The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 16, 1994 - 7 .CLASSIFIED ADS 764-0557 STDENT ERigCE NEHELP AEDMNR MINUTES FROM North Campus. Subway A. is now accepng applications for current and Achiee thespring and summer employment. Part time LSAT score You undi/dinner shifts. Apply 1701 Plymouth need wfithEXCEL .,MnexttLVdoac, atr 2. MODELS , trade, T.V., Assoc. Models Our Classes lm- 81W/8897 NEED extra money? Handyman wanted fall prove Your Skills 1994 & spring 1995 for odd jobs in Ann at making the Arbor. Call 313/562-5756. AKey AnalCal PAID Theatre Position available for Director t sand Playwright for social-issue theatre Disti ns tha ttroupes sponsored by the University of are required for MichiganHousing Division. Applications Top Performanc Pick up at G-104 S. Quad, Central Mgmt. Jniver sits of Michigan. Questions? JuneLSA Casse;s Please call 747-Uies3525. PAINTERS- EXPERIENCED $9.50 to $15.00/hr. Paint houses this summer. Detroit area and other cities throughout Michigan. Campus Corps Painters 1-800/536-355. -- $ 750/WK. Alaska Fisheries this summer. Maritime Services. 1-208/860-0219. $! FASTEST GROWING telecom co. in US. High income potential excellent training FT/PT/summer positions Ron 995-3327. AA ALASKA SUMMER employment. Join the gold rush to Alaska's fisheries industryl Earn $5,000/mno. in canneries, processors, etc.! Male or Female. No experience required. Room/Board/Travel often provided! Guaranteed Success! 919/929-4398 ext. Al. AA CRUISE & "TRAVEL employment guide. $$$ + FREE worldwide travel! (Caribbean, Europe, Etc.!) Summer/Per- manent avail. Guaranteed success! 919/929- 4398 eatci. ALASKA CANNERY JOBS Big $, big challenge, big experience. Call for info. 1-800/41-NOMAD. ATTENTION Psychology, Econ., and Busi- ness majors! We're looking for six hard working industrious students for a summer workprogam.Earn $7000+- Call 995-1359. BANDITO'S Mexican Restaurant. Hiring kitchen help and waitstaff. Responsible hard working persons only. Apply inm after 3:00pm. No phone calls. 216 S. Fourth Ave. CAMP COUNSELORS - Outstanding Slim Down Camps: Tennis, Dance, Slimnastics, WSI, Athletics, Nutrition/Dietetics. Age 20+. Seven Weeks. Camp Camelot on College Campuses at Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, California. Contact: Michele Friedman 947 Hewlett Drive, North Woodmere, N.Y. 11581 1-800/421-4321. CARPENTER'S ASST. needed. Start *imddly. Brian 994-5403 leave msg. CHILD CARE NEEDED beginning sum- mer 1994 for 1 year. 30-40 hrs./wk. caring for a 2 1/2 year old and 6 year old. Exp., references, trans. necessary, non smoker. Live in or out. Call eve. 663-3482. CRUISE SHIPS NOW HIRING - Earn up to $2,000+/month working on Cruise Ships or Land-Tour companies. World travel. Sum- mer & Full-time employment available. No experience necessary. For more information call 1-206/634-0468 ext. C5598. CUSTODIANS are needed for S pring and Summer Semesters (beginning May 1) at Student Publications (Michigan Daily, Michiganensian yearbook and Gargoyle humor magazine). We are looking for in- dividuals who are in good physical condition, and able to do cleaning and lifting. Students familiar with general cleaning and who are enthusiastic, energetic, reliable and punctual will receive top consideration. Pay $5.75/hr. Must be available 8:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. at least two days a week. Apply now. Call 764- 0550 or stop by Room 210A, Student Publications Buildig, 420 Maynard Street. EARN CASH STUFFING envelopes at home. All materials provided. Send SASE to P.O. Box 395, Olathe, KS 66051. EARN OVER $100/HR. processing our mail at home. For info call 202/310-5958. GREENPEACE JOBS. Promote/educate global ecological sanity. Call 761-1996. PAINTERS needed-Earn from $5-$7 per hour. Have fun & work outside. Triple A" Student Painters needs painters for Port Huron & Birmingham-Boomfield area. Call 1-800/543-3792. PART TIME cleaning office bldgs. evengs. Exp. & trans. necessary. 668-3319. PART-TIME SPR. & full-time sum. for loading and/or delivery of packaged ice. Call or apply in person at Partytime Ice, Co. 1854 Cadillac Ave. Ypsilanti, MI 48198. 313/485- 0430. CLASSIFIED rAl) PRODUCTION The Michigan Daily is look- ing for help in producing the Classified Ad pages next fall.You must be able to work 1.5-2 hours per day (Mon- day- Friday between the hours of 12:30 -3:00). Neat- ness and attention to detail is a must. No paste-up ex- perience needed, but -it is helpful. Knowledge of Quark or Pagemaker is also a plus. You will be working with a student run organization and gaining Valuble work experi- ence. Monthly salary is $75. Contact Susan or Mike at 764-0556 for more information. PERSONAL BANKER. Republic Bank is seeking responsible customer service orien- ted individuals for its downtown Ann Arbor office. The successful candidate will have a bachelor's degree with some formal banking training helpful. This full-time position offers competitive salary plus incentives with an ex- cellent benefit package. For consideration, send your resume with a cover letter to: Republic Bank Personnel Director, Re: PB- AA 122 S. Main, Ann Arbor, MI 480104 or fax 313/665-5095. EOE. No phone calls please. PRODUCTION ASSISTANT- Part-time until 4/22. Full time 4/25-8/31. To assist Ann Arbor photography co. w/ customer serv. Ex- cellent problem solving & phone manner needed. Call Ms. Kane at 663-1822. Rh NEGATIVE semen donors are needed and will be paid $120 per acceptable inen because of their rare blood type. rite APRL, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, M 48106. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for a well es- tablished infertility clinic. If you are a male student or professional 20-40 years of age we need you. Donors will be paid $60 per ac- ceptable specimens. For further information please write APRL, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS/care givers needed for infant, toddler and preschool program for winter, spring, summer terms. Prefer availability between 11-1 pm. Other times needed also. Please call 994-1150. SUMMER JOBS to save the environment earn $2500-$3500 & make a difference. Campaign to save endangered species, promote recycling & stop polluters. Work w/ national environmental groups Sierra Club, Green Corps & the PIRGs. Positions in 28 states & D.C. Campus Interviews: March 16 & 17 Call Jamie: 1-800/75-EARTH. SUMMER JOB Opportunities at Mackinac Island Resort. All positions avail. Contact 616/538-5747 SUMMER RESIDENT COUNSELOR POSITIONS AVAILABLE AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Summer Discovery at Michigan, a pre- college enrichment program for high-school students is looking for energetic, Resident Counselors for on-campus program June 22- August 7. Program includes academics, sports, evening activities and weekend excursions. Staff accompany students day and night. Remuneration includes salary, room and board at Couzens Hall, and activities. Must be 21 by June 20, 1994. On campus interviews in early April. For application and further information call SUMMER DISCOVERY at 1-800/645-6611, and mention this ad. TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS The University of Michigan, Survey Research Center Telephone Facility, is now recruiting people with good communications skills to conduct social science research interviews. Some typing ability is needed due to our use of computer-assisted telephone interviewing. Must be available to work 20 hours a week, mostly nights and weekends. Pay starts at $6 per hour. Pay starts at $7 per hour for Spanish bilingual interviewers whose language skills meet our qualifications. Attendance is required at a 5 night training. Compensations for training is available after interviewing begins. Apply in person, weekdays, March 14 - March 22, 8:00 p.m. -4:30p.m., at the University of AWA ACCOUNTING 769.3031 1!!!1!Tax Season Specialsl!!!!!!! Any Federal and State retur. Reg. $ students half price w/ U of M I.D. EJS WORDPROCESSING service. Resumes, papers, dictation, and typing. Please call Beth at 973-7220. HOUSESITTER AVAILABLE Profes- sional (RN/auto exec.), reliable, middle age couple. Lifelong Ann Arbor residents. From April/May 94 for a minimum of 9 months. Phone 4849429 weekdays, 313/475-1827 evenings & weekends. JETAWAY TRAVEL welcomes students backl Hope your trip was super & thanks LOW FARES- London from $398, Germany from $398. Other low prices for Europe available. Regency Travel 209 S. State 665 6122. ROMANTIC SPRING Hideaway! Cozy log cabins on lake. $49-$69 nightly, includes hoi tub, boats, canoes, and more Traverse City Ellis Lake Resort, 616276-9502. SCHOOL'S ALMOST over. Plan your getaway with Jetaway. 994-5921. STUDENT TRAVEL BREAKS CAN OFFER Europe '94 air sale Stamos Family of Travel 663-4400. STUDENT TRAVELLERS Call now and save the best prices available for Railpasses and Discount Airfare! INTERNATIONAL BACKPACKERS UNION 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday-Friday I - 800313-PACK. STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on Continental fr. $159/$279. Bring your Con- tinental voucher & AMEX card. Diane at Regency Travel 209 S. State 665-6122. TOUR CZECH Rep. this summer w/ Czech cit. & UM Sr. 668-2686 or MTS M. Warwick. HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO. 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. Lessons, repair, music. Tune up & lesson specials. What's free? PEARL JAM TIXS. Best offer. 810/524- 1829. 2 PINK FLOYD TIX Lower bowl seats. Best offer. Call 998-0069 leave message. PEARL JAM Tix. Chrysler Arena. Best offer! 741-1385. PINK FLOYD Tix July 15 best seats 741- 4928. BILLY JOEL Tix. March 21, fourth row floor!!! Call 996-0135. ANNQUNOEMENT WICCA CLASS Mon. or Wed., 7-10, Mar. 14/16-Apr 18/20. Aurora, 665-5550. ARE YOU CONCERNED that your social security number is on your student ID? Have you had problems with it? If so, please call Noceeba 663-4931, or Cheryl 747-8592.This is a student project. SENIORS, JUNIORS & SOPHOMORES Rhodes/Marshall Scholarship Information Meeting Wed. March 16 7pm9pm Anderson Rm., Michigan Union Information on Rhodes, Marshall, Churchill, Truman, Goldwater. Hear from UM's Rhodes & Marshall winners for '94. Information, conversation, refreshments. LAW STUDENT looking for non-smoking housemate(s) in newly furnished house: big- screen TV, prkg., Idry., piano, alarm sys. No pts.Sept-Sept. $350 single, $200 double. ROOMMATES WANTED. Male and female to share fabulous 2 bedroom bi-level apartments with all the extras. Call CMB Management 74-9300. TIOS SELLS TRINIDAD Habenerd sauce. Winner 3 years in a row as the best hot sauce in North America. 333 E. Huron. .~PERSQINAL. 4-YEAR OLD, LOVING Mom and Dad in Washington, D.C. area wish to adopt infant brother or sister. Close extended family in area. Let's help each other. Med./legal/ravel paid. Please call Jessica or Bob at 1-800/864- 8385. ADOPTION: LOVING, christian couple to adopt new born. 1-800/850-0090. AREA GUY is forming an organizaton for like-minded guys over 21 who are interested in extending men's fashion options to include all choices now available to women. Be- havior and dress will be professional at all times. This is a group for rights and self- expression. It is not for gays or bi-sexuals. Contact Jim. 810/473-0046. PREGNANT? Are you or someone you care about pregnant and not in the position to be a parent? Please help a loving couple be a loving family. Call collect 810/360-0223. PREGNANT? Not what you had planned. Unsure what to do? Adoptive couple eagerly awaits child. Call 810/641-3820. PROBLEM PREGNANCY HELP Let us help you choose Life. 769-7283. COME SEE the area's best selection of Tropical fish & aquariums. The Fish Doctors! Next to Putt-Putt on Washtenaw. 434-1030. Mihia Alumn 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 Integrn tional Scientific American Time Newsweek Clinton deflects Whitewater woes in New Hampshire jaunt THE WASHINGTON POST FORT DRUM, N.Y. - President Clinton returned to the nostalgic cam- paign locale of New Hampshire and a familiar presidential ritual of welcom- ing home the troops as he tried once again to turn attention away from Whitewater and other problems plagu- ing the administration. After seeing two of his top officials resign in recent days and others troop before a federal grand jury, Clinton got something ofa morale boost yesterday, with a 21-gun salute as he arrived at this Army base and a campaign-style swing through the state that sent him on his way to the presidency. Clinton held atown meeting, toured a factory and strolled through a town square in New Hampshire, astatewhere he weathered some of the most diffi- cult moments of the campaign but emerged the self-proclaimed "Come- back Kid." Then he went on to this base in upstate New York to welcome home -- for the second time - soldiers returning from Somalia. Clinton on Monday night had railed against Republicans as a "party com- mitted to the politics of personal de- struction," pounding the lectern with his fist. But yesterday, he denied that that he had been angry. "I was happy. What I said last night - I was not angry. I was determined," Clinton said. "That was a deliberate - I wanted to tell those people how I felt. And I'm very happy being here today. This is America, this is where they are." Like other presidents, Clinton likes to emphasize the gulf between "Wash- ington," and "America." The latter, Clinton went to great lengths yesterday to explain, is a place that cares far more about the health care crisis and creating jobs than it does about the inside-the- Beltway intricacies of Whitewater. Coming over to agroup of reporters as he shook hands after the town meet- ing in Nashua, Clinton waved a snap- shot ofayoung boy. "This is America," he said. "Let me show you something. Look at this. This is what people care about. Here's a child with a pre- existing condition. He can't get health insurance....That's where America is - with these people." The questioners at the Elm Street Junior High School in Nashua-largely Democrats, though the meeting was an open one - wanted to know about details of Clinton's health plan, how the national service program will work, and what his job training proposal en- tails. Their sole interest in Whitewater seemed to be to encourage the presi- dent not to let it get him down. "Whitewater is for canoeing and rafting." said Nashua resident Betty Windberg said. "Shame on those who would detract and distract from the important work you're doing with uni- versal health coverage and jobs." Clinton folded his arms across his chest, tilted his head back, and roared. "I'm arecovering Republican," said another woman. "We made you the comeback kid a few years ago, and we hope to send that message from this town meeting to Mr. Dole and his friends in the media, that we're very focused....We're concerned withjobs and health care." "You're on the right track," said another man. "Don't let the people on the other side of the aisle give you all that rhetoric. They're all running for office and you're going to come out on top in the long run." For his own part, Clinton told the audience pointedly that "this" - the town meeting - "is the way I think public life ought to be conducted... so different from the tenor and tone of political debate and discusison in the nation's capital." Dean B. Joseph White Invites you to a Dean's Seminar to hear Mr. Woo Choong Kim Chairman and Founder Daewoo Group present "The I i leHand of Corp r Growth" Thursday, March 17,.1994 4:00 PM * Hale Auditorium " Business School Questions, Answers and Reception to follow E f WANT TF A ~CAEERN 'PEP N O Obtain a cutting edge over the competition with experience as an EXECUIN for the Aichigan Daily Classifieds. Pick up applicatiorn at 420 Maynard. Due Mar. 25. Questions? Call 764-0557. INTERESTED in Advertising? Are you looking for ex rience in business or creative advertising? en the Michigan Daily Clas- sifieds wants you! We're lookinj for fun- loving, enthusiastic, and creative Individuals to apply for Assistant Account Executive positions for Fall 1994. Training to begin this emester. Pick up ap lications at 420 W aynard. Questions? 764-0557. Ap- plications due Friday, Mar. 25 @ 4:00. G .TIO4 wi 0 University Healt 1993-94 Peer Education Programs Thank You For Making A Difference!, University Health Service would like to recognize and th Servic thank the following students 1 for their participation in Gloria Aponte providing other students with Mary Broderick important health information Amy Curtis JJ Daubenmier on stress & time management, Becky Gatman alcohol & other drugs, safer Thriy sex, healthy & disordered ALCOHOL & OTHER DRUG Telaekah Brooks Julie Chang Irene Hsu Mary Janevic Cathy Lahti Eunice Lee Mia Morse Melissa Peet Brett Penfil Amy Van Wormer Jennifer Danielson STRESS & TM MANAGEMENT Sharon Barbour Deniz Colak Michelle Edwards Julie Fairbank Michelle Haag Lisa Kaufman Tama Rittberg Alissa Strauss Amy White cazdinat*"" Deanna Mitchell Abigail Hunter Jackie Kaufman Sarah Khorran Shari Melman Jennifer Cordova-Overman Elizabeth Ralston Rebecca Riseman John Rybock Monya Schmidt Jessica Shill Hal Smith Jeffery Zoellner Merav Barr Ronnie Sharir eating and contraceptive education. CONTRACEPTIVE EDUCATION Celeste Bondon Julie Eisenstein Tom Eckert Blair Feldman Candyce Greene Jennifer Kammeraad Sumita Kaul Andrew Kleiman Rebecca Lamparelli Donal McCarthy Michelle Ober Angela Steele Laurie Stein Rebecca Stern Nicole Ury Brandon VanWormer Valerie Voss Jill Wallace Anne Young INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT - Make up to $2,000 - $4,000+/mo. teaching basic conversational English abroad. Japan, Taiwan, and S. Korea. Many employers provide room & board + other benefits. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For more information call: 206/632- 1146 ext. J5598. BODY IMAGE, HEALTHY & DISORDERED EATING Ali Hambright Pradnya Parulekar Netta Shaked Julie Desai Cheryl Nordstrom Jeff Rinna