30. SPRING BREAK '93-Sell trips, earn cash & go free! Student Travel Services is now hiring campus representatives. Ski packages also available. CALL 1-800-648-4849. STUDENTS WANTED FOR BUSY UM CONFERENCE center! Part time positions include: Waitstaff, Desk Clerks, Student Lounge Staff. Friendly, outgoing people with previous customer service experience are en- couraged to apply in person: Sept. 16-18, 2:00-4:00 pm, 710 E. University. An E.O.E./ Affirmative Action Employer. STUDENTS! Need a job? Then we need you! Call 764-1115. STUDENTS. Jobs available. Good pay. 11 am to 2 pm weekdays. Call 764-1115. TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS: The University of Michigan Research Center. Part-time, must be available weekday shifts, 8am-lpm, fpm-5pm or Sam- 5pm w/ mini- mum 20 hours/week. $6/hr. September- December commitment. Mandatory training 9am- 5pm, Mon. 9/21. Apply in person weekdays, 9/11- 9/15, 9am- 4pm, outside Room 1066, Institute for Social Research, 426 Thompson, between William and Jefferson, Ann Arbor. Applications MUST be submitted by 4pm, Tues. 9/15. For additional tape information only, phone 764-6562. No further phone calls accepted. A non- discriminatory, Affirmative Action employer. THE DIVISION OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE at University Hospital is look- ing for a work-study eligible student to per- form clerical functions 10-20 hrs./wk. Responsibilities will include inventory, or- dering supplies, maintaining division' s timekeeping database, typing, filing, answer- ing phones. Clerical & computer experience 'is preferred. Interested candidates should contact Tim Wade at 936-5386 or Kim New- man at 936-5402. . TWO ADORABLE BOYS need fun friend to babysit. Flexible hours. 995-5928. UNIVERSITY CLUB - WAITSTAFF, host, hostess, kitchen prep, kitchen cleaner: lunch. Experience required, students, flexible hours. Apply in person: Room 1310, Michigan Union. WANTED: TEACHERS FOR PROGRES- SIVE secular Jewish Sunday School. Teach- ing or camp counselor experience preferred. Call 665-5761 and leave a message. WENDY'S IS NOW HIRING. Get the best ~in the business compare hrs. to all others. Join America's quality restaurant team at Wendy's. Crew positions available for full & part-time breakfast, lunch, evening & closing shifts. We offer * Very competitive starting wage of $5.00/hr. * Free Meals * Free Uniforms * Performance & Wage reviews * Friendly working environment Stop by and fill out an application and see how you can begin a rewarding and respon- sible opportunity with America's leading res- taurant team. Apply at University of Michigan Union Wendy's. WORK FOR ACADEMIC CREDIT OR VOLUNTEER at U of M's Pound House Children's Center during Fall Term. Join hndreds of past students in a quality ex- perenc working with young children. Lo- cated at Hill and East University. Please call 764-2547 for more information or to arrange a visit. WORK STUDY LAB ASST. POSITION AVAIL. in head & neck cancer research lab at Kresge Hearing Research Institute. For WORK/STUDY wanted Fall term for office related duties including some lifting and moving. Must be available Tuesdays & Thursdays. Call 764-9290. YARD HELP. Mowing, trimming and weed- ing done weekly. Bulb planting. Own transportation and experience required. Call 662-1122. DUs NE SSEIWECE R & V SCREEN PRINTING & DESIGN. Sweats, hats, t-shirts & jackets. You design. 434-87755.1 X LEASE Hunters/Jumpers. Call Evenings 971-2809. GUITAR LESSONS-All styles of jazz, blues and rock, from Pass to S.R.V. to Holdsworth. Jazz improv and theory for all instruments. Beginner to Advanced. SPECIAL!! Personalized play-along practice tapes of any musical piece in any key and tempo included. Call Jake Reichbartkat 769- 6912 or at the Ann Arbor Academy of Music 663-4949. GUITARIST LOOKING FOR blues musicians immediately to form band. Bass, voice, keys, drums. Full committment! Call Jeff Malkin at 996-4064. HIGHLY IMPROVABLE COMEDY TROUPE seeks dynamic, committed and kinda loopy Music Director. Call Mike or Matt 996-5979. I NEED STUDENT FOOTBALL TICKETS: Will pay top $$$ for good tickets. 781-3483. STUDENT FOOTBALL TICKETS WAN- TED 2 Seats together. Call collect: 313-856-8125 Tues. & Weds. 6-8 pm. ONE PACK OF STUDENT FOOTBALL TICKETS for sale. Sec. 24. Call 769-4133. MICHIGAN FOOTBALL TICKETS FOR SALE. All games except Michigan State. 668-7707. 2 SEASON FOOTBALL TICKETS for sale. Sect. 24. Best Offer. 662-4783. WANTED: SEASON FOOTBALL TICK- ETS in Section 24. Call 747-8640. WANTED: 2 SEASON FOOTBALL TICKETS Sec. 24. Please call 313/332- 4025. WANTED 4 STUDENT SEASON FOOT- BALL TKTS. together Call 747-9395. Leave message. ACT NOW. UM Football-2 season tickets, student section 25, row 48. 971-8157. STUDENT FOOTBALL SEASON ticket package for sale. Price neg. James 662-5939. WANT TO BUY- I ea. student season foot- ball ticket. 517-694-5612. Evening. NEED 2 STUDENT PASSBOOKS FOR Michigan Football. Must be together & in sec. 24 or 25. Call Rich at (313)228-5478. TWO ADJACENT SEASON FOOTBALL BOOKLETS near 45 yard line. Best offer: 996-9381. U OF M FOOTBALL TKTS 4-SALE. 50 yd. line! Season tkts. Call 313-699-4756. YOGA COURSE, 6 TUES. EVES., starts Sept. 15. Call 761-6520. DISC (FRISBEE) GOLF CLUB SEEK- ING new members at any skill level. Ann Ar- bor Area has a new 18-hole golf course and it's about time we put UM disc golf on the map! Beginners encouraged to to check it out. Pro tips avail. Call 434-1615 or meet on Diag. Thur. 9/17 at 1:00 PM. ZEN MEDITATION COURSE, 5 Thurs. eves., starts Sept. 17, Zen Buddhist Temple, 761-6520. ATTENTION FIRST YEAR STUDENTS: Interested in becoming a future leade? Then apply for SODC's leadership Development Program! 1992 EMERGING LEADERS applications are available at the SODC, 2202 Michigan Union & must be returned by Friday, Sept. 18, 5 PM ***E COURSE*** The Elderly and Life Histories 2 - 3 credits For more info... contact Jeanne Gray at PROJECT COMMUNITY Room 2205 The Michigan Union nition of individuality and at the same time recognizing that each one of these individuals is part of a whole," Acevedo said. Sponsored by the OMA and the Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs, the celebration be- gins this evening with a speech by Antonio Flores of the Michigan State Department of Education titled "Cultural Diversity in Higher Education Curriculum." Flores will speak at 7 p.m. in the Michigan League Ballroom. Also tonight, Charles Moody, vice provost of the OMA, will be recognized for this contributions to Hispanic students at the University. Germany cuts mterest rates in hopes of world economic recovery '*NEW COURSE*** Prison Literacy .and Adult Education 2 - 3 credits For more info... contact Jeanne Gray at PROJECT COMMUNITY Room 2205 The Michigan Union FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED to share Lge. Apt. Great location. Call Yasmin 995-0714 FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED! Share room in fabulous 2 bdrm. apt. New contem- porary furn., A/C, pkng., dwshr. Bi-level & garden level avail. Call direct 995-5568 & 741-9574 or 741-9300. HOUSEMATE WANTED: lbdrm. in 2 bdrm. house close to campus, on bus line. Washer/dryer, sundeck/fenced yard, parking, pets ok. 450/mo. + 1/2 utils. 741-9437. MALE ROOMMATE WANTED! Share a fabulous 2 bdrm. apt. New contemporary furn., A/C, pkng., dwshr. Bi-level & garden level avail. Call Direct 741-7162 & 994-5752 or 741-9300., BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS. Apple powerbook 140, 4/40, $1900 w/ Hypercard/ System 7. Compaq Lte 386sx/20. Factory sealed 2/60 VGA $1600, 2/84 VGA $1700. New/used computer systems available. Coi- pu Cycle, Inc. 1-800-854-2677. BONN, Germany (AP) - Germany cut key interest rates for the first time in five years yesterday, an action the United States and European Community nations had urged for months to help spur a world economic recovery. Stocks shot up in New York and other financial markets. The cuts by the Bundesbank, Germany's central bank, could ease pressures on the U.S. economy and improve the prospects for French approval of a treaty for European political and monetary union in a referendum this Sunday. But the gap between German rates and those in other major industrial nations remained wide. Germany's high rates have at- tracted investments and drawn money away from other currencies, helping to drive the dollar to an all- time low against the mark in recent weeks. The cut was part of a European Community agreement Sunday to devalue the weakening Italian lira against the mark and other European currencies in exchange for a reduc- tion in German interest rates. Yesterday the Bundesbank lowered its Lombard rate from 9.75 percent to 9.50 percent and cut the discount rate from 8.75 percent to 8.25 percent. The pivotal Lombard is the rate at which banks borrow emergency funds from the Bundesbank, and acts as the ceiling on money market rates. The discount rate is used for the cheapest standard bank-to-bank lending. There was an immediate reaction on Wall Street, where the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials shot up 35 points in the first half hour of trading. Prices also rallied in London, but lost ground when the cuts were smaller than investors had hoped. The rate-trimming was something of a victory for the United States and for Bonn's European partners. The powerful German Labor Federation said the lowered rates are "a step in the right direction but too small. The whole world awaits further steps." Cheney touts Bush's military record, promises economic recovery in Detroit DETROIT (AP) - Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney cheered President Bush's overseas victories yesterday while spinning sugar-plum visions of jobs in this economically downtrodden city. Cheney, speaking to the Detroit Economic Club, began his Michigan trip at the former Hudson's depart- ment store downtown. Detroit and state officials have touted the vacant site as a prime spot for a new Pentagon finance and accounting center. Abandoned in 1983 because of dying business, the 25-story building is just one victim of Detroit's hard times. Cheney's visit sparked hope that Detroit could win one of as many as five planned facilities as the Pentagon consolidates its finance and accounting operations. "The feeling is that Detroit has a good chance," said Bob Berg, a spokesperson forfMayor Coleman Young. "Just the fact that the secre- tary took the time out of his schedule to look at the building, that says a lot." Young, Gov. John Engler and Detroit-area financiers Max Fisher, Peter Stroh and Heinz Prechter, all of whom have close ties to the Bush administration, accompanied Cheney on his tour of the building. More than 125 cities have sub- mitted 200 bids for the regional of- fice centers, said defense spokesper- son Pete Williams. Each center will produce between 4,000 and 7,000 jobs. Three other Michigan areas have expressed interest in the offices: Muskegon, Sterling Heights, and Monroe County. But Cheney seemed to favor Detroit yesterday, saying, "As Detroit goes, so goes Michigan." Metropolitan Detroit, in the southeastern corner of the state, con- tains over half of Michigan's resi- dents. "If you were to put 4,000 to 7,000 additional jobs there ... you're revitalizing the whole state's econ- omy," Berg siad. Cheney made the extra stop at the request of Engler, the head of Bush's Michigan campaign. "I think it shows how serious Detroit is in the running," Engler spokesperson John Truscott said of Cheney's visit to the Hudson's building. HAVE ME EVER WANTED TO BE PART OF A HUMOR MAG? * THE GUY BEHIND YA F xXEE ~~L i . apt with your host 4 I