The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 14, 1993 - 7 CLASSIFIED ADS 764-0557 :..WAT.......TAEL.. TRAVEL FREE! Sell quality vacations to SPRING BREAK '94- Sell trips, earn cash the hottest destinations. Springdbreak to & go freer! Student Travel Services is now y Cancun, Jamaica, S. Padre Island, Florida. hirng campus reps. Call @ (800)648-.4849. Y Best commissions/service! Sun Splash Tours:M 1-800426-7710. PAJI ::::::.:: p UNIVERSITY CLUB-Waitstaff, lunch. Ex- ::*'.: perience required. Students, flexible hours. GUITAR LESSONS 769-5704 Teacher with i1l Apply in person: Room 1310, Michigan Viennese training and Masters Degree in Union. guitar has openings. Credit avail. UNIVERSITY HEALTH SERVICE needsI E HMO temp. assistant/ 30 hrs/ wk. duties incl......... :: administrative & patient billing support. WANTED PENN STATE Football tickets. in Documentation/ verification of utilization Top $$ Paid. Craig: 313 390-5755 during th stats. Quality control-patient flexibility. Word business hours or leave message after. processing using Mac. Some data entry exp. U OF M FOOTBALL TICKET. Games 3-t helpful. Contact (Bus. Dept.)Kerry at 263- 7. Call Sue at 741-7146. 9631. WANTED ONE TICKET Penn State game. d WAITERS NEEDED FOR SORORITY Please call Marshall or leave message at 1- DINNERS! Good food & pay. Call anytime 313-380-40)46. i & leave message: 665-2768. SEASON FOOTBALL TICKETS SP WAITSTAFF NEEDED for off-premise 747-6924. catering. Day & eve. hrs. avail. Experience helpful. Call 747-9099. Q N ENT .:. WAITSTAFF & CASHIER wanted. Apply PROBLEM.PREGNANCE"LP"""s in person- China Gate 1201 S. University. Le usOhe ou oose Li 769-723 b Experience prefered but will train. THLe usNe GDu AToeLi BRARY9-283 THE UNDERGRADUATE LIBRARY IS nc WANTED PART-TIME Childcare in my OPEN!! During construction, the UGL will home for twin infants. Experience necessary be open Monday-Friday 8 am.-12 midnight, Please call 747-9078.MEbSTUd Saturday 10 a.m y.-12 midnight, Sunday 12 WANTED: PART-TIME STUDENT Cs noon-12 midnight. Beginning September 26 ta tal help. Flexible s le ys een open 8 a.m.-5 a.m. 7 days a week. : 10a.m. and 12a.m. 10-20 hours, $5.25/hr. YG ORE us vnns eis Apply in person rm. 1310 Michigan Union 9 YOGA COURSE. 6 Tues. evenings. Begns' 5. Trash removal, clearing tables, other Sept. 14. Zen Buddhist Temple. 761-6520. A duties ATHLETES-Increase your jump by up to 12 WANTED: Reliable bab f inches. For more info, 1-800-987-HOPS. M good natured 2 1/2 yr. old. Must be willing to CONVERSATION PARTNERS NEEDED work Sat. eve. $6/hr. Burns Park area, no car for foreign students learning English. Make a necess. 662-8869 friend, learn a little Japanese, Chinese, WORK FOR ACADEMIC CREDIT or Korean or Spanish. Call 994-1456.U volunteer at U of M's Pound House ZEN MEDITATION COURSE. 5 Thurs. th Children's Center during fall term. Join evgs. Begins Sept. 16. 761-6520. p hundreds of past students in a quality ex- perience in working with young children in a .. .. .... preschool setting. Located at Hill and East A WONDERFUL ROOMMATE NEEDED - University. Please call 764-2547 for more in- to share room in 2 bdrm. apt. Female non- formation or to arrange a visit. smoker. Call Heather or Bette 668-8987. WORK STUDY LAB ASST. needed in can- ARTISTIC HIDEAWAY! Own room in 2 cer research lab. Word processing computer bdrm. apt. Clean, nice cmplex- Plymouth/ exper. necessary. Contact Thanku Nair at Brdwy area. $295/mo. incl. heat. 665-1792. 764-2578U WALK TO MED-CENTER OR NORTH WORK-STUDY STUDENT WANTED: CAMPUS. 2-bdrms. avail. in 3 bdrm. hse. Assist in busy dialysis unit. Posting lab $300/mo. Call Dale at 677-0240 or 998- values, data entry, filing & various errands 2570. 10-15 hrsJ wk. Gall Cathy 936-4800. WORK/STUDY STUDENTS:'The Institute for Humanities seeks to fill several office as- sistant and word pocessing positions. $6.50- EN....RTAIN.......T $/r. Vrieproc sksing $7/r. Vared tasks: library, PLAY ULTIMATE FRISBEE. Mitchell .publicity,copying, phones. Call: Eliza or Lin- field Mon. eves. For info email Rob nea 936-3518 Burridge. burridge@engin.umich.edu 761- YARD HELP WANTED. Flexible hours, 9542. own transportation. $6/hr. 662-1122 anytime. NI. INESS SERVICES DOC MARTENS JUST ARRIVED! Many new styles & colors. Mast's Shoes 619 E. Liberty. TNNERAVE ~iTHE 1 WAY DETROIT-FT. LAUDERDALE, Female, Good 'til 9/28. $100. 764-7630. 2 ONE WAY TICKETS to Boston for Oct. 8. Best offer 662-5354 ask for Dan. CLASSIFIEDS ROMANTIC FALL HIDEAWAY Traverse City Area. Cozy log cabins $49-$69 nightly. Incl. outdoor hot tub, boats, canoes & more. Ellis Lake Resort. 616/276-9502. Detroit primary first step to new mayor Young's retirement leaves DETROIT (AP) - With Coleman oung on the sidelines for the first time n20 years, voters in the city's mayoral. rimary today take the first step in choos- ng a new leader of a city plagued by rime, decaying neighborhoods and windling population. Twenty-threecandidatesarerunning the non-partisan primary, from which he top two vote-getters will advance to he Nov. 2 general election. Newspaper and television polls in- icate former state Supreme Court Jus- ce Dennis Archer is a shoo-in for one pot on the general election ballot. Archer, Young's campaign manager n 1977, resigned his Supreme Court eat to begin campaigning 2 1/2 years efore Young announced his decision Archer ot to run again. civic grot Leading contenders for the second former leg pot are Sharon McPhail, deputy assis- Young wa ant in the Wayne County Prosecutor's Young office and a former Young appointee to his fifth te he Detroit Police Commission, and he no long Arthur Blackwell, Wayne County Com- Hehasnot nission chairman and chairman of the been quiet Wayne County Port Authority. Arches Lagging in public opinion polls are the Detro U.S. Rep. John Conyers, who placed troit New bird in the 1989 mayoral primary, and McPhail Paul Hubbard, former president of the weekly BI wide-open race; his former campaign manager leads disinvestment are overwhelming," said John Mogk, a professor at Wayne State University law school. Detroit has had multimillion-dollar budget deficits for the past four years. Two years ago, the city was forced to borrow $106 million to pay for its short- fall. It ended the past fiscal year $30 million in the red. Then there's the crime issue. Young notes, rightly, that crime is down. But about 600 homicides were reported in the city in both 1991 and 1992. Detroit ranked fourth highest in the nation in murders per 1,000 residents in 1991. The city's population is still declin- ing - down to half its 2 million peak in 1950. The job and tax bases are shrink- ing. "What the city lacks and what none of the candidates have addressedis what is the vision for Detroit for 20 years from now, and and how will Detroit fit into the region," Mogk said. "It will never again be the industrial and popu- lation center of the region, so what will it be?" The influential Black Slate of the Shrine of the Black Madonna, a Chris- tian Black nationalist church that was instrumental in helping elect Young in 1973, is refusing to endorse acandidate. McPhail up New Detroit Inc. and a islative intern to Young when s a state senator. 75, announced.in June that rm would be his last because ger has the energy for the job. tendorsed a successor and has t throughout the campaign. r earned the endorsement of it Free Press, while The De- s endorsed both Archer and for the primary. The city's ack newspaper, the Michigan Chronicle, supports Archer. Reducing crime, revitalizing neigh- borhoods, spurring economic develop- ment and improving relations between predominantly Black Detroit and its mostly white suburbs have been the candidates' major issues. The problem is: How much can re- ally be done? 'The city's current condition is in such a state of decline that the problems that the mayor faces in being able to reverse the trend of deterioration and is now hiring for positions on the Finance Staff GREAT RESUME EXPERIENCE 8 HOURS/WEEK For more information call Stephany Lewis at 763-3246 Department of Recreational Sports INTRAMURAL SPORTS PROGRAM TENNIS TOURNAMENT (Singles & Doubles) Entry Deadline: Wednesday 9/15 4:30 p.m. IMSB Main Office Tourney Begins: Sunday 9/18 For Additional Information Contact IMSB 763-3562 F. 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