100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

March 01, 1996 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1996-03-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 1, 1996 - 7

NATION/WORLD
School bus shooting

SHAKE 3BDRM. apt. in Kerrytown area $1750 WEEKLY ossible mailing our PART-TIME DRIVERS needed for an auto
with two female students and a cat $295.00/ circulars. For info. c 1 202/393-7723. pars wholesaler. Must be 21. Flex. hrs. App
mo. includes utilities, six month lease. Call $35,000lYR. INCOME potential. Reading 1'iperson Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. at ISW.
Larry 434-5787 or Randy 434-2350. books. Toll Free (1) 800-898-9778 Ext. R- 3965 Varsity St. Ann Arbor or phone 971-
SPRISU SUBLET- 2 bdrms., Central Crps. 1864 for details. 3899.

child care kils prenant grl
07, ST. LOUIS (AP) - A teen-agter Two bullets struck Tayl

i

dor, a ninth-

Great loc. 332-6183 for more info!
eaving Ann Arbor in May?
Don't get stuck with an
unwanted summer lease!
Now is the time to advertise your summer
sublet. The Daily wants to help you out with
our special Summer Sublet Supplement.
Your ad will reach thousands of readers
specifically interested in subletting. If you
place your ad before March 15, it's cheaper
and your ad can be in color. See the form on
this page for more information.
DON'T DELAY, PLACE YOUR AD TODAY!
SUBLET AVAILABLE May 1 to Sept. 1.
Close to Medical Center and North Cam pus.
bedroom. Call Jason, Anthony or Saul 747-
Servic es
$
!AAHH, THINK MONEY! Money for
college available, proven results. Recorded
message 24 hrs. 973-8719 x 112.
* SANDI'S WORD PRO: Resumes. Letters.
'gapers. Theses. Law. Editing. Tapes. Fax.
sh. U-M $ Discount. 426-5217.
ANN ARBOR INSTITUTE of Massage
Therapy's annual student massage clinic is
now open. $25/hr. call 677-0030 & request a
"student massage."

Achieve the
LSAT score You
need with EXCEL
Our Classes Im-
prove Your Skills
at making the
Key Analytical
Dis nctions that
are required for
Top Performance.

AL

LSAT Classes start:
Wed., May 8th &
Thur., May 9th
rEL991500
Test Preparation
1100 South University
ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! Grants
& scholarships available! Billions of $$$ in
privaie funding. Qualify immediately. 1-800/
AID-2=HELP (1-800/243-2435).
CHRIS'S TYPING/WP- All typing: term
pers, CC's, applications. etc. All work
liaranteed. Rush avail. 995-4495.
GREENCARD
Diversity immigrant visa lottery '97. Under
sec.' 203(c) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1990, there will be 55,000
pennanent resident visas on lottery for 1997.
You have 6 working days before the
application deadline! For info, call 517/355-
1191.
IMPACT TECHNOLOGY SERVICES -
Resumes, word processing, desktop publish-
ing - best service, best turn around, best value
- and it could be FREE - Call today for details
572-1480.
ECTURE NOTES: We take notes in your
classes! Over 100 sets to choose from. Call or
stop in and browse. Grade A Notes at
Ulnch's Bookstore, Second Floor, 549 E.
Universit Ave., 741-9669.
REGNANT? Don't face your choices
alone. Today's adoption choices may
pleasantly surpnse you. Why not call Cheryl
or Debbie at 810/588-9400 or call toll-free
1800-BETHANY, before you decide to go
through it alone. At Bethany Christian
Services, we listen! World Wide Web: http://
Www.bethany.org/ and Internet Email:
'fo@bethany.org
ROFESSIONAL Processing: Resumes, let-
ters and papers. Fast, friedly, and acurate
416-8170.

$40,000/YR. INCOME potential. Home
typists/PC users. Toll free 800/898-9778 ext.
T-1864 for listings.
***FREE TRIPS & CASH!***
Find out how hundreds of students are
already eaming FREE TRIPS and LOTS OF
CASH with America's #1 Spring Break
company! Sell only 15 trips and travel freel
Choose Cancun, Bahamas, Mazatlan, or
Florida. CALL NOW! TAKE A BREAK
STUDENT TRAVEL 800/95-BREAKI
A SPECIAL GIFT- We're looking for heal-
thy women between the ages 21-35 for egg
donation. All ethnic backgrounds
encouraged. Fee paid. Send inquiries to
AARMA, P.O.2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106.
ACCOUNTANT- Full charge for real estate,
property management, mortgage loan and
ight construction multi-company firm. Hand-
les all aspects from banking, pay-roll, escrow
accounting,& multi-level general ledger thru
trial balance & tax reporting. Bachelors in
Accounting or equivalent plus at least five
years exp. required. Must be fluent in
Microsoft Works for Windows, spreadsheets,
databases, & both manual & computerized
accounting systems. 761-2470 for appt. or
fax resume to 994-0624.
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT- fishing
industry. Earn up to $3000-$6000+ per
month. Room & Board! Transportation! Male
or Female. No experience necessary! 206/
971-3510 ext. A55982.
ALASKA EMPLOYMENT- Fisheries,
parks, resorts now hiring. Earn to $3,000-
$6,000+/mo.1 Airfare! Room/Board Free
Fishery Video w/ program! Call SEI 919/
932-1489, ext. Al15.
AVON REPS NEEDED on campus today.
Call Kelly 1-800/484-8040 ext. 5138.
BLIMPY BURGER HIRING now part-time
thn spring full-time in summer. Apply in
person. 551 S. Division at Packard.
CAMP COUNSELORS join the exciting ad-
venture and share the rewards and memories
at summer camp! Top ranked camps in the
Pocono Mtns. of PA need counselors ex-
perienced teaching water and land sports,
WSI's/Life Guards, Tennis, Climbing, Arts
and more! Salary plus room & board. 2 hours
from NYC. Call 215/887-9700 or write: 151
Washington Lane, Jenkinstown, PA 19027.
CAMP COUNSELORS - OUTSTANDING
SLIM DOWN CAMPS: Tennis, Dance,
Slimnastics, WSI, Athletics, Nutrition
Dietetics. Age 20+. Seven weeks. CAMP
CAMELOT on College Cam puses at
MASSACHUSETTS, PENNSYLVANIA,
CALIFORNIA. Contact: Michele Friedman,
947 Hewlett Drive, North Wookmere, N.Y.
11581. 800/421-4321.
CAREER IN EXECUTIVE RECRUIT-
MENT
AIM Executive, a nationally recognized
human resources consulting firm, will be in-
terviewing at the UM School of Business on
Thurs. March 14. We seek graduates to join
us in our nationwide expansion program
within our Executive Recruiting Division.
Unlimited income and career growth follow
our intensive training program at AIM
University.vOpportunities are available
throughout the nation. Interviews being
scheduled through Business Placement Of-
fice by Monday, March 11.
CONVERSATIONAL ENGLISH
TEACHERSNEEDED in South Korea
immediately. Bachelor's required. No fees.
Contact us at English Teacher Recruiting
Service, 9011-2 George Avenue, Berrien
Springs, MI. 49103-1620, or 616473-2129.
CUSTODIAN MICHIGAN THEATER
must be willing to work late night hours.
$5.50/hr. Plus free movie and concert
passes!! Pick up application at the Michigan
Theater Box Ofice, 603 E. Liberty.
DIRECT CARE WORKERS full & part-
time positions available to work with
developmentally disabled adults. Competi-
tive wages & excellent benefits provided.
High school diploma/GED & valid Michigan
driver's license required. Call 313/665-1152.
EOE.
EARN EXTRA MONEY over Spring
Break. Strong amiable women needed to as-
sist disabled woman. Should enjoy cats. 662-
2734.
EASTERN EUROPE JOBS- teach basic
conversational English in Prague, Budapest,
or Krakow. No teaching certificate or
European languages required. Inexpensive
room & board + other benefits. For info. call
206/971-3680 ext. K55981.
FULL-TIME SANDWICH PREP Days,
good starting pay, good working
environment. Apply in person at the Back A-
ley Gourmet 611 S. Main in the S. Main
Market.
FULL-TIME, PART-TIME & 1 mo. project
opportunities avail. at Kaplan Test Pr. Of-
fice environment. Call Lisa at 662-3149.
LSA ACADEMIC PEER Advisor positions
available for summer orientation. Applica-
tions available in 1255 Angell Hall. Deadline
3/13/96.
MAINTENANCE Ann Arbor Art Center.

117 W. Liberty. 20-25 hrs./wk. Cleaning &
maintenance of offices & studios. Fill out ap-
plication Tues.-Fri. 10-6.
MESSENGER- Law firm seeking messenger
to work Monday-Friday, 3-5 p.m. Must have
reliable transportation. Paid parking and
mileage reimbursement. Position available
immediately. $5.50/hour. Fax resume to
Stein, Moran, Raimi, Goethel 769-7935.
NATIONAL PARKS HIRING - Positions
are now available at National Parks, Forests
& Wildlife Preserves. Excellent benefits +
bonuses! Call: 1-206971-3620 ext. N55984.
NEED TO BUILD YOUR RESUME? In-
stead of an unpaid intemnship get concrete
sales and management experience. Contact
Jacob 973-7456.
NUDE FEMALE MODELS wanted. No ex-
perience necessary. Must be 18 +. Up to
$360 every 6 hrs. Must have reliable
transportation. Page Francis 810/903-7000.
OUR FIRM IS looking for individuals who
want to gain comprehensive management ex-
perience next summer. Earn $6000 to
$10,000/summer. Positions available
throughout Michigan incl. Rochester, Utica,
Troy, Farmington, Bloomfield, Novi,
Livonia, Flint, Grand Rapids, Holland, Mus-
kego and more. 800/887-1960.

POSTAL & Government jobs $21/hr. +
benefits. No experience. Will train. Call 313/
913-5082.
PUBLIC RELATIONS/ Community Ser-
vice--The University of Michigan seeks part-
time public relations professional. Respon-
sible for planning strategy and developing
and promoting stories to increase visibility
and awareness of Michigan's community
service, service learning and related
programs to targeted media. Proven media
placement experience a plus. To apply, send
cover letter, resume and work samples to
Janet Mendler, 412 Maynard, Ann Arbor, MI
48109-1399. Deadline: Postmarked by
March 13.
REALTOR ASSISTANT- Work in a fast
paced environment where enthusiasm,
energy, and self motivation are essential.
Computer skills necessary. Knowledge of
real estate desirable but not required. Full
time but flexible hours. Salary plus incentive
bonus. Send resume to: Realtor, P.O. Box
4442, Ann Arbor, MI. 48106.
RELIABLE PERSON NEEDED for es-
tablished Ann Arbor area cleaning service
route. Reliable transportation a must.
Responsible, outgoing person. 4 day work
wk., early hrs., full time employment, in-
surance avail., starting $8/hr. call 810-299-
8364 for appointment.
REPORT PROCESSOR
Service Quality consulting firm has
immediate opening. Proofreading, editing &
typing of market research reports. Must have
IBM/PC experience. Flexible hours, part time
position. Casual workplace in downtown Ann
Arbor $6.00 an hour to start. Call 668-8148
ext. 102.
SALES EXPERIENCE. Want it? Get some
selling environmental products. Contact
Jacob 973-7456.
SECURITY GUARDS NEEDED for U of
M campus. Part & full-time available w/
flexible schedule. Apply @ State Security
Services 525 Church. 668-0444. EOE.
SEMEN DONORS NEEDED, O negative.
For this blood type, $120 is pad r accep-
table donation.Wrte APRL, P.O. Box 2674,
Ann Arbor, MI 48106.
SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for an infer-
tility clinic. Male students or grads. 20-40
yrs. old are sought. Donors are paid $60 per
acceptable donation. Write APRL, P.O. Box
2674, AnnArbor, MI 48106.

COZY WINTER HIDEAWAY Log cabins
$54-75 nightly. Incl. outdoor hot tub & ski
trails. Traverse City 616/276-9502.
STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on
Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con-
tinental voucher & AMEX card. Linda at
Regency Travel, 209S. State, 665-6122.

were unsure of a
motive.
Police were also
uncertain whether
Kyunia Taylor,
who was sitting in
the first seat inside
thedoor on her way
to school, had been

"The baby s
outcome is in
doubt"'
.- Timothy Buchanan

continued to
beat,there wasno
oxygen going to
the baby or to the
baby's brain"
said Dr. Timothy
Buchanan, who
delivered the
baby. "The

St. Lou

sic rnhvcirian

WORLDWIDE LOW FARES Instant pur-
chase Eurail passes. Shannon, London from
$399. Frankfurt from $599. Beijing-effective
5/1 from2$999. Regency Travel, 209S. State.
665-6122.

targeted or was
shot at random.
The shooting took place shortly be-
fore 7 a.m. when the small bus carry-
ing the driver and three students pulled
up to its regular stop. When the door
opened, the gunman stepped inside
and asked if the bus was going to
Beaumont High School. The driver
said yes.
"It was very swift," Police Chief Ron
Henderson said last night. "He walked
up the steps and shot the driver, and
then he shot the young lady."
The gunman looked at the other two
girls, but didn't try to harm them,
Henderson said. They were helping
police with a description of the suspect.
The 60-year-old bus driver, Richard
Lanemann, was in serious condition
with three gunshot wounds.

---

cant yesterday morning. A crying girl
was escorted to an office by two adults.
Security was already tight - all stu-
dents must pass through a metal detec-
tor each day - but it appeared that
movement was also being restricted:
Principal Floyd. Crues announced
Taylor's death over the public address
system. "At the moment we have our
counseling crisis management staff in
placeto deal with the students and staff,"
Crues said.
Taylor entered school there in Sep-
tember. Few people knew she was preg-
nant, Crues said.
Freshman Rhonda Palmer said Tay-
lor was the third student from Beau-
mont killed this year.

bay's outcome
is in doubt."
At the school, halls were mostly va-

HERB DAVID GUITAR Studio 302 E.
Liberty, 665-8001. Repair, repair, repair.
Lessons, lessons. Not just guitar.
JERRY GARCIA lithographs- affordable.
Call 314/230-2370.

Clinton hails new TV

WARM, RELIABLE SITTER for girl, age
8, Tues. 6:30-8:30 p.m. $7/hr. 665-4719.

SUMMER INTERNSHIPS
$600/WK.
PLACING ALL MAJORS
CALL 769-6446.

7-

nouncements ratings agreement

SUMMER JOBS
Applications are now being accepted for
summer jobs on cruiseships, airlines, and
resorts. No experience necessary. For more
information send $2 and a self-addressed en-
velope to:
World Wide Travel Club
6021 Yonge Street, Suite 1040
Toronto, Ontario M2M 3W2 Canada.
SUMMER LANDSCAPING employment
available in Petoskey area. Starting pay is
$6.20. Send name, phone & address to John
Hoffman Landscapig Inc. 2023-B Mitchell
St., Petoskey, MI 49770. 616/347-9854, fax
347-7258.
TELEPHONE INTERVIEWS needed for
public health research projects. Office is lo-
cated in downtown A2. Paid parking. Flex.
scheduling. Evening & weekend hours avail.
12-25 hrs./wk. EOE. Apply at I.T.S., 209 E.
Washington, 2nd floor.
WANTED: 100 students, lose 8-100 lbs.
New metabolism breakthrough. I lost 12 lbs.
in 15 days. Dr. recommended. Guaranteed
results. $35. 1/8001827-2975.
WANTED: STUDENT CHEMIST for lab
work.
Part-time Mon.-Fri. 7-11 a.m.
For printed circuit board mfg.
7232 Jackson Rd. Ann Arbor. 663-6445.
WORK STUDY STUDENT needed Tues.
and Wed. mornings and most of the day on
Thurs. to perform various duties at the Medi-
cal Center. Call Liz at 936-5504.

waiting at a school bus stop with a pistol
began firing after the bus doors swung
open yesterday, killing a pregnant 15-
year-old and wounding the driver be-
fore running away. The baby was in
critical condition.
Dozens of police officers searched
the city's north side for the gunman,
who was believed to be 16 to 18. Police

AMERICAN BUDDHIST songs concert,
Sun. Mar. 3, 2 .m. Unitarian Universalist
Church, 1917 Washtenaw. Adults $8, stu-
dents & children $5, families $20. Info 761-
6520 (Zen Buddhist Temple).
FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 Billion
in public and private sector grants & scholar-
ships 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.
F55985.
MULTI-MILLIONAIRE
Kevin Trudeau
Producer of Mega Memory
Free business opportunity meeting.
Call 1-800/433-1025.
1 OR 2 MALE ROOMMATES needed for
2 bdrmn. a pt. on S. Forest for Fall '96. Great
location!Call Jeff 741-7208.
ROOMATE to share furnished 2 bdrm., 1
bath apt. Near U of M Hospital. Fireplace, A/
C, dishwasher, laundry & parking available.
No smoking. Available immediately. Call
Angie 313/332-9629.
ROOMMATES NEEDED to share large
contemporary 2 bdrm. apts. Call 741-9300.

Los Angeles Times
WASHINGTON -The representa-
tives of every major production studio,
cable company and broadcast televi-
sion network met with President Clinton
at the White House for more than two
hours yesterday and committed to put
warning labels on violent and sexually
explicit TV programs.
Clinton hailed the agreement to create
a new ratings regime for virtually all
television programming, combined with
new "V-chip" technology, as a "break-
through" that will give parents more con-
trol over their children's TV viewing.
"We're handing the TV remote con-
trol back to America's parents so that
they can pass on their values and pro-
tect their children," Clinton exulted fol-
lowing the first White House summit
meeting of its kind on television vio-
lence.
But the president made clear he be-
lieves the ratings system, while neces-
sary, was only a modest first step to-
ward improving the content of pro-
gramming beamed into American liv-
ing rooms.
"It is not enough for parents to be
able to tune out what they don't want
their children to watch," Clinton said.
"They want to be able to tune in good
programs that their children will watch."
Participants described the session as
"historic" and friendly, but industry of-
ficials showed the strains ofbeingdriven
to a "voluntary" ratings system under
political pressure and legal duress.
They also complained about the size
of the task that confronts them between
now and next January, when they prom-
ise to have the new ratings regime in
place.
The typical 72-channel cable TV sys-
tem broadcasts more than 600,000 hours
of programming a year, most of which
will have to be rated and encoded for
use with the V-chip, which allows par-
ents to screen out objectionable pro-

grams.
Under the agreement announced yes-
terday, only news and sports programs
will be exempt from the ratings require-
ment.
Industry execu-
tives, who met with
House Speaker
Newt Gingrich (R-
Ga.) at the Capitol
before caravaning
to the White House,
took pains to assert
that they were act-
ing voluntarily on
the ratings system
but would brookno
Clinton further government
intrusion into their
artistic and First Amendment freedoms.
The voluble Jack Valenti, president
of the Motion Picture Association of
America, says while the entertainment
industry has been demonized for pol-
luting American culture, the answer is
not more regulation but anational moral
renaissance.
"I will say this," Valenti intoned in
the East Room as Clinton and Vice
President Gore looked on, "absent that
kind of moral regeneration, in the home
and in the family and in the school and
in the church, frankly, no ratings sys-
tem, however purposeful; no V-chip or
electronic device; and no government
law is going to salvage that child's
conduct or locate a lost moral core."
Valenti began with an outline of how
the industry intends to design and imple-
ment the ratings system. He said indi-
vidual distributors of programming
would rate theirproducts accordingto a
system modeled on the 27-year-old
MPAA movie ratings scale.
The industry will also create aratings
review board that periodically will re-
view the operation of the system to
ensure it is being applied consistently
by production studios.

grader, in the chest. She was dead on
arrival at the hospital.
Doctors delivered her baby by
Caesarean section. The 3-pound gitl
appeared to be one to three months
premature.
"The fact that the mom had been
dead for a period of time meant that
although the baby's heart may have

RESUME SERVICE: Fast, friendly, profes-
sional & accurate. Grade A Notes at Ulrich's
Bookstore, Second Floor, 549 E. University
Ave.. 741-9669.

r

SICK OF TYPING term papers?
$2/pg. double-spaced Word Processing.
Graphics/Tables slightly higher.
More minfo. leave message @ 973-9079.

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:
+ an

FREE FREE hot sauce and salsa taste test-
ing at ios. Come in and try some of the
world's best and hotest sauces. Sun. March
3, 12-4 p.m. 333 E. Huron.

THESIS EDITING by experienced
essional. Language, organization, format.
TYPING & WRITING
Resumes, cover letters, applications &
essays. Ann Arbor Typing 994-5515.
VCR - TV - AUDIO SERVICE
Imnmediate attention, pick-up & delivery
available... Rentals of big screen TVs,
camcorders, TVs and sound equipments. Ask
about our used equipments inventory. 215
South Ashley (1/2 block north of Liberty St.
down town Ann Arbor) Telephone: 668-7942
or 769-0342.

Chemnobyl area becomes
refuige for wild animals

ARE YOU READY for love? Call now! 1/
900/656-2600 ext. 8360. $2.99/mi. 18+
Touchtone phone req. SERV-U 619/645-
8434.
HILARIOUS JOKES about Notre Dame,
MSU, OSU, & other U-M rivals! Call Sports/
School Joke Line! 900/336-6181 ext. 7842
$2.99/min. 18+ Touchtone phone Procall Co.
602/954-7420.
I'LL TELL YOUR FUTURE now. 1/900/
255-0400 ext. 3204 $3.99/min. 18+ Touch-
tone phone req. SERV-U 619/645-8434.
PREGNANT? Are you or someone you care
about pregnant and not in a position to parent
at this tune? Please help a loving couple be-
come a loving family. Call collect 810/360-
0223.

Los Angeles Times
CHERNOBYL, Ukraine - Ihor
Shokhalevich recalls the autumn
evening he spotted a boar munching on
apples outside the local drugstore.
"He wasn't bothering anyone," the
Ukrainian biochemist says, smiling at
the incongruous image of a tusked pig
in what had been the center ofa bustling
district until the Chernobyl nuclear re-
actor exploded 10 years ago this April.
Since 135,000 people were evacuated in
the disaster's aftermath, there haven't been
many people for a boar to bother in the
highly contaminated "Zone of Alienation"

also more roebucks, wolves, foxesot-
ters and rodents than outside the zone's
139-mile perimeter.
"And there are no monsters!" insists
ecologist Vitaly Gaichenko.
No live monsters, at least. "If wild
animals are weak, they die," he says.
That so many creatures are flourish-
ing leads Gaichenko and other scien-
tists to the conclusion that for wildlife,
the benefits of a human-free environ-
ment can outweigh even the biological
costs of radiation.
No more than 10,000 people are in
the entire zone on a given day. And

$ CRUISE SHIPS HIRING!! Students
needed! Earn up to_$3000/mo. and Free

OUTSIDE JOBS! Now hiring- National

.1

i

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan