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April 05, 1995 - Image 7

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The Michigan Daily, 1995-04-05

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The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 5, 1995 - 7

"SANDI'S WORD PRO: Resumes. Letters. ATTENTION: Michigan Union Food Ser- Nutrition Resource Staff Specialist
papers. Theses. Law. Editing. Tapes. Fax. vice now hiring for Spring term. Experienced Gordon Food Service has an opening in the
Rush. U-M $ Discount. 426-5217. waitstaff, host and dishwasher. Flexible Nutritional Resource Center located in the
CASH FOR COLLEGE. 900,000 grants schedules, free meal and a wonderful work- Grand Rapids, Michigan office.
available. No renayments ever. Qualify ing atmosphere'- Friendly, smiling faces need

immediately. 1- /43-2435. only apply. Rm. 1310, Michigan Union.
Attn.: Darla.

i

UIKINGU T MUCHn DinkWise -
ealthy choices for people who drink.
oderation or abstinence - you decide. A
service of U-M Med. Center. 747-9473.
EJS WORD PROCESSING SERVICE.
Resumes, papers, dictation, and typing.
Please call Beth at 973-7220.

Be Prepared for August
" Increase Your Ability to
Apply Science Knowledge
" Learn to Write Effective Essays
* Develop Comprehensive
MCAT Exam Strategies
MCAT Classes start:
In May & June
EL9 6-15
Test Preparation
1100 South University
KATHY'S WORD PROCESSING * typing
* editing- Dissertations, papers, applications,
transcription. 662-8977.
RESUME CREATION
Career counseling
jareerPath. 313/434-0376.
W TYPING & WRITING
Resumes, cover letters, applications &
essays. Ann Arbor Typing 994-5515.
WENDY'S LIMOUSINE trips to Danny's
club, the club for ladies, Windsor. 19-yr. old
drinking age. Fri. & Sat. Free introductory
offer. 810/746-9663.
WRITE ON...Editing of theses, books,
journals, manuscripts, proposals,
coursepacks. 996-0566.

$1750 WEEKLY possible mailing our
circulars. No experience required! Begin
now. For info call 202/298-9065.
$5 + PAID FOR RESUME. Send confiden-
tially to Resume, 117 E. Louisa St. #360,
Seattle, WA 98102.
$500/WEEK
.SUMMER INTERNSHIPS
PLACING ALL MAJORS
CALL 971-1133.
*** ADVERTISING ***
Gain valuable experience working as an
account executive with The Michigan Daily
Classified Sales Department.No experience
necessary. Aplications available at 420
Maynard (2nd fir. of Student Publications
Bldg.) Deadline April 11, 5 p.m. Questions?
Call 764-0557.
**ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS. Look-
ing for responsible, goal-oriented people to
join our team. Line cooks and prep cooks.
inimum 2 yr. experience. Positive attitude
'iquired. Raises based on merit. Waitstaff, I
yr. experience w/ some alcohol service
preferred. Outgoing and enthusiasm required.
Excellent benefit available. Permanent
schedule. Apply in. person. Mon.-Fri. - be-
tween 2 and 4 p.m. Max & Erma's, 445
Eisenhower.
*CHILDCARE IN NORTHEAST A2 for
15 mo. old baby girl. Must be reliable, gentle,
and caring. Mon., Tues., Wed. afternoon to
early eve. If interested in any of these days,
call 668-1730 (office).
*NATIVE ENGLISH SPEAKERS*
Needed to volunteer for Michigan Language
4oenter's Conversation Partner Program.
Spend as little as one hour each week (more
if you wish) speaking with an international
student. For more information, call Lisa at
663-9415 or stop by the Michigan Language
Center at 309 S. State St.
A SUMMER RESIDENT counselor job on
campus could be yours. Summer Discovery,
a pnvate pre-college enrichment program for
high school students at U-M is looking for
energetic, multi-faceted counselors for 7
weeks, June 20 - Aug. 6. Salary plus room &
board at Couzens Hall. Must be 21 by June
'0. On campus interviews in April. Call 800/
45-6611 for application & mention this ad.
AA CRUISE SHIPS HIRING! Earn big $+
free world travel (Caribbean, Europe, Hawaii,
etc.) Summer/permanent, no exp. nec. Guide.
919/929-4398 ext. C 1014.
ABSOLUTELY PERFECT hours. Want to
work full or part-time in a fun, casual
atmosphere? Put some extra money in your
pocket. Make phone calls & no selling
involved. Call Kristin @ 665-5742.
ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS full and
part-time shifts available from 6 a.m. - 11
p.m. Positions available now and for summer.
Apply at Y&S Yogurt and Sandwich, 2603
Wymouth and 2264S. Main.
ACTIVISTS WANTED for social change &
environmental justice. Canvass for
Greenpeace. Call Chuck at 761-1996.
ALASKA SUMMER JOBS - Very High
Earnings Potential with over 8,000 openings!
Students work on fishing vessels and in on-
shore canneries. No exp. necessary. Male/
Female. Room/Board & Transportation often
free. Call Student Employment Services for
Directory. 206/545-4155 ext. A55983.
ALLEN HOME HEALTH CARE NEEDS
YOU!
As
HHAs
Flexible Hours.
Competitive Pay.
Sign-on bonus.
Call 313/677-8140.

CAFE NOW HIRING full and part-time.
Flexible, hrs., competitive pay, food benefits,
management positions. Call Nizar 761-8600.
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 Wookmere, N.Y.
11581. 800/421-4321.
CHILD CARE/HOUSEKEEPING in our
northeast Ann Arbor home. 25-30 hrs./week,
own car preferable. 995-0882 6-9 p.m.
CHILD CARE in our home, afternoons, full-
time, 761-7213.
COMPETITIVE ATHLETES excel in our
summer work program. The average U-M
student earned over $7000. Areyou average?
Applicants should be hard working, self
motivated and willing to work out west. Call
Dirk @ 971-5370.
COMPETITIVE ATHLETES Do extreme-
ly well in our sales and management
internship. Find out how our top student
made over $9,140. Call 971-8063.
COMPUTING JOBS (Starts @ $7.50) Great
job for qualified students! For more infor-
mation & to apply call 764-0020 or e-mail
job@ccmail.eec.bus.uich.edu.
COOKS AND DISHWASHERS. Sweet
Lorraine's Cafe and Bar in Ann Arbor is now
accepting applications. Appl in person, 2
p.m.-5 p.m. 303 Detroit St.Next to Farmer's
Market.
COUNSELORS, COACHES: Outstanding
Maine girls camp has summer opportunities
for mature Counselors and Coaches:
TENNIS, SOCCER, SOFTBALL,
VOLLEYBALL, BASKETBALL, P.E.
MAJORS, GYMNASTICS, LIFEGUARDS,
WSI, WATERSKIING, SAILING,
CANOEING, PIONEERING, ROPES,
PIANO ACCOMPANIAST, RN's AND
VIDEO. Accent is on fun and quality,
instruction. High salary plus travel
allowance. Send resume to Cam pPineciffe,
277 South Cassingham Road, Columbus, OH
43209.
COUNSELORS-Top boys sports camp -
Maine - Exiting, fun-filled summer!
Openings: ALL COMPETITIVE TEAM
SPORTS, TENNIS, WSI & ALL WATER
SPORTS, PLUS: camping & hiking, Ropes
& climbing wall, Ice hockey, SCUBA,
Archery, Riflery, A&C, Martial Arts, etc. Top
Sal., Exc. facilities, travel allowance, CALL
OR WRITE: Steve Rubin, 1-800/473-6104,
CAMP COBBOSSEE, 10 Silvennine Dr., So.
Salem, NY 10590.
CRUISE SHIPS HIRING - Earn up to
$2,000+/month. World travel. Seasonal &
full-time positions. No exp. necessary. For
info. call 1-206/634-0468 ext. C55987.
DISHWASHER- Evenings, free meal. Walk
to work. $6.50 hr. Part/full-time. Apply at
The Bella Ciao, 118W. Liberty, 3-5 p.m.
DOES LOOKING FOR SUMMER
WORK TURN YOUR STOMACH
UPSIDE DOWN?
Don't settle for the same old. Differentiate
your resume, skills, bank account & yourself.
Call 668-3101.
Camp Algonquin provides opportunities
to work with boys and girls,teens, pre-
schoolers, mothers, & senior adults in a
unique multi-cultural overnight camp
serving low-income families
We ned COUNSELORS FOOD
SERVICE LIFEGUARDS MEDICAL
1-2 yrs, of college, $990-$1750 season
plus rmboard.
708/658-8212.
EARLY CHILDHOOD subs needed. Call
668-0887. Flexible hours.
ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN help
wanted. Work/study or temporary, flexible
hours. Chemistry Dept., 764-7370.
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 billion in
private sector grants & scholarships is now
available. All students are eligible regardless
of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us
help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800/
263-6495 ext. F55986.
FUN SUMMER JOBS!
Willoway Day Camp is seeking creative &
talented students living in Bloomfield,
Farmington, Brighton, Birmingham, Novi, &
Northville for General Counselors, WSI's,
A&C spec. from 6/19-8/18. Call 810/932-
2123 or write P.O. Box 250933, W.
Bloomfield, 48325.
IF YOU ENJOY making $ while working
outdoors, then this summer, asalt main-
tenance job is for you. Good pay. Positions in
Detroit & A2. 810/545-8888.
IF YOU LIKE making BIG $ and can only
work part-time, this sales position is for you.
Earn and learn. Positions in Detroit & A2.

810/545-8888.
IF YOUR JOB SUCKS, call me!!
I will take 10 more motivated university stu-
dents to work in my business this summer.
Great exp., excellent resume builder. Make
$500/wk. For interviews, call Mr. Chad
Conover, 971-1133.
INTERESTED IN working with children?
Be a day camp counselor. Male students,
teachers. Program is child-centered, non-
competitive. Transportation provided,
Chicago & northern suburbs. 708/537-9700,
Circle M Day Camp, Wheeling, IL 60090.
INTERNATIONAL EMPLOYMENT -
Earn up to $25-$45/hour teaching basic con-
versational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S.
Korea. No teaching background or Asian lan-
guages required. For info. call: 206/632-1146
ext. J55987.
LOOKING FOR A FUN SUMMER JOB?
Trail's End Camp has openings for this
summer at our Pocono Mountain,
Pennsylvania camp in the following areas:
general counselors; basketball; baseball;
softball; soccer, volleyball; photography;
tennis; computers; gymnastics; archery;
dance; climbing wall; challenge course
facilitator; WSIlifeguard; painting, riflery
(NR A e-Pr.f...- A l he.re 1 ...J..;Ai

The ideal candidate will be a Registered
Dietitian (or R.D. eligible) who is familiar
with the principles of excellent customer
service, great communication, and quantity
food production techniques and terminology.
The responsibilities include working with our
nutritional data bank (specifically Nutritional
IV software) as a means to provide our
customers with timely, accurate, nutritional
information. Functions will include
evaluating nutritional information, updating
and inputting the information into the data
bank, performing recipe and menu analysis,
as well as interpreting analysis. Computer
skills are essential.
The Nutrition Resource Center staff interacts
daily with a wide spectm of individuals
with diverse backgrounds.
EOE
Interested, qualified candidates are
encouraged to send a resume with a cover
letterFto:
Gordon Food Service
P.O. Box 1534
Grand Rapids, MI 49501
PAINTERS & FOREMAN: $6-8/hr. Call
College Pro Painters at 1-800/346-4649.
PAINTERS - Full-time summer positions,
$8.00 per hour, Green Hill Apartments, Far-
mington Hills, MI. Send resume to: Green
Hill Apartments, 24610 Michigan Avenue,
Dearbor, MI 48124.
PAINTERS NEEDED: $7.00 - $8/hr. based
on experience. Part-time flexible hours now
with full-time possible in sp/su. Contact Joe
at 971-9426.
PHOTO LAB TECHNICIAN. Experienced
mini-lab technician. Permanent, full-time,
and/or part-time, plus benefits. Contact Jeff
or Andrew 665-3686.
RESORT JOBS - Ear to $12/hr. + tips.
Theme Parks, Hotels, Spas, + more. Tropical
& Mountain destinations. Call 1-206/632-
0150 ext. R55981.
RUN YOUR OWN BUSINESS, make your
own hours, & earn up to $15,000 or more per
summer. Call 217-3663584.
SALAD DAYS: Looking for energetic,
hardworking help. Full-time, part-time
delivery. Apply: comer of State & William.
SCOREKEEPERS IS NOW hiring waitstaff
floorstaff and cooks for spr./sum. Apply in
person at 310 Maynard 995-0581.
SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for an es-
tablished infertility clinic. Male students or
graduates 20-40 yrs. old are sought. Donors
are paid $60 per acceptable donation. Write,
APRL, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI
48106.
SEMEN DONORS NEEDED, Rh negative.
For this blood type, $120 is paid per accept-
able donation. Write APRL, P.O. Box 2674,
Ann Arbor, MI 48106.
SPEND YOUR SUMMER on Put-In-Bay Is
Land. Retail job staring at 5.25/hr. Housing is
$25/wk. Call 419/285-3085.
STAYING IN ANN ARBOR over the sum-
mer and looking for part-time work? Ann Ar-
bor Community Rec. & Ed. is searching for a
few good people to umpire youth baseball &
softball starting the 3rd week of June. The
a is $14.00 to $21.00 per game and it's2lots
ofun! For more info call 994-2300 ext. 214.
SUBJECTS WANTED: Healthy, 20-40 yrs.
normal blood pressure needed for 12 week
study. Includes urine collection & blood
draws. Compensation $500. For information,
call Anne, 747-0216, 9 a.m. - 3:30 p.m.
weekdays.
SUBWAY - CLOSE to North Campus.
Lunch/dinner shifts. Part/full-time. 1701
Plymouth Rd. Next to Video Watch.
SUMMER HELP NEEDED. Full-time cleri-
cal & data entry positions avail. for May &
June at small photography copany.Day,
night, & weekend shifts avail. Call 677-3400.
SUMMER JOBS
TENNIS AND WATERFRONT
Premiere New England Brother/Sister Camps
located in Wester Massachusetts seek:
Tennis Staff: Counselors/Coaches sought to
instruct in top level tennis program. 29
courts, excellent salaries, room/board and
travel allowance.
Waterfront Staff: Instructors sought for
comprehensive Lake/Pool operation. Skill in
water-skiing, WSI, lifeguarding, sailing,
canoe/kayak and windsurfing.
Men Contact: Camp Mah-Kee-Nac, 190
Linden Avenue, Glen Ridge, NJ 0708 1-
800/753-9118.
Women Contact: Camp Danbee, 17
Westminster Drive, Montville, NJ 07045,
1-800/392-3752.
SUMMER JOBS. Day Care center. Part &
full-time. Call 668-0887.
SUMMER PAINTERS & foremen needed.
Earn $3-5,000 no exp. needed. Hiring in A2,
Mt. Clemens, Farmington & Midland. Call
AAA Student Painters 800/543-3792.
SUMMER POSITIONS Student Sprinklers
now has openings in MI, OH, IN. Get real ex-
perience running your own business and earn
$10,000 plus. Must have own car. Call
immediately. 800/265-7691.
SUMMER POSITION - Intem needed to

create computer-based multi-media sales
presentations for engineering software
company. Necessary skills include UNIX, ar-
tistic talent, and ability to learn many
software packages. Prefer mechanical
engineers, computer science, or graphic
artists. Submit resume to Mechanical
Dynamics, Attn: drobe, 2301
Commonwealth, Ann Arbor, MI 48105. Fax
313/994-6418. drobe@adams.com.
SWIMMING POOL ATTENDANTS - Per-
fect summer job. Maintain swimming pool,
tennis courts, showers & grounds. 13 weeks
beginning May 26. Send resume to Green
Hill Apartments, 24610 Michigan Avenue,
Dearborn, MI 48124.
TEACHER NEEDED FOR Pre-school.
Full-time or part-time in the a.m. or p.m. Min.
through Sept 1. $6-8/hr. 996-4847.
Cassified
--read them Daily -

HERB DAVID GUITAR Studio 302 E.
Liberty, 665-8001. Repair, lesson, repair,
lesson, repair. Not just guitar.
ERIC'S SPORTS: Team uniforms and shoes
for all indoor sports. 2 blocks off State Street.
Call 663-6771.
IF YOU ARE plagued by loneliness and
isolation and have a difficult time with per-
sonal relationships, perhaps a therapy group
will help orient you in the right direction.
Men & women, maximum of 7. Free initial
interview confidential. The Counseling Cen-
ter 761-7204.
sure hope someone
bought me a
Crraduation Hat in
The Michigan Daily!
Have a friend, child, or sibling
who is graduating?
Salute them in our special
Hats Off To The Graduates section.
Publication Date: Friday, April 14, 1995
Deadline: Friday, April 7, 1995, 5 p.m.
Cost $5.00
Buy your graduation hat in the
Fishbowl today through Thursday!
JOIN A CP & P focus group! Career Plan-
ning & Placement wants to hear ideas &
feedback from current students.Free &ia&
pop provided for participants. Call 764-7460
to sign up for upcoming dates/times.
PASSOVER SEDER DINNER at Chabad.
715 Hill. Fri.-Sat. April 14-15 8:30 p.m. For
reservations, call 995-3276.

EUROPE $199 one way. Carribean/Mexico
$189 roundtrip. If you can beat these prices
start your own air-line. Air-Tech Ltd. 212/
219-7000. Info@aerotech.com.
LOVELY SPRING GETAWAY. Romantic
log cabins on lake. $49-$69 nightly. Incl. hot
tub, boats, canoes, more. Traverse City area.
616/276-9502.
LOW FARES TO EUROPE * ASIA*
AUSTRALIA * AFRICA * SOUTH
AMERICA
Call STAMOS TRAVEL in Kerrytown,
downtown Ann Arbor, 407 N. Fifth Ave.,
Ann Arbor, MI at 663-4400. Special U-M
line 663-5500.
LOW FARES! London - $399, Paris - $528,
Frankfurt - $504, Japan - $790, Korea - $750,
Bangkok - $887, Singapore - $982. Regency
Travel 209 S. State St. 665-6122.
R.E.M. - MAIN FLOOR - lower and upper
bowl tickets available. Call 662-0387.
SAVE HUNDREDS on international air
fares! Details 303/271-3494.
STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on
Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con-
tinental voucher & AMEX card Kelly at
Regency Travel, 2095S. State, 665-6122.

TAXES
Continued from page 1.
University's Michael Boskin, who
was chairman of the Council of Eco-
nomic Advisers in the Bush White
House, predicted that the House tax
cuts would boost entrepreneurship,
improve the efficiency of capital mar-
kets, raise stock prices in the short run
and boost savings over the long run.
But Boskin conceded that when simi-
lar things were tried during the 1980s,
the results were often "ambiguous."
Officially, business groups are sit
idly behind the tax bill and in recent
weeks have stepped up their lobbying
efforts. Privately, meanwhile, some
business lobbyists express reserva-
tions about the package. Published
surveys of business executives have
generally put tax cuts below regula-
tory reform, legal reform and balanc-
ing the budget on the priority list of
business executives.
One leading business lobbyist said
there were provisions of the tax bill his
group cares a lot about - the elimina-
tion, for example, of the alternate mini-
mum tax, which ensures that every cor-
poration pays some federal tax each
year. But his group considers other ele-
ments marginal, such as a complex new
formula covering how businesses de-
preciate their investments in plants,
equipment and real estate.
"The leadership has made it clear
that it's a package deal - take it or
leave it - and so we're taking it," he
said on condition that neither he nor
his organization be named.
Here is how economists and busi-
ness representatives generally view
the three major provisions of the
House tax bill:
The $500 child credit.
This provision holds little interest
for the business community, although
it is the most costly element of the tax
bill, accounting for 37 percent of the
tax reduction over the next decade,
according to the Treasury.
Economists largely agree that this
provision simply shifts spending from
government to families. The composi-
tion of the spending might change -
more TV sets, less asphalt - but with
little impact on the overall economy.
Capital gains reduction.
Republicans propose to reduce the
taxes paid by investors when they make
profits selling stocks, bonds, real estate,
race horses or any other asset, by reduc-
ing both the tax rate and indexing the
value of assets to inflation.
The rationale is to encourage
Americans to save and invest more of
their money - a goal supported by
nearly all economists. But even those
who support it concede there is no
evidence that it will work.
"In all honesty, as an economist, I
cannot say that a change in the capital
gains rate will have any measurable
impact on savings or investment,"
said Martin Regalia of the U.S. Cham-
ber of Commerce, which nonetheless
strongly supports the provision.
One big reason reduced capital
gains taxes don't change behavior is
that most Americans already have
their savings in tax-free type invest-
ments - such as their home, IRAs or
life insurance policies - or avoid
capital gains taxes altogether by sim-
ply holding assets until their deaths.

A reduced capital gains tax would
however, likely have the immediate
effect of boosting prices for stocks and
real estate. It also could encourage in
vestors to buy and sell stocks more
frequently and significantly reduce th=
tax bite on entrepreneurs who want to
sell their businesses. For those reasons,
it has won broad business support, par-
ticularly from Wall Streetandthe small-
business community.
Depreciation.
It's called "neutral cost recovery,"
and the basic idea has wide support
among the business community and
economists: Rather than depreciating
the value of a new piece of equipment
over several years, which is the cur-
rent system, businesses would be al-
lowed to deduct the full cost in the
year in which the investment is made.
Switching systems, it turns outs
causes the Treasury to lose huge sums
of revenue for the first decade. So the
GOP plan makes the transition to the
new system more slowly - and then
compensates businesses for the delay
by allowing them to deduct more than
they paid for each piece of machinery
Most companies, however, said the
benefits are too many years in the future-
to save them any money. And some
experts predict it will lead to a new
generation of very attractive tax shel-
ters that would create negative tax rates
for some firms and investors - rather
than paying taxes on some of their-
A number of
things in this bill
go in the right
direction, but
economically, the
whole thing just
doesn't hang
together. r
- Dale Jorgenson.
Harvard University economist
income, in other words, the govern--
ment would wind up paying them.
"It's a very retrograde proposal,".Y
said Harvard University's Dale'
Jorgenson, who was one of the first to -m
propose the neutral cost recovery idea
in the late 1970s. "Doing it this way,.
without making other changes in thes
tax code - well, it's just nuts" A
Today's House vote on taxes comes
just two days after Gingrich (R-Ga.)
and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dolea_
(R-Kan.) announced the formation of am
group to come up with sweeping re-
form of the federal tax system. Their
aim, long supported by many econo-
mists and business leaders, is to tax
people on the income they use for con-"
sumption, but not the income they use.
for investment or saving.
Several provisions of the House
tax bill move in that direction while_
leaving the rest of the tax code intact.-
The result, according to several ex-"
perts, would be a hybrid system tha.
lacks coherence and yields the worst:
aspect of both approaches.
"A number of things in this bill g..
in the right direction, but economi-.
cally, the whole thing just doesn't'
hang together," Jorgenson said.

K

2 SINGLES AVAILABLE in house across
from B-school, May lease. 994-1469.

VOTES
Continued from page 1
Rep. Greg Ganske (R-Iowa), who
helped organize the effort, said yes-
terday that he would oppose bringing
the measure to the House floor with-
out the right to vote separately on that
issue.
The measure would also cut the
tax on capital gains by 25 percent,
create new individual retirement ac-
counts and repeal the 1993 tax in-
crease on Social Security recipients.
In all, the bill would return $189 bil-
lion to taxpayers over five years.
Trying to achieve the tandem
goals of tax relief and a balanced

budget, GOP leaders last month put
together a package of spending cuts
to offset the lost revenue from the
tax cuts.
The package included $64 billion
worth of cuts to federal welfare pro-
grams and another $100 billion in
unspecified reductions.
The pension changes, which would
result in a net savings of about $11
billion over five years, are a smaller
piece of the package.
President Clinton called the mea-
sure too costly and said, "I think we
need to focus on the deficit."
Gingrich countered that Republi-
cans stand for "a lower deficit, less
taxes and a smaller government."

TIOS SELLS MICHIGAN'S finest
Mexican style food and the world's hottest
sauces. Stop by 333 E. Huron, or call 761-
6650. We Deliver!

*LIBERTY THERAPEUTIC MASSAGE*
for relaxation & optimal health. 2 for the
price of 1 gift certificates. 527 E. Liberty,
741-1212.
ADOPTION. HAPPILY MARRIED U of
M alumna & husband wish to adopt baby.
We will provide loving & secure home,
Christian values & a full-time mom. Com-
pletely legal. We can help with medical, legal
& living expenses. Please call Kathy collect
@ 310/541-8222. Thank You!
DETROIT LIVE!
One-on-One/oice Personals
1-313-976-3000
Whypa more! Only 69e/min.

What's New i The Galleria?t
1214 S. University
(campus level below Tower Records
Campus Collectibles ,. e l
Ann Arbor's Experts on Cards, }
Comics, Magic, and
Memorabilia
- 313-663-6646
C , Watch Batteries Installed $3.00
Watch Bands $6.00

VOLUNTEER WORK IN Latin America!
Spend this summer working as a public
health volunteer in Mexico, Honduras, Costa
Rica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador,
Paraguay or Brazil. Call Amigos De Las

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Alternative Lifestyles
Gay - Bi - Couples - Swingers

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