The Michigan Daily - Friday, January 81993- Page 7 California family in stable condition after rescued from storm CEDARVILLE, Calif. (AP) - As coyotes howled, James Stolpa trudged on frozen feet, desperately seeking help in the snow-covered desert for the wife and child he had left sheltered by a sleeping bag hanging from a rock shelf. After 22 hours of wandering through waist-high drifts, Stolpa spotted a highway worker yesterday, and his eight-day ordeal ended. Five hours later, using directions from Stolpa, California Highway Patrol Officer Pat Green discovered Jennifer Stolpa, cuddling 5-month- old Clayton beneath an outcropping "in the middle of nowhere." The couple survived on coconut cookies, Doritos and prenatal vita- mins. Mrs. Stolpa nursed Clayton and melted ice in her mouth for water. "We were worried about freezing to death or starving to death," Stolpa said yesterday at Surprise Valley Community Hospital, his damaged feet wrapped and little Clayton cra- dled in his arms. "We did a lot of praying." The ordeal began in Northern California on Dec. 29 when the Stolpas borrowed a pickup truck to attend the funeral of Stolpa's grandmother in Pocatello, Idaho. Just as they left, a severe storm struck, bringing 9 feet of snow to the area. Authorities believe the Stolpas got stuck the first night. After five nights in the snow- bound truck without seeing another car, "we had to decide whether to stay and die or try and do something and die," said Stolpa, an Army pri- vate at Camp Roberts, near Paso Robles. "I would tell her, 'We're not do- ing it for me, we're not doing it for you. We're doing it for the baby,"' he said. The couple walked 12 miles through drifts up to waist-high until they found shelter under a ledge Sunday where Mrs. Stolpa and the baby stayed while Stolpa continued his trek for help. While trudging through the high desert, Stolpa told doctors, he could hear the coyotes. Mrs. Stolpa said her husband "is more than a hero to me." "I don't think I could have picked anyone better. He had the courage and the drive to get us out of there and he did," she said from her hospi- tal bed. Stolpa and his wife were in stable condition with severe frostbite to their toes and feet. The baby was unharmed. "They never lost their heads and that's what saved their lives," said Modoc County Sheriff Bruce Mix. The Stolpas were transferred later yesterday to Washoe Medical Center in Reno, Nev. A plow cleared a path for their ambulance on Highway 395 as more snow fell. Stolpa was "somewhat incoherent when he was found" 30 miles north of Vya in the wilderness of north- western Nevada, said Dave Reider, a spokesperson for Lassen National Forest. Dr. Hugh Washburn said high- way worker Dave Peterson took Stolpa home, where his wife "heated (Stolpa's) feet with a blow dryer so his socks could be pulled off without tearing off the tissue." Stolpa was wearing panty hose and heavy socks, but only light shoes, Washburn said. The baby was dressed in multiple layers of clothes, wrapped in a baby sleeping bag and an adult sleeping bag. Stolpa said he and his wife placed Clayton in a garment bag that acted as a sled, and the motion "soothed him" on their hike. Shetland Islanders cope with oil sp11 S UMBURGH, Shetland Islands (AP) - Harsh weather halted efforts yesterday to battle an oil spill fouling rich marine habitats and spreading noxious fumes and oil on land. An oil mist blowing inland forced some parents to keep chil- dren home from school and led farmers to move their oil-smeared sheep. Residents worried about crops and the famous Shetland ponies, native to the North Sea islands. "It's always been a very healthy place until now," said Helen Thomson, who runs a pony trekking business. "I think what surprised us all is the effect the oil spill has had on agriculture and livestock." The Liberian-registered Braer, carrying 24.6 million gallons of Norwegian oil to Canada, ran aground Tuesday after its engines failed in hurricane-force winds Government officials say pri- vately that about half the cargo has spilled into the sea. Gale-force winds and lashing rains all but shut down yesterday's efforts to rescue wildlife and clean up the spreading slick. The Oil oozes out of the Liberian-registered oil tanker Braer as it lies half-submerged off the southern tip of the Shetland Islands. The tanker survived intact through one night of ferocious pounding. weather also prevented planes from dropping detergents to dis- perse it. "A day lost to weather would be the best way to describe it," said George Sutherland, director of marine operations in the Shetlands. The ship's owners, Bergvall and Hudner of New York, said in a statement they hoped workers could begin pumping oil from the tanker's holds this weekend. They have pledged compensation. A salvage team reported Wednesday the tanker is in one piece and partly submerged. If the ship breaks under the pounding waves, the remaining oil will spill. Sutherland said oil had spread four miles up the east coast of Mainland, the largest island in the Shetland chain about 100 miles off the Scottish coast. Oil also was moving near West Burra island, an important salmon farming area 13 miles north of the wreck. Hundreds of dead, oil-covered fish and birds were found along the Mainland coast yesterday. The Shetlands are famed for thriving seabird colonies, and waters teem- ing with fish and sea mammals. Wind has sprayed oil as far as four miles inland, smearing a brown coating on farms and sheep. At the south point of the island, oil droplets spatter clothing and cling to the skin. Martin Hall, director of envi- ronmental services for the Shetland Islands Council, said several farms were damaged. New tagging system helps fat- COnscious CUStomers find Support Campus Cinema 1 CLASSIFIED ADS H now hiring- Earn $2,000+/ mo, and world -travel Holiday, Summer and Career employment available. No experience nesary For employment program call - 206-634-0468 ext. 05598. HAVE A SPECIAL SKILL? Work well with children? Consider summer camp! Supervisors, counselors, R.N. s, Waterfront staff, (WSI, ALS, Boating), Tennis and arts & crafts specialist. Call or write for application: Joel Stravsky Jewish Community Center of Cleveland Camp Wise 26001 South Woodland Road Beachwood, Ohio 44122 (216) 831-0700, Ext. 312. NCC WAITSTAFF WANTED. Catering experience helpful. Call Sue at 764-2142. 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. STRONG MUSCLES NEEDED FOR MOVING! Sat. Jan. 9. start 10 AM. $6/hr. 996-4055. STUDENT CUSTODIANS Neeue.d at Student Publications (Michigan Daily. Michiganensian and. the Gargoyle). We are looking for individuals who are enthusiastic, energetic and in good physical condition. $5/hr. Must be available 8:15 ant to 12:15 pm at least two days a week. To apply, call David Friedo at 764-0550 or stop by Room 205 at 420 Maynard Street. SUBJECTS NEEDED Male, right-handed. native English speakers, normal vision, nor- mal hearing for reaction time experiment in cognition. Must be available for 90 minutes, 3 consecutive days, same time each day. Hourly pay + bonus. Call 936-2056. SUBWAY- close to North Campus. Days/ nights, flexible hrs., free meals. 1701 Plymouth Rd. (next to videowatch). US TRACERS IS CURRENTLY seeking motivated students in the Ann Arbor area for FT and PT independent work. Call 1-800- 886-6919. WENDY'S IS NOW HIRING. Get the best in the business compare hours 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 * Competitive starting wage of up to $5.50/hr Free Meals and 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. WINGS OF WESTWOOD- Now hiring drivers and cooks. Call 662-4659. WORK FOR ACADEMIC CREDIT OR VOLUNTEER at U of M's Pound House LOW FARES - Europe fr. $448, Orient fr. $947. Call Claudia or Dan @ Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. ROMANTIC X-SKI GET'VAY! Cozy log cabins with outdoor hot tub. $49-$69 nightly. Traverse City area. Close to downhill. Gift certificates available. Ellis Lake Resort. 616- 276-9502. SKI SIRING BREAK in Park City, Utah. Call Amy 996-2648 or Tami 665-1026. SPRING BREAK/REPS. WANTED Acapulco fr. $469, Jamaica fr. $539, Cancun fr. $479, Puerto Vallarta fr. $539. Call Dan. Regency Travel, 209 S. State 665-6122. SPRING BREAK IN CANCUN AND JAMAICA. For best prices call Jeff immne'd. 747-9332. SPRING BREAK IN CANCUN. All price ranges available. Best trip at UM year after year. Call Mike 995-5704 Amy 996-2648. SPRING BREAK, DAYTONA BEACH! O.F. Motels, Quad (Icc. 7 full nights, R/T charter bus, $159.50 pp. Room only $69.50 VIP. Card special (leals, focal & erit. Daytona Travel Tours Inc. 1-800-88 -B EACn. SPRING BREAK7 nights. D)aytona Beach $129. Call CMI at 1-800-423-5264. SPRINGBREAKERS Promote our Florida Spring Break packages. Earn MONEY and Free trips. Campus Marketing. 800-423-5264. STUDENTS ANYWHERE IN THE U.S. on Continental fr. $129/$199. Bring your Continental voucher and your AMEX Card. Anywhere. in the U.S.A. ontJS Air fr. $ 129/ $189. Bring your US Air Voucher and Chase Visa/Mastercard. Call Kristina or Wandaat Regency Travel 209 S State 665-6122. STUDENTS DESERVE THEM! Special student and youth fares at Student Travel Breaks-Stamos Family Travel. 663-4400. WARM BODIES NEEDED: Jamaica &I Cancun-SPRING BREAK '93- Lowest pricej guaranteed. Spaces limited. Call Mike 995- 9506. HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Not just guitars. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Free les- son special: harp, percussion. NEED 2 TICKETS for Indiana b-ball game. Call 995.0470. DETROIT-TAMPA TCKT NW. Jan 15, (can extend to 3/23). Best offer, 349-1696. NEED 2 OR 4 TICKETS for Indiana b-ball game. Call 665-5911. ANOUNCEMENTS THE STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE Jan. 8-10. Don't buy fron bookstores-buy fron us! 11 AM-6PM in the Union Pendletont Room. NEED 3-5 TICKETS FOR B-BALL VS. ILLINOIS. Call Eric 665-2411. DOWNTOWN COMM. LOFT/GALLERY SPACE. Daily rates, 209 N. Main St. 769- 6823. an x.rror rtrr nrt l 1 T healthy foods at TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. (AP) - A local supermarket chain is joining the fight against flab with a labeling system to steer customers toward the healthier foods on its shelves. Tom's Food Markets, which has four stores in the Traverse City area, will affix tags to thousands of pro- cessed food products beginning Monday, a spokesperson said. The "High Fit, Low Fat" color- coded tagging is based on studies by the University Medical Center's MedSport Preventive Cardiology Program. Foods were evaluated for dietary fiber, fat, saturated fat, cholesterol and sodium as disclosed on product labels. Foods the MedSport program considers acceptable will have a green tag. Those evaluated as ac- ceptable in limited use will have a yellow tag. Under the MedSport program, foods that don't make either of these categories are considered unaccept- able and get a red tag. Tom's, how- supermarket ever, will use only green and yellow tags. Foods that don't fall into either category will not be tagged. The idea is to encourage people to consider the recommended items, not to discourage them from buying others, Marty Phelan, director of merchandising for Tom's, said yesterday. An Ann Arbor supermarket chain, Busch's Valu Land, has a similar program using the MedSport tagging system. "We've had a tremendous re- sponse," said Dan Courser, a Busch vice president. "When we first started a year ago, it was phenome- nal. All the holes on the shelves were the MedSport-recommended items. It took us weeks to get our in- ventory adjusted." Phelan, the Tom's official, said. most processed foods will be tagged. The program later will be extended to the bakery, which will feature muffins made from ingredients ap- proved by MedSport. Welcome Back! from MAYNARD PARTY STORE 326 Magnard 995-1888 OPEN 7 DAYS 8 am-11 pm FRESH eSalads eSubs eFruit "Coldest Beer in town" EWHUMETA 5TH AVE AT LIBERTY 761-9700 $3 2 G AILY SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM $3 25 ALL DAY TUESDAY' *-. aptwons STUDENT WITH ID..$3.50 D~VITO I.- A Danny DeVito Film HOFFA H Fri 4:15, 7:05,9-.65 Fri 4:45, 7:20, 9:.45 Sat Sun 1:20,4:15, Sat Sun 12:00,2:20% 7:05, 9:55 4:4S,7:20.9:45 Present This Coupon When Purchasing A Large Popcorn & Receive One EXPIRES: 211193 The University of Michigan School of Music Sun. Jan. 10 Stearns Collection: Virginia Martin Howard Lecture "Drums of Korea" by Robert C. Provine, University of Durham, England School of Music Recital Hall, 2 p.m. Sun. Jan. 17 Michigan Chamber Players Mozart: Quintet for Piano and Winds, with John Mohler, clarinet;,Harry Sargous, oboe; Richard Beene, bassoon; Lowell Greer, horn; and Louis Nagel, piano Rochberg: Trio for Clarinet, Horn and Piano, with Fred Ormand, clarinet; Lowell Greer, horn; and Ellen Weckler, piano Brahms: Quintet for Piano and Strings, with Stephen Shipps and Andrew Jennings, violin; Yizhak Schotten, viola; Jerome Jelinek, cello; and Dickran Atamian, piano School of Music Recital Hall, 8 p.m. l I p: Golden Computer Service CARRY IN ! PICK-UP AND DELIVERY * EMERGENCY EEE REPAIRS AVAILABLE " EXPERIENCED SPECIALISTS IN REPAIR OF PERSONAL COMPUTERS, PRINTERS " WE WANT TO REPAIR YOUR COMPUTER -- NOT SELL YOU A NEW ONE student/Staff Discount with a copy of this ad All events free unless specified. Wheelchair accessible. For up-to-date program information on School of Music events call the 24-Hour Music Hotline--763-4726 " a)FREE PARKING M!11 1, 221 FETCH ANN ARBOR I Ia ~~ DWelcomes.. Ttsckets avaiable now at the The Miigan Union Ticket Office. Herb David GuitarStudio and al TkkelmaslerOuets, and after January 1, atSchocdkds Records.Charge by phone at?7-TKTS. :r MinLoriy Career Conference Explore career opportunities with over 80 major employers and graduate school T 8 NN S XTEE N TH ANN URBO NanciGrlfi Tuesday, January 26 6:00 pm- O pm Registration begins at-430 pm Informal discussions with employeis and graduate school representatives Arrange interviews with Pre-Conference Workshops Information and tips on making the most of your conference experience Tuesday January 19 3:40-5:30 pm Angell Hall, Room 25 Saturday January 23 9:10-11:00 am Career Planning & Placement Saturdag, Januar 390 1993 a6:Upm Hill fuditorium, Rn rbor R Fund Raiser for XFARK Program subject to change. NANCI GRIFFITH RITCHIE HAVENS THE MARCIA BALL BAND PETE MORTON Sneak Prev i >'" ) ItU