I NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, September 12, 1996 - 7A 1.S. Navy, Air Force compete for next Iraq offensive f . F ' K i J The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The U.S. Navy and the Ail Force, and factions within each service, have jockeyed strenuously this week over who gets the anticipated assignment to attack Iraq from the air in response to Iraq's reported rebuilding af air defense sites and yesterday's launch of an raqi missile against U.S. F-16 jet fighters. Military commanders keenly want to demon- strate their weapons systems' capabilities in an assault on Iraqi President Saddam Hussein in order to protect their interests in a different sort of war - a bruising Pentagon review of all U.S. military programs next year that will demand that commanders justify their weapons and the funds allotted to them. The most brutal struggles, as usual, pit the Air Force against the Navy, military officials said. In the first round of U.S. attacks, when 44 American cruise missiles were launched against 15 Iraqi sites on Sept. 3 and 4, the Navy was seen as winning hands down because its surface ships and a submarine in the Persian Gulf shot 31 of those missiles, while Air Force B-52s loft- ed only 13. Now Navy officials are trying to persuade operations planners at the Joint Chiefs of Staff that the maritime service should again shoulder the main burden in a new assault. And several bureaucracies within the Navy itself- represent- ing aircraft carriers, cruise missiles and sub- marines - each is lobbying like sidelined foot- ball players who plead, "Coach, let me in the game." At the same time, the Air Force has won a key victory by securing an assignment for its F- I I7A stealth fighters, a squadron of which flew yesterday from Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico to Kuwait for the expected strikes against Iraq. Before this, the Air Force had been hobbled because Saudi Arabia and Turkey had forbidden U.S. jets based in their countries frOQ taking part in assaults on Iraq. "Who gets-assigned to do what is imp6Y tant because we're on the eve of a quadrenni. al review of military programs that will suh stantially determine the military services' budgets for years to come," said Loren. Thompson, a Pentagon and defense-industry consultant. NEW METABOLISM BREAKTHRU! TRANSLATOR BABYSITTER WANTED 6 and 3 yr. old Lose 5-99 pounds. R.N. assisted. $35 800/ boys. 12:30 to 5:00, 1 to 5 days/week. 996- 579-1634. NOW HIRING PART-TIME office asst, for Fall term no experience necessary great hours & ,ay - super job for B-school students 995-0100. NOW HIRING banquet waitstaff and eve- ning receptionist. Apply at Ann Arbor omen's City Club, 1830 Washtenaw, Ann >or, 662-3279. OFF-CAMPUS work study position avail. (Office of Financial Aid award req.) Interest- ing office work/good pay/flex. hrs. Near Domino Farms, car req. Free prkg. Mac com- puter exp. a +. 998-6969. OFFICE PERSON/PART-TIME Mac skills a must. Knowledge of pagemaker desirable 761-7204. P/T SECRETARY, must be Mac-intelligent. Bookkeeping, filing, customer service, inventory, & billing. Exp. req. Needs trans. Flex. hrs. 973-2948. PAID PR INTERNSHIP FALL '96. SE ichigan advertising agency is seeking .ative, energetic person interested in the excitement of the entertainment industry. Full/part-time PR/promotions position to ef- fectively assist in research, develop, and im- plement PR plans for major movie studios; screening programs, publicity tours and spe- cial events. Major in Comm., Adv., Mktg., Film, or PR preferred; must have car, basic computer/t mg skills, flexible hours. Send resume to PR Intern, P.O. Box 2002, Bloom- field Hills, MI 48303. DEADLINE: Sept. 20. PART TIME - FLEXIBLE HOURS. 'Local wine distributor looking for wine fcrchandiser. Hourly wage & miles need 'Zwn transportation Steve 930-6832. PART TIME POSITION research assistant. Knowledge of windows, word processing, sgreadshet, graphics and data mgmt. skills. Bring resume to 3084 ISR. Work study preferred. PART-TIME FILE CLERK for Ann Arbor law firm. Send fax/resume to Bamett & Rich. 415 Detroit, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Fax 313/ 769-1989. PART-TIME counter help wanted. Week- days 2-6 p.m. Sat. 8-1. Apply in person at 332 Maynard. RTHENON RESTAURANT now hiring perienced waitstaff lunch & dinner full or part tune. Also host or hostess. Apply in' per- son only. 226 S. Main St. PHOTOGRAPHER for weddings and portrait sittings. Will train. 313/591-9359. POLITICAL CAMPAIGN position open: Experienced, part-time staffer needed or ad- ministrative duties. Call Bryan at 973-5882 for details. PRESCHOOL TEACHER, AAECE or CDA, 13K+ exp., full benefits, EOE, minorities encouraged to apply, immediate ening. Perry Nursery School, 3770 ackard, 677-8130. Local manufacturer of machine vision software has an immediate part-time position for a translator to convert user documentation from English to Japanese. The ideal candidate for this position has a technical/ engineering background, is fluent in both Japanese and English, and has PC desktop publishing experience. Familiarity with any of the following is also considered a plus: machine vision, on-line help authoring, MS Windows, MS Work, and RoboHelp. The job entails 20-30 hrns. per week and can be done off-site. Compensation is based on a negotiable per-page fee. If interested, fax or mail resume to: Integral Vision, Inc. 38700 Grand River Ave. Farmington Hills, MI 48335 Attn: Human Resources fax: 810/615-2971 TRAVEL ABROAD AND WORK - Make up to $25-45/hr. teaching basic conversa- tional English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian languages required. For information call: 206/971-3570 ext. J55981. TUTOR-ELEMENTARY ED. MAJORS, would you like to work two hours a day twice a week tutoring a NW A2 fourth grader on basic reading and math skills? If interested, have a car and want $10/hr., give us a call 763-1091. FLEX. HRS. All shifts. Crew & asst.nmgrs. Apply at YES Sandwich Cafe in the Michigan Union. WANTED: DRIVER Driver for after school activities for children. hours somewhat flex. 15 hrs./wk. Mon.-Fri. Please call 998-0643 evenings. WANTED: Psychology, education, or speech/language major. Undergrad./Grad. Needed to work Tues. & Thurs. afternoons. 6-12 hrs./wk. With special needs, language delayed 5 yr. old child. Will train. Pay $9/hr. Call Kim 764-5203 work or 665-8473 eves. WANTED: UM STUDENT for employment beginning Fall term '96. General office duties, errands, Macintosh friendly, valid driver's license. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday hours available. Please submit resume by September 9 to Karen Gibbons, University of Michigan, Provost's Office, 3074 Fleming Administration Bldg., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1340. WE ARE LOOKING FOR a few good men & women, for security guard work on the U of M campus. Are you qualified? Can you meet the challenge? Good pay and regular hours. Come join us! Apply at State Security Services, 525 Church St. 668-0444. EOE. WIDE WORLD SPORTS Center hiring eve, facility & concession personnel & con- cession supervisor. $5-10/hr. 913-4625. WORK IN THE GREAT OUTDOORS! Positions now available at A-l LAWN CARE Ann Arbor's Largest Lawn Care Co. *25-40 hrs./wk. *Mowing, fertilization, leaf removal *Will Train Crew Leader & Crew Member positions start at $6.75-7.25/hr. Winter snow removal at $12-14/hr. Will work around School Schedule. Apply today at 719 W. Ellsworth #8 (1 Block West of State St.) or call 663- 3343. WORK STUDY STUDENTS NEEDED for 4 laboratory assistants for the biomedical research core. Must have some knowledge in molecular biology methods & basic laboratory techniques. Laboratory course work in Chemistry or Biochemistry necessary to work in protein structure core. Computer experience useful. 3 office assistants are also needed for the biomedical research core. Must have basic knowledge of IBM & Mac systems & general office skills; data entry, filing, copying & some finance. If interested please call Nicole Brantley at 647-4776. 25 i, ater U. CHILD CARE FOR TODDLER. School yr. commitment, flex. hrs., competitive pay, ref. 662-4540. CHILD CARE Energetic exp. non-smoker needed for 2 children in NE Ann Arbor. Hrs. 2:30-6:30 p.m. Mon. through Fri. excellent pay, ref. req. 994-9443. CHILD CARE Tues./Wed. eves. References, transportation required. Near Fords Lake. 487-2980. CHILD CARE needed M. W. F. a.m. N. Campus 1 or 2 great kids! $5-7 764-3103. CHILD CARE in our home for 6 week old. Prefer major in relevant field. TuesfThur. 12- 6 p.m. beginning October. Must have own transportation and be very reliable. 663-7784. CHILDCARE live-in, live-out, job share. Energetic, enthusiastic, healthy, neat, non- smoking childcare provider for our four children 9, 8, 6 and 2. Provide safe activity packed, fun, loving childcare in our home. Transport children to school, activities, etc. Prepare meals, light housekeeping, homework assistance, etc. Live-in will be provided private lower-level bed and sitting room and bathroom, food and weekly pay. Live-out will negotiate, hourly, daily, weekly rate. Will also consider job sharing. Childcare experience necessary! Position required ASAP. Call Denise at 769-0239. EXPERIENCED SITTER needed for 2 & 4 yr. olds. 6-8 hrs. evenings/wknds. Trans. & ref. necessary. No allergies or fear of dog. Call 747-9333 after 2 p.m. EXPERIENCED, RESPONSIBLE, caring person to watch 5 yr. old & 2 yr. old 3 after- noons/I eve./wk. $7/hr.T665-2803. FUN BABYSITTERS WANTED 5-10 hrs./ wk. $7/hr. 3 children. 975-9473. GREAT BABYSITTER needed for 2 & 1/2 yr. old twins (and sometimes a 6 yr. old). Seeking RESPONSIBLE, creative, energetic person for Mon. eve. & Wed. a.m. Oc- casional other times. Close to campus. Fun family. Good $. Refs. please. 998-0647. MOTHER'S HELPER Seek kind, patient, & playful helper/sitter for our adorable 2 & 1/ 2 & 1 yr. old children. Approx. 10 hrs./wk. flex. schedule. Need car. 662-3560. NANNIES NEEDED exp. in childcare. Top salary & benefits. F/T or PIT. A2 area. Nanny Network 313/998-2500. NANNY for 1 & 4 girls, 45 hrs., N.E. AA. Non-smoker; own car. Lt. housekeeping. Experience. 313/568-5412 (days); 741-9763 (nights). PART-TIME CHILD CARE needed. Tues. 5:30p.m. - 8p.m. References required, ex- perience preferred. 975-0434. TEACHING ASSISTANTS for preschool center near Ann Arbor. Need reliable car and be able to lift up to 40 lbs. Fun and respon- sible job, 6 to 15 hours per week. 665-5175. Awar, has the a remaining largel Continued from Page 1A radar. Eight F- 1 authority since Clinton expanded the terday from Hollo southern no-fly zone last week and in New Mexico t ordered cruise missile strikes against other land- and Iraqi air defenses, senior Pentagon offi- planes in the gul cials indicated they were in no rush to armed with cruis launch another attack. directed to the In They said the United States could Diego Garcia, wh afford to wait and review options since nearer to Iraq than U.S. and allied pilots still were not seri- Guam where the ously threatened by Iraq's weakened air for last week's ass defense system. In addition to i Also, given repeated U.S. efforts and claiming toi since the 1991 Persian Gulf War to sup- zones, Saddam h, press Iraq's ability to shoot at allied American warni planes, administration officials want to reinforce the air be confident that whatever they try next.L .N h will have some I[thinkIhe is lasting effect.n The United drive a States also re m a i n s wedgebetweenus engaged in ur intense behind- UIUU our allies. dded advantage of y invisible to Iraqi 7s were ordered yes- oman Air Force Bash o join more than 200 sea-based U.S. war- f region. Four B-52s se missiles also were rdian Ocean island of ich would bring them n the Pacific island of bombers were based sault. firing on U.S. aircraft. intrude on the no-fly as defied an explicit ng not to repair or defenses struck last AUDITIONS-The UM Gilbert & Sullivan Society is now holding auditions for our fall productions. For more info. contact Mary @ 313/366-4942. week by I American cruise missiles. Defense offi. cials report at. least half of the eight antiaircraff missile sites that were hit have been reconstitut- ed with spare radar batteris - and other sal- vaged parts. I 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. F55981. FREE BRIDGE LESSONS NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY 637 Dennison Hall Mondays 7-9 starting 9/23 sponsored by the UJM Bridge Club and the American Contract Bridge League for more info call Ed at 971-5628, e-mail dwaugh@umich.edu, or http://www.umich.edu/ -bridgeum/ WIN COLLEGE scholarships, trips, money, furs, promotional contracts & more. Learn the secrets to winning all types of pageants from scholarship pageants to talent, fitness & beauty pageants. Free call 1-800/484-8233 pin #5009. tAL1A] h + A l{e -'s" e- e- - the-scenes diplomatic con-D sultations to Def garner more backing from key European and Middle Eastern allies than Washington received for last week's cruise missile volleys in southern Iraq. That assault involved 44 cruise mis- siles launched by warships and B-52 bombers from several hundred miles away against only air defense targets. Any new attacks likely would be more widespread. They also are likely to include bomb- ing runs over Iraq by strike aircraft, since Saddam is moving his air defense equipment around, thereby making it tougher to target with cruise missiles, which have to be programmed before launch. Moreover, aircraft like the F-117 can deliver a greater punch than cruise mis- siles, dropping bombs that can pene- trate the hardened, underground bunkers that are the nerve center of Saddam's air defense system. The stealthy F-117, used against tar- gets in Baghdad at the start of the gulf Clinton ordered last week's cruise_ missile attack, along with a widening of the southern no-fly zone, to exact a price for Saddam's thrust into Kurdish areas of northern Iraq, and to con- strain Iraq's ability to mount military, operations against Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. As often inthe past, U.S. officials' said yesterday they had no way of knowing for certain what was motivat- ing Saddam to confront the United States again. They suspected the Iraqi leader is probably hoping that by pro- voking the United States to attempt more strikes in the absence of strong allied support, he will succeed in split- ting up the international coalition against him. "I think he is trying to drive a wedge between us and our allies,' Perry said. But the secretary added the coalitionl, that fought together in 1991 to oui Saddam's forces from Kuwait "is funcs tioning and functioning effectively." - William Perry erse secretary SCOREKEEPERS- Ann Arbor's premiere sports bar has immediate opening for wait & floor staff-No experience necessary. For position in fun atmosphere with flexible hours submit applications to Eric at 310 Maynard. SEEKING DRIVER, safe car, 6-8 hrs. weekly for after school pick up of 2 children, $6/hr. 971-0953. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for an infer- ility clinic. Male students or grads. 20-40 s. old are sought. Donors are paid $60 per ble donation. Write AP , P.O. Box ~74, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. SHORT ORDER & prep cooks. Great pay & working conditions. Free meals. Apply at Old Town Tavem 122 W. Liberty. SNMP DEVELOPER needed to design cus- tom MIB and implement agent. C++/Java, Win95. 5-10 hrs./wk. Send resume to hr@xfer.com or fax 913-4205. SOFTWARE SALES. Part-time software sales, flex. hrs., mktg. background and com- puter knowledge helpful. Will train motivated individual, daytime hrs. near Briarwood Mall. is hourly plus commission. Send resumes /Mr. Joseph 1000 Victors Way Suite 300, Ann Arbor 48108. SUBSTITUTES needed for early childhood center. Work according to your schedule. Fun job working with young children. Call 668-0887. SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS needed, $5.50 an hr. Early childhood exp. or background with children pref., immediate openings. Per- ry Nursery School, 3770 Packard, 677-8130. INDAY RECEPTIONIST. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. nswer phones & take messages. Study while you work! 971-0990. TEACHER NEEDED in accredited pre- school program. Exp. working w/ pres- choolers req. 8-10 hrs./wk. Mon. &/or Fri. $5.50-$6.50/hr. Call 663-9753. TEACHERS NEEDED for: Gymnastics, Swim, Tennis, Basketball, Art, Dance and Drama with Community Education & Recreation. Weekday, evening & weekend hours available. Classes begin 9/21/96. Call immediately: 994-2300 ext. 233 or 288. APS. LEPHONE INTERVIEWERS needed for public health research projects. Office is located in downtown Ann Arbor. Paid parking. Flexible scheduling. Evening and weekend hours. 12 to 15 hours per week. EOE. Apply at I.T.S., 209 E. Washington, Second Floor, Ann Arbor. YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS Looking for a business opportunity with low capital investment and high retum potential? If so, contact 764-4622. No phone interviewers. child care AFTER SCHOOL child care for 11 year old in Ann Arbor home. Car for school pick up needed. Mon., Wed., Fri. 3:30-5:30. N-smkr. References. 332-8702. AFTER SCHOOL childcare for 2 girls ages 7 & 12. Own car needed. Errands, homework, some housekeeping. $6.50/hr. 995-2814. AFTERSCHOOL CHILDCARE seek dep. exp. person to care for one 10 yr. old child tn our A2 home. N-smkr. Own car req. 3:30- 7:00 p.m. 3 days/wk. Refs. req. Call 747- 8960. ***FREE TRIPS AND CASH!*** Find out how hundreds of student representatives are already earning FREE TRIPS and LOTS OF CASH with America's #1 Spring Break company! Sell only 15 trips and travel free! Cancun, Bahamas, Mazatlan, Jamaica or Florida! CAMPUS MANAGER POSITIONS ALSO AVAILABLE. Call Now! TAKE A BREAK STUDENT TRAVEL (800)95-BREAK! ALUMNI SELLING pair of season football tkts. for '96 home games. Pkg. or single games avail. Dan 770/736-9273. BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION for long time local fan, need MSU-UM football tickets. Call 677-6660 or page 201-2349. FOOTBALL TICKETS Full season, great seats. 332-1273. MI @ COLORADO-football Ticketman ...........303/430-1111 MI @ Colorado--football--MI @ Colorado MICHIGAN FOOTBALL tickets for sale 615/662-3769. Ask for Ted. MICHIGAN versus Boston College tickets needed. 2 pairs or 4 seats together. call James at 332-4858. PRIME TICKET SERVICE Visa/MC/ AMEX/ $$ buy/sell all Michigan*Lions*Wings*Amos*Boss*Phant- om. 800/500-8497. ROMANTIC ESCAPE - Cozy log cabins, $54-75 nightly, incl. hot tub, canoes, & more. Traverse City. 616/276-9502. FEM. TO SHARE RM. in nice condo near U-M, on bus line. $350hno. 668-0891. FEMALE WANTED - to share 2 bdrm. apt. Walk to campus. Call 810/288-0529. LEASE AVAILABLE in large double apt. 4th & William $300 neg. Call: 741-1279. ONE BDRM. in a 1g. 2 bdrm. apt. avail. Less than 5 min. walk to campus. 829 Tappan #302. Call 769-9255. Rent neg. ASSESS Continued from Page 1A Kurds and Hussein's ruling clique from the center of the country, risked making it clear to Hussein that he has a free hand to restore his suzerainty over the north. The Shiites are already firmly under his thumb. A U.S. diplomat acknowledged yes- terday that the goal of "Operation Provide Comfort;" as the U.S. and allied mission in Kurdistan has been called, is not only to help Kurds but, more impor- tantly, to keep Hussein in line. "The U.S. goal there is also to con- strain Saddam Hussein. It's very diffi- cult to help people who won't them- selves be helped," the diplomat said. But if the lightning progress of Hussein's Kurdish allies across north- ern Iraq is any indication, Hussein was not constrained by the initial U.S. attacks in the south. Already yesterday it appeared that the resolve of U.S. allies to continue the military mission in the north had been badly shaken by Hussein's successful gambit. Turkey, where most of the U.S. and European aircraft charged with keeping Hussein's air force out of the skies over Kurdistan are based, signaled strongly that it wanted out. Saudi Arabia had already made it clear that it wanted no part in the current attacks, refusingto let U.S. planes base there. Turkey has used the current crisis to send its own troops across its bordey into Kurdistan to root out Kurds fight- ing for independence from Turkey. Iran, for the time being, appears to be stand, ing by, though it had troops in the region itself just over a month ago to help its Kurdish allies. "It became apparent that the duties and responsibilities of Provide Comfort have to be looked at again in the light of the recent developments," Omer Akbel, ministry spokesperson for the Turkish government, said yesterday before news of the Iraqi attack. Undaunted, U.S. officials said they would dictate the playing field. "We don't necessarily need to play on Saddam's turf," the U.S. diplomat said. "But the goal of restraining and containing Saddam Hussein remains." TIOS DELIVERS Ann Arbor's best Mexican style food. Call 761-6650. Tios Mexican Restaurant 333 E. Huron. BABYSITTER/DRIVER for Mon. & Wed. 3:30-4:30 & Sat. 8 A.M.-12:30 P.M. Call Elayne @ 747-7333. BABYSITTER-we need an occasional sitter this year for our 3 NW A2 kids (beginning with UM football Sats.). If you are experienced, have a car, don't smoke and want $7/hr., give us a call 763-1091. BABYSITTER NEEDED for Alex 1 1/2 at SPRING BREAK reps. wanted Acapulco, Nassau, Cancun. Call Dan at Regency Travel 665-6122. 209 S. State Street. STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con- tinental voucher & AMEX card. Linda at Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. WANT TO BUY 1 student season football ticket. Call 517/694-5612 eves. WANTED 2 good Season U of M tix. Will pay reasonable price. Call Thom at 810/642- 8700. Leave message. WORLDWIDE LOW air fares. Reserve tl~t" R Ctllo",..o P a_ _ R tro r- _rvp ADOPT Loving mom & dad w/3 yr. old little girl wish to share their hearts & home w/ newborn. Lots of love, happiness & security. Expenses pd. Call Debby & Larry 1-800/989- 2246 'es TIOS NEEDS YOU! Counter help, part- rime Will train Good wages, excellent hours. THE FISH DOCTORS b quarium sale! back to school a- p m