The~ Mic'higa~n daily -Fridav. Sentembepr 13. 1996-7 _ ATIN OR LD1 - I t4 i &nate foes block ban on poison chemical weapons . The Washington Post WASHINGTON - Facing the prospect of rejection of a prized arms control agreement, the Clinton administration was forced yesterday to accept indefinite postponement of a Senate rati- fication vote on an ambitious global treaty to ban poison gas weapons. The treaty, known as the Chemical Weapons Convention, will not resurface in the current Congress, Republican leaders and administra- tion officials said. Whether it can be revived next year probably depends on the outcome of the Nov. 5 election because Republican presi- dential nominee Bob Dole joined the opposition ranks at the last minute. Dole, when he was Senate majority leader, Chemical treaty vote may return next ye ar had brokered an earlier agreement aimed at facilitating ratification of the accord. But this week he endorsed the arguments of treaty critics that its ban on the manufacture or possession of poison gas weapons would not be enforceable or verifiable, and that it would subject U.S. chemi- cal manufacturers to intrusive searches by inter- national inspectors. The outcome of yesterday's maneuvering rep- resented a defeat for the administration and a repudiation of its Republican predecessor. The treaty had broad bipartisan support for more than a decade, was signed by the United States during the Bush administration's final weeks, and appeared headed for easy ratification until the past few weeks, when a relentless opposition campaign began to pick up momentum. Administration officials said they were still confident of ratification until late Wednesday night, when Frank Gaffney - a former Pentagon hard-liner who runs a one-man think tank here called the Center for Security Policy and who has been an indefatigable critic of the treaty - began faxing out a letter from Dole urging his tormer Senate colleagues to vote no. As a result. the treaty, which has been ratified by 63 countries, is likely to go into force without U.S. participation. Only two more countries among the 1 60 that have signed the treaty need to ratify it in order for it to take effect. If that happens without U.S. participation, senior officials said, the United States w ould be precluded from planning or participating in the international inspection system, which is designed to make sure that nobody is making or selling prohibited chemicals. Moreover, the treaty prov ides that. without U.S. ratification, S chemical manu urers would be banned fom selling in most worlid markets. The (hemical iianu facturers Association, representing such industry giants as E.l. duPont tic \emours & Co.. Dow Chemical Co. and Monsnto (o.. lobbied hard for ratification. Tihey argued that S60 billion a year in export sales could be jeopardized if the United States does not participate in the ireaty. The big chem- ical companies said they were prepared to accept the m ndatorv challenge inspections called for in the treaty. hut treaty opponents said the inspections would impose an unfair and perhaps unconstitutional burden on small manufacturers of legitimate compounds. PART TIME - FLEXIBLE HOURS. WIDE WORLD SPORTS Center hiring Local wine distributor looking for wine eve. facility & concession personnel & con- merchandiser. Hourly wage & miles need cession supervisor. $5-10/hr. 913-4625. k own transportation Steve 930-6832. PART-TIME FILE CLERK for Ann Arbor law firm. Send fax/resurme to Bamett & Rich. S Detroit, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Fax 313/ -1989. PART-TIME counter help wanted. Week- days 2-6 p.m. Sat. 8-1. Apply in person at 332 Maynard. PRESCHOOL TEACHER, AAECE or CDA, 13K+ exp., full benefits, EOE, minorities encouraged to apply, immediate opening. Perry Nursery School, 3770 Packard, 677-8130. SALON NEEDS receptionist. Other duties included. $8/hr. 662-4202. SCOREKEEPERS- Ann Arbor's premiere spoils bar has immediate opening for wait & fipor staff-No experience necessary. For sition in fun atmosphere with flexible ours submit applications to Eric at 310 Maynard. 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, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. SHORT ORDER & prep cooks. Great pay & working conditions. Free meals. Apply at Old Town Tavern 122 W. Liberty. SNMP DEVELOPER needed to design cus- 9~M MIB and implement agent. C++/Java, in95. 5-10 hrs./wk. Send resume to '@xfer.com or fax 913-4205. SPRING BREAK '97. Sell trips, earn cash, & go free. STS is hiring campus representa- tives/group organizers to promote trips to Cancun, Jamaica, & Fla. Call 800/648-4849 for info. on joining America's #1 Student Tour Operator. 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 th children pref., immediate openings. Per- Nursery School, 3770 Packard, 677-8130. 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 9/21196. Call immediately: 994-2300 ext. 233 or 288. AAPS. , LEPHONE INTERVIEWERS needed r 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. TIOS NEEDS YOU! Counter help, part- time. Will train. Good wages, excellent hours, a nice place to work. Apply at 333 E. Huron or call 761-6650. TRANSLATOR Local manufacturer of machine vision software has an immediate part-time position ra translator to convert user documentation Wpm 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 hrs. per week and can be done off-site. Compensation is based on a negotiable per-page fee. interested, fax or mail resume to: gral Vision, Inc. 38700 Grand River Ave. Farmington Hills, MI 48335 Aun: 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 week tutoring a NW A2 fourth grader on sic reading and math skills? If interested, ave a car and want $10/hr., give us a call 763-1091. FLEX. HRS. All shifts. Crew & asst. mgrs. Apply at YES Sandwich Cafe in the Michigan Union. WANTED lab asst. to maintain research database, order lab supplies, & do library searches. Work study or temp. hourly. $6.25/ hr, 10 hrs./wk. Call 647-3908 to apply.. WANTED: Psychology, education, or speech/language major. Undergrad./Grad. Needed to work Tues. & Thurs. afternoons. 42 hrs./wk. With special needs, language elayed 5 yr. old child. Will train. Pay $9/hr. Call Kim 764-5203 work or 665-8473 eves. WORK IN THE GREAT OUTDOORS! Positions now available at A-1 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. YOUNG ENTREPRENEURS Looking for a business opportunity with low capital investment and high return potential? If so, contact 764-4622. No phone interviewers. child care * Y AFTER SCHOOL childcare for 2 girls ages 7 & 12. Own car needed. Errands, homework, some housekeeping. $6.50/hr. 995-2814. 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. BABYSITER WANTED 6 and 3 yr. old boys. 12:30 to 5:00, 1 to 5 days/week. 996- 2876, after 6. BABYSITTER NEEDED for Alex 1 1/2 at his home 2 mornings & one evening each week. Call 741-8113. BABYSITTER NEEDED for 2 young children 3 aftemoons/wk. + some Sat, eves. Own trans., n-smkr. Call 998-0432. 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 I or 2 great kids! $5-7 764-3103. CHILD CARE in our home for 6 week old. Prefer major in relevant field. Tues./Thur. 12- 6 p.m. beginning October. Must have own transportation and be very reliable. 663-7784. 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/ eve./wk. $7/hr. 665-2803. 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 P/T. 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. RESPONSIBLE CARING childcare provider w/ own trans. needed for 2-3 hrs. afterschool for 8 & 10 yr. old girls. NE Ann Arbor. $7+/hr. Call 761-9813 after 6 p.m. 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. 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, i. hot tub, canoes, & more. Traverse City. 616/276-9502. 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 your Christmas space early. Regency Travel 209 S. State St. 665-6122. AUDITIONS-The UM Gilbert & Sullivan Society is now holding auditions for our fall productions. For more info. contact Mary @ 313/366-4942. 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. 1-55981. 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. FEM. TO SHARE RM. in nice condo near U-M, on bus line. $350/mo. 668-0891. LEASE AVAILABLE in large double apt. 4th & William $300 neg. Call: 741-1279. Hitting the road Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole celebrates with supporters in Montpelier, Ohio, during a rally yesterday. Dole and vice presidential nominee Jack Kemp will campaign in Michigan today. Clinton, Dole discuss debates Negotiators hammer out details of presidential debates WASHINGTON (AI) Negotiators for Bob Dole and President Clinton opened debate talks yesterday with the Dole camp proposing four one-on-one presidential faceoffs and two vice presidential exchanges. The Clinton team did not immediate- ly respond to the Dole proposal and negotiators broke off talks after about two hours to await a recommendation by the Commission on Presidential Debates on whether Ross Perot should be part of the debates. vately financed, nonpartisan commis- s0on has sponsored presidential debates since 1988. Perot's national coordinator Russell Verney was excluded from yesterday's session, but irched into the meetinog room uninvited. By that time. the meet- ing was already breaking up. The Dole campaign does not want Perot to share the debate stage; the Clinton camp does. The commission has proposed presi- dential debates ftr Sept. 25 in St. Louis, Oct. 9 in St. Petersburg, Fla., and Oct. 16 in San DiegoCalifI It proposed a vice presidential debate for Oct. 2 in [lartford. Conn. The candidates are not bound by the tor-, proposed an additional presidential and an additional vice presidential debate. All six debates would occur baet n Sept. 25 and Oct. 25. "We believe the debates should be one hour in length and have a single moder- ator, Campbell said. "President Clinton is a world-class debater; someone who can charm the birds out of trees. We will be hard-presed to understand why the president would not want to debate Bob Dole, one-oil-one. four times." Clinton's chiet negotiator, Commerce Secretary Mickey Kantor, told reporters