The Michigan Daily - Thursday, February 18,1993- Pagel -I . ,_ . CLASSIFIED AIDS FOfl RENT STUDENT . AlE HUGE 6 BDRM. HOUSE near Packard & E. University. Furnished, 2 baths, parking, laundry, Oakland Mgmt. 761-7491. provides HUGE 6 BEDROOM HOUSE, parking, EXCELpr laundry, & 3 baths. Near Power Center. clear instruction Room for 7. Oakland Mgmt. 761-7491. HURRY & MISS THE RUSH - S. Fourth, 5 focusing upon bdrm. Furn. house., Pkng., Lndry., New the key pnts kitchen. May lease $ 1500+ util. 737-2445. IF YOU WANTED A BETTER Of the GRE. LOCATION, ' you'd have to live on the Diag.... Why make it hard on yourself? At University Towers you can live within minutes of your classes while enjoying the best of campus life. *Exercise room* *Study lounge* *Laundry facilities* *24 hour attended lobby* *Recrato room* *4 month leases available in January, 1993. 536 S.University Towers 536 S. Forest Ave. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Call (313) 761-2680. LARGE 2 BDRM. 526 S. Fifth Ave. New * Kit. Dwshr., Disposal, Prkg., Ldry. Clean, Quiet $825/2, $850/3 FALL. 662-7121. LARGE 6 BDRM. HSE. fully furn. queen size beds, kit. w/ 2 freezers, dishwasher, ldry., 2 full bath. On Greenwood. Call Green- wood Mgmt. 996-4064. LEASE CANCELLATION! Exc. Church St. lc. Available May 1993. Recently remodeled 5 bedroom house for 6- 8. Call 665-8825. LOOKING for female roommates - 4 singles ;avail, in 6 bdrm. hse., 2 ktchns., free lndry.& pkng. $230-260/mth. 761-9684. LRG. 1 BDRM. APTS. Fall, cmps, historic bldg., pets ok. 662-9429 bef. 10 pm. R LRG. CAMPUS FURNISHED Efficiency apartments. w/parking $435-445/mo. Call M- F, 9-5, 665-5750 else 665-8477. MAY - MAY LEASES 1 bdrm. - modern, balconies, air. 2 bdrm. - Ige. 3 & 4 man units, modern, air, sec., several campus locations 668-6906. MAY TO MAY HUGE 5 BDRM HOUSE. Furnished. Lots of pkng. Oakland Mgmt. 761-7491. MCKINLEY TERRACE - '93. 1 & 2 bdrm., recently contemporized throughout. You will be impressed! 741-9300 extented hrs. MED. CENTER APTS. Now leasing for Sept: Eff. to 5 bedrooms. Call or stop by our office today! 665-8825. NEAR POWER CENTER. 4 bedroom house. 2 baths, laundry, & parking. $1350. Oakland Management 761-7491. NEAR STATE & HURON 6 bdrm. hse. $1560 + utils., 5 bdrm. apt. $1350 + elect., 10 bdrm. hse. $2650 +utils. 663-3149. NOW LEASING FOR '93. Houses & apts. going fast. Oakland Management. 761-7491. OAKLAND NEAR ARCH, modern 2 bdrm., AC, pkng, $760-800; 1 bdrm, $550, 66-4617. ROOM FOR SEVEN! House near athletic campus on UM bus line. 2 baths, parking, laundry. $1350. Oakland Mgmt. 761-7491. SHARE LARGE HOUSE-OWN ROOM, pkng. no utilities. Short lease. 973-7368. SPACIOUS, MODERN 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments. Call Post Realty at 761-8220. SPRING/SUMMER 1993 special rates at excellent campus location. Avail. May 7. To view call Wilson White Co. Inc. 995-9200. EHO. TERRIFIC 1 BDRM., contemporary, spec- tacular view, free Idry., photocopy, rec. room. Immed. occupancy. 741-9300. 1 BDRM. in 2 bdrm. apt. Burns Park area. Avail March 1. $325/mo. mel. heat. 663- 2657. 2 BDRM. 1 BATH- charming west-side apt. Furn., hardwood floors, quiet residential area. Perfect for the serious student. May- Aug. $ 600/mo.- very neg!! call 996-9218. Pls. leave a message. APRIL-SEPT 1 SUBLET (OR LONGER) West side house 2 bdrm. quiet street Your own house for $675/mo w/wash/dryer -761-8531 leave message. AVAIL IMMEDTLY. until Aug. 25 own room in 2 bdrm. apt. $275/mo.heat includ. Washer/dryer in bids. 994-4553. CHARMING 5 BDRM. HOUSE at State & Kingsley. May-Sept. $1000/mo. Call 994- 5043. FURNISHED ROOMS NEAR CCRB and main bus stop. Kitchen privledges included. ,Immediate Occupancy. 668-6906. MAY-AUG. 1 FURN. BDRM. in 4 bdrm. hse. Great location. $200/mo. neg. Call Karen at 994-9464 or 994-9448. SPACIOUS FURN. 2 BDRM. APT. w/ bal- cony overlooking State St. $600 inc. util. neg. Call Chris or Aaron @ 769-8990. SUBLET MAY-AUG Own room in house $165/month. Hill and Division. 995-8963. PREGNANT? Please help us start our family. Happily mar- ried 10 yrs., financially secure, active foster parents with religious background. Call col- lect eves. 313-946-9555. O ADOPTION. We want to work with you to give your child the warm and loving home that you, are looking for - we hope you will work with us to build the family of our dreams. Call Susan and Bennett collect 313- 350-2313. DISCOVER MOSHIACH TODAY. Dial 1- 800-4-moshiach. Dial-a-Jewish story 995- 5959. ERIC'S ACTION SPORTS- Team uniforms & shoes for all indoor sports. 2 blocks off State Street. Call 663-6771. HOP IN AND PICK UP A SNACK. Pop, candy, gum and muchies at the Village Apothecary, 1112 S. University. NOW FINGERING THESE VEINS OF HEMP, the hair upon my skin. 3-2-93. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP Let us help you choose life. 769-7283. YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT "HOT" IS 'till you have tried Peppa-Po hot sauce at Tios. 333 E. Huron, 761-5660. STUDENTEMM ***SANDI'S WORDPROCESSING*** Reports, resumes, dissertations. 426-5217. EDITING: BY EXPERIENCED WRITER, ESL teacher, PhD. Call Bonnie 995-0664. LSAT MAC'S WORD PROCESSING & Resume Services. Days, eves, wknds, urgent also done. Pick up/drop off. 482-5000. TYPING: Resumes, cover letters, & applications. A2 Typing. Call 994-5515. ATTENDANT CARE for disabled female. $5-6 hr., midnight or daytime hrs. avail. N. Campus. Must be strong. 663-4372. BABYSITTER: Random hrs., 5 yr. old. Call 662-0712. Must have car. CAFE NOW HIRING Responsible person for part-time afternoons cleaning/counter position! Great working environment. $5/hr.+ bonus to start. Call Ann 663-3080. CAMP BIRCH TRAIL FOR GIRLS--NW Wisconsin. Counselors & instructors for waterfront & land activities! Wilderness trip leaders, secretaries, nurses, food service per- sonnel also needed. Mid-June through Mid- August. Excellent salaries, free room & board, transportation allowance. On-campus interviews. Contact Mary Scanlan at (414)962-2548; 5146 N. Woodburn, Milwaukee, WI 53217. CATERER NEEDED for small wedding May 1. Call evenings 662-3305. CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING Earn $2000+/ month + world travel (Hawaii, Mexico, the Caribbean, etc.) Holiday, sum- mer and Career employment opportunities available. No experience necessary. For employment program information Call 1- 206-634-0468. DR. MIKE SAYERS of UMTRI (747-2455 or mike_sayers@un.ccumih.edu) is seek- ing a programmer experienced with Common Lisp and Windows for IBM p's to port an existing LISP program to the AKCL Lisp system for the PC. EARN 100'S DAILY mailing circulars at home P/T. Info: Desktop Ventures. Write 736 Packard Ste #102-A, A2, MI 48104. ENVIRONMENTALISTS Are you a nature lover? Let's fight to keep the environment clean. Join students across the country campaigning for more effective recycling laws, reduction of toxic chemicals and a more democratic government! Hiring now for part time positions and summer work. Flexible hours for students. Earn $40- $60 a day, while making a difference. Volunteers Welcome! Call Marla 662-6597. EXCEPTIONAL SUMMER opportunity - Camp Wayne for Boys & Girls. N.E. PA (3 hr/N.Y.C.) - Sports oriented. Counselors/ Specialists for all land/water sports, camping, computers, A&C, video, radio. Campus in- terviews on Weds. March 10. Write 55 chan- nel drive, Port Washington NY. 11050-2216. or call 1-800-456-7946. KITCHEN HELP - STUDENT PREFERRED. Afternoon hours - Apply in person - 1310 Michigan Union. M - F 8:30am - 5:00pm MACKINAC ISLAND resort hotel seeking staff-front desk, night audit, kitchen, dining room, maintenaMc, bike mechanic. Contact Iroquois Hotel, 2488 Village Dr. SE, Grand Rapids, MI. 49506. (616)247-5675 or (313)663-5971. MINI-SOCCER OFFICIALS for the In- tramural Sports Program. Training and orien- tation sessions to be held beginning Monday March 1, 1993 at 7:00pm in the IMSB. Work hours on Tues., Weds. and Thurs. evenings and on Sunday afternoons. $5.00 per game. Contact Steve Olson, IMSB, at 763-3562 for further information. NOW HIRING for Spring/Summer and Fall terms. Account Executives needed to sell ad- vertising for the Michigan Daily. Job descrip- tions & applications available in the senior staff office, 420 Maynard. Application dead- line is Feb. 19. NOW HIRING: Scorekeeper's Bar & Grill now accepting ap- plications for energetic, sales-oriented waiters/waitresses. Apply between 2-5 pm at 310 Maynard St. OFFICE ASST./TYPIST part-time, accurate & officient, call Pat at 994-5515. OFFICE ASSIST. / SECRETARY. Now thru Oct. $7/hr. Medical Cntr. Research Lab. Flex. hrs. up to 20/wk. Must be computer literate (Word/WordPerfect) 747-2914. POOL MANAGER/SWIM COACH for neighborhood swim club. Experience and certification required. 665-9853. RECEPTIONIST NEEDED for UM Botanical Gardens. $5/hr. Own transportation. Call 998-7061. 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. W NA STUCCHI'S IS HIRING at all Ann Arbor locations. Apply in person at the desired location. WANTED-STUDENTS TO PRODUCE and film a TV commercial. Contact Jeff at Ashley's Restaurant, S. State. 996-9191. YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK - over 3,000 positions available in all aspects of guest service. Recruiter will be at theMichigan Employment Security Commission. 214 E. Michigan Ave. in Yp- silanti on Thurs., Feb. 25. Please pick up ap- plications before the 25th from 8:15-10:00 a.m. or 1 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.. If you are unable to interview with the recruiter, please contact TW Recreational Services, P.O. Box 165, Yellowstone Park, WY 82190; 307-344-5324 AA/EOE/M/F/HV. YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK - over 4,200 summer positions available in Yellowstone and other Western U.S. National Parks for the summer of 1993. Positions in- volve all aspects of guest services in hotels, restaurants, lodges, corrals, marinas, gift shops, etc. Recruiter will be at the Michigan Employment Security Commission Office at 214 E. Michigan Ave. Please pick up ap- plications before the 25th from 8:15 a.m. to 10 a.m. or 1p.m. to 3p.m. Iffyou are unable to interview with the recruiter, please contact TW Recreational Services, P.O. Box 165,Yellowstone Park, WY 82190. 307-344- 5 324. AA/EOE/M/F/H/. C CLEANING- HOUSE- OFFICE. Call 996- 3543 for reasonable rates. EUROPE '93 the lowest fares with Student Travel Breaks-Stamos Travel, Kerrytown Mall. 663-4400 or 483-5695. LOW FARES - Europe fr. $448, Eurorail Flexipass from $298, Orient fr. $769 Call Claudia or Dan @ Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. SPRING BREAK! CANCUN MEXICO Feb. 20-27. $400-500 neg. Call 665-2814. SPRING BREAK IN FLORIDA! Hot and sunny Feb. 19-27 round trip to Miami. Tkt. for $400. Call Sylvie, 764-7662. STUDENTS ANYWHERE IN THE U.S. on Continental fr. $129/$199. Bring your Continental voucher and AMEX Card. Anywhere in the U.S.A. on US Air fr. $129/ $189. Bring your US Air Voucher and Chase Visa/Mastercard. Call Wanda at Regency Travel 209 S. State 665-6122. WINTER BLUES? Spring Break Getaway! Traverse City area. Romantic, cozy log cabins on lake surrounded by forest. $49-69 "nightly inc. outdoor hot tub & much more. Ellis Lake Resort 616-276-9502. BREW QUALITY BEER at home-$2/6- pack! Free catalog. 301-540-3877. N. Am. Brewlords P.O Box 1321 Germantown, MD 20875. HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO. Not just guitars. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Repairs. Percussion; harp lessons: Pay 4 Get 5. BLACK CROWE TIX FOR SALE' Floor and balcony seats available. Call 665-9972. FLY ANYWHERE at incredible savings. Ted 662-0626. Leave message. CONTACTS - 50% SAVINGS LENS EXPRESS to you America's No. 1 Replacement Company Call 1-800-543-LENS! 76-GUIDE U of M's PEER COUNSELING PHONE LINE Whe u need to talk We are here to listen Hours: 7 nights a week 7 pm to 8 am 764-8433 -- - --------- El 11 POLICE Continued from page 1 and that it has been better," he said. "(DPS) has arrested people in mat- ters of rapes, assaults and beatings." Baisden also cited an increase in the number of sexual assaults re- ported to both DPS and the University Sexual Assault Prevention and Awareness Center (SAPAC). He said a visible campus police force creates an atmosphere that makes women feel more com- fortable reporting incidents of sexual violence. However, SAPAC Director Debi Cain said the increase in reported rapes may or may not be connected with the campus police force. "I would suspect that there are a variety of reasons that reported rapes are up," she said, adding that statis- tics seem to be similar across the country. Ann Arbor Police Department (AAPD) Sgt. Mark Hoornstra said city crime statistics show the same trends as those presented by DPS. "In general, major crimes have been going down," he said. "The stats for the city show the same things happening. National figures are in agreement also." While the number of major crimes has been dropping, Freer said the police are not combatting an im- portant segment of campus crime. "Guns don't do anything to stop harassment and the problems faced by women and people of color," she said. Baisden said most crimes that oc- cur on campus are perpetrated by people who are not affiliated with the University. Freer said part of the problem with the University police is this atti- tude that people who are not affili- ated with the University should be denied access to campus. She said community members call the BMC with complaints about the campus police. "The BMC has received several complaints of problems," she said. "It has mostly been people from the community who have been harassed by the police." Freer said the University is be- coming more and more isolated from the surrounding community. "People are being harassed by po- lice because they are on campus and police make a judgment as to whether or not they should be there," she said. During last year's public hearings, that preceded the transfer of deputi- zation authority from the Washtenaw County Sheriff to the regents, protesters and police clashed after students were denied access to the hearings. Students called for sensitivity training to help DPS officers effec- tively fight crime in a University setting. While many of the students' complaints fell on deaf ears, both re- gents and DPS officials pledged to take this suggestion into account. Baisden said DPS is currently at- tempting to modify its training pro- gram in order to include this type of instruction. "Our training program is contin- ually being enhanced, revised and reviewed," he said. "Our department has hired an independent consultant to try to provide us with sensitivity training." Ann Arbor Mayor Liz Brater wrote a letter of protest to the re- gents when they voted to assume au- thority over the police force. "My problems have to do with civil liberty issues and issues of ac- countability," she said. "The citizens of Ann Arbor are very concerned about sensitivity and training. "It's very difficult when you have a police force that is supervised by a board that is elected statewide and not by the people the board is sup- posed to be protecting," she added. Hoornstra said the AAPD has an extensive sensitivity training system. "We have a program which is given to every officer and taught to our new employees," he said. "We use these courses to try to increase our abilities to deal with the public. They have been somewhat success- ful but they are only a beginning." Public Act 120, the state legisla- tion that permits the regents to as- sume authority over the police force, also mandates that the force have an independent oversight board to han- dle complaints about the department. In the University's case, this body is made up of six members - two faculty representatives, two staff members and two students. However, this board has not been active in the operations of either DPS or the University Board of Regents. Baker said he has no formal con- tact with DPS personnel or oversight board members. "I talk to officers informally. They are usually around the regents room or events, but we don't have business kinds of talks," he said. "There is no organized kind of con- tact. We don't have anything but a casual relationship with the police." He added that he would like some sort of regular contact with the oversight board. Regent Philip Power (D-Ann Arbor) agreed, and said the regents cannot effectively govern the force if they are not aware of its actions. "Police issues are more sensitive than managing snow sweeping dn campus, so it seem that we should get some kind of report or have some contact on a regular basis," he said. But oversight board member Christie Ochoa, an LSA senior, said the board is not required to have aqy regular contact with the regents. "I would imagine that once we get complaints, we will take it upon ourselves to make reports to the regents," she said. Ochoa added that she is very dis- appointed with the oversight board thus far. "I'm not happy with what the board is doing," she said, citing what she sees as administrative stalling of the board's purpose. Ochoa said only last week the board finally decided to distribute a complaint form to all students in order to make the board more accessible. The relationship between the DPS police force and the AAPD was also called into question over the past year. Hoornstra said the two forces have a distinct and specific relationship. "We are operating under a mutual aid agreement," he said. "We can ask for each other's assistance. "We would only come to a crime scene as a result of a request from DPS. The scene itself would still be directed by (DPS), and they would tell our forces how it was needed. Our officers would be taking orders from Ann Arbor supervisors. Hoornstra added that the Washtenaw Country Sheriffs Office is also involved in this agreement. Brater said she thinks the forces interact well. "We are trying to work out a good working relationship between the forces," she said, adding that the two departments are currently trying to draft a contract. "The two forces seem to be interacting smoothly." Baisden said that, despite linger- ing imperfections in the operations of the University police force, the concept and reality of the force is a success. "The establishment of a full- service campus police force seems to be a win-win situation," he said. 0 _ AILYcEDS gcords m 1-:4 1-, JL% Ly % A-j %./ A-F " mrmwv-- a $1,000 AN HOUR! Each member of your sorority, team, club, pitches in just oneb and your group can $,000 in just a few d I frat, .elc. hour raise Jays! Michigan Alumni work here: The Wall Street Journal The New York Times The Washington Post The Detroit Free Press The Detroit News NBC Sports Associated Press United Press International Scientific American Time Newsweek Sports Illustrated USA Today Because they worked here: 1 ai tin I fIPls/1 dIP AIOffdPoO2 C0ffA7 01 IFW P (f0 d,,ff4COt&TPI 336 1/2 S. State Ann ardor, 761-8686 Display Advertising Early Deadlines Spring Break Publication Date: Deadline: Monday, March 1 Thursday, Feb. 18 Tuesday, March 2 Thursday, Feb. 18 Wednesday, March 3 Thursday, Feb. 18 We will not print from Feb. 22nd thru Feb. 26th Plus a chance to earn $1000 for yourself! No cost. No Obligation 1-800-932-0528, ext. 65 1ST YR. LAW STUDENT looking for non- smoking housemate(s) in newly furnished house: big-screen TV, pkng., ldry., piano, alarm sys. No pets. Sept-Sept. $190 double, $350 single. J.P. 930-0354. CmnP MAC PWRBK. 100 2MB Ram 20MB HD. 1. 4MB Ext. floppy. Unopened. $1300. 677- 4281. Have a Happy Spring Break!! w . s - - -- SAY IT IN THE... DAILY CLASSIFIEDS 1 i Want ajob In Advertising? Freshmen and Sophomores! The Michigan Daily is recruiting aggressive, creative students for our Display Sales Advertising Team! Great I I I I