The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, February 11, 1997 - 7 CAMP WAYNE (sister half of brother/sister camp, Northeastem Pennsylvania, 623-8/201 97). Have the most memorable summer of your life! Directors needed for Drama, Fine Arts, Sports, Camping/Nature. Counselors for: Tennis, Sports, Golf, Self-Defense, Gymnastics, Dance, Cheerleading, Ropes, Guitar, Batik, Sculpture, Drawing/Painmg, screen, Ceramics, Swimming (WSI .ferred), Sailing, Waterskiing. Other staff: 'ver/Video/Photo by, Head Chef and Assistant Chef, en positions, Office personnel. On Campus Interviews February 19th. Call 800/279-3019 for information. COLLEGE STUDENT WANTED for a home-based program for my 5 yr. old autistic son. Special Ed. or Psych ma ors preferred, but not necessary. Training will be available. Must have own trans rtation. Excellent pay and hours. Please caTmat 800/422-3902 ext. 206 between 8:30 and 5:30. CRUISE & LAND-TOUR EMPLOY- NT - Industry offers Travel (Hawaii, ico, Caribbean), incomparable benefits, & good pay. Find out how to start the ap- plication process now! Cruise Employment Services provides the answers. Call 800-276- 4928 Ext. C55984 (We are a research & publishing company). CRUISE LINE entry level on board posi- tions avail., benefits, summer/year-round. 612/643-4333. DAYCARE NEEDS organizing, cooking, baking, cleaning, baby care, pet care, and fun activities. $6-8/hr. 996-4847. LI HELPERS WANTED part-time. fur. to start. Dimo's Deli & Donuts. -7944. DRIVERS NEEDED: Help deliver flowers to the sweethearts of Ann Arbor on Valentine's Day. Own car & good knowledge of Ann Arbor required. Call 971- 8558.r EARLY CHILDHOOD substitutes needed by NAEYC accredited center. Work accord- ing to your availability. Children ages 0 to 5. Call 668-0887. GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTORS needed for preschool girls & competitive classes. st be enthusiastic & have own sportation. Call 971-1667. INTERNATIONAL MUSIC booking agen- cy seeks interns. Call Jay 995-5777. LEGAL SECRETARY: Ypsi. law firm w/ civil trial practice seeks experienced legal secretary proficient in Word Perfect for Win- dows to fill full-time position. Contact Jim Farrell at Smillie and Assoc. 313/481/1111. LOOKING FOR THAT PERFECT JOB IN ALL THE WRONG PLACES??? Look no further mon ami...work for the Michigan Daily and your troubles will be a er. Now hiring for CIRCULATION NAGER for Fall 1997. Salary-paid, approx. 20 hrs./wk., & good times. Stop by 420 Maynard St., upstairs in the Student Publications Bldg., & fill out an application. Deadline: February 21. MACKINAC ISLAND Resort Hotel seeking summer staff - front desk, dining room, kitchen, maintenance and housekeepin. Contact, Iroquois Hotel Winter Office (in Ann Arbor) at 327-9660. MORE THAN JUST SUMMER EMPLOYMENT! Camp counselors needed for a private, residential camp in the beautiful Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. We are 1king for people with a dedication to ldren, a passion for the field of expertise, and a desire to share it. Your expertise could be in any of the following areas: Computers, Circus, Basketball, Magic, Volleyball, Tennis, Swimming, Sailing, Fishing, Water- Skiing, Theater, Dance, Video, Creative Writing, ESL, Soccer, Cooking, Radio, Rock Music, Golf, Rollerblading, Skateboarding, Rocketry, Newspaper, Fine Arts, Creative Crafts. Please Call 1-800-CAMP Ask for Dan or Nigel. NOW HIRING - part-time cooks for Winter h- Flexible hours. Great pay - meal dis- mit - no experience necessary. Apply at Scorekeepers 310 Maynard. 995-0100. OFFICE HELP part-time. Filing, phone, & general office duties. For appointment, call 741-9663. PA. COED CHILDRENS' ovemight camp seeks staff. Swim, radio, golf, sailing, tennis, sports, & general. Call Mark at 60/941-0128 for an application or to schedule local interviews. Write: Mark Glaser, 16 Gum Tree Lane, Lafayette Hill, PA 19444. e-mail: mglaser@aol.com PART TIME SALES REPS WANTED ' d the way into the 21st century" with our yright "slogan" sweatshirt. Be your own boss, earn extra money fast. Send for details to: The 21st Century Group 332 Bleecker St. - D40 NYC NY 10014 QTP will hiring 3-4 UM students to fill sum- mer positions in the following areas: Ann Arbor, Clarkston, Sterling Heights, Utica, Novi, Plymouth, Lk Orion, and West Bloomfield. Build your resume extensively while gaining valuable experience in Marketing, Management Sales, and * neral Business. Earn $8,0-$9,000. sitions are limited and will be filling quickly. For more information cal QTP at 1 8001356-5987. RECEPTIONIST Part-time position available with Property Management firm. Position requires 8 to 15 hours per week with Saturday hours. Please aply in person or send resume to Wilson White Co., Inc., 608 Packard, Suite 2, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Equal Opportunity Employer. STUDENT CO-OP OPENINGS in cor- ter support! Mostly software ubleshooting, some hardware, some network. Great opportunity to learn about computer networkig! Flexible, min. 20 hrs./ week. $7-5/hr. depending on qualifications. Contact 763-0462 for application. STUDENT NURSE/AIDE- Will train. Call for details. Part/full-time. 769-5942. SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS: Camp Michigania, UM Alumni Famil Camp in Boyne City, June 7-Aug. 30. Opnigs mn s & Crafts/ Ceramics, Boating, Child re, Tennis, Horseback Riding, Nature & more! Must be at least 18. Contact Allison Schuster, Asst. Director, 616-582-9191, 03006 Camp Sherwood Rd., Boyne City, MI 49712. SUMMER IN THE MOUNTAINS PANAMA CITY BEACH, FLORIDA Blue Star Camps: needed fun, mature & SPRING BREAK - GOTTA BE THERE! responsible individuals who love kids & the Due to excess hotel rooms being available, outdoors, to fill positions as Cabin Coun- go for half price for 5 or 7 night stays selors & Activity Specialists. To apply con- beginning March 1st or 2nd. Trip package tact our offices: (954) 963-4494, or e-mail: includes lodging, all taxes, and welcome info@bluestarcamps.com come see us 2/19 at party. Celebrate spring break with MTV on the Summer Job Fair! the beach! Immediate reservations 1-800- SUMMER JOBS IN COLORADO SUNCHASE. Offer expires February 16th. Large resort in beautiful Rocky Mountains Don't Delay! seeks lifeguards, food service, maint., front desk, counselor, etc. Snow Mountain Ranch, YMCA of the Rockies. Interviews Wed. 2/12 M at the Crawfoot Room in the Student Union. 0.111 Call (970) 887-2152 for an interview. Walk- t ins welcome. - . - . THE WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY/Hut- zel Hospital Infertility Program is seeking healthy women to be egg donors for infertile couples. Participation would require frequent office visits and laboratory evaluations, daily injections, ultrasounds and a minor surgical procedure to remove donated eggs. The en- tire process is strictly confidential, and finan- cial compensation for time and travel expen- ses will be provided. For more information, or to initiate the screening process to be an egg donor, call Merrilie Rousseau, BS, RNC, Program Coordinator at (810) 558-1100, ext. 4016. TUXEDO WORLD HIRING full & part- time up to $10/hr., benefits available. If you are an enthusiastic & hard working individual please apply at: 893 W. Eisenhower Pkwy., Ann Arbor, or call: 313/663-5780 for appointment. UNIX SYSTEMS Administration & Web Development. Extremely competitive salary & benefits. Fax resume to: DCCI, 810/666- 9121. WANTED: SUBJECTS for psychology ex- periment on perception at U of M. The ex- periment takes 1 1/2 hours, pays $15. To qualify, must be a native English speaker, have vision correctible to 20/20 & be right- handed. Call 763-3127. WORK STUDY STUDENTS NEEDED! Must have basic course work in a science major (biology, chemistry etc.) Laboratory experience not required. Duties include data entry, filing, faxing, placing orders, and res- tocking of supplies. If interested contact Nicole Brentley at 647-4776. Clinton pushes educational standards Los Angeles Times ANNAPOLIS, Md - President Clinton tried to head off grassroots resistance to his education initiatives yesterday, saying that America's chil- dren will be hurt and "the rest of the country will pay the price" unless schools begin administering nationwide tests of student performance. The president made his most fervent and lengthy pitch yet for his proposal to institute standardized tests to ensure that all fourth-graders have learned to read and all eighth-graders are profi- cient in math. The proposal, perhaps the most con- troversial of Clinton's broad package of education initiatives, has been criticized by some educators and politicians as an attempt by the federal government to usurp state control over education. "That's nonsense," Clinton said in response. He accused his opponents of hiding behind a "very small fig leaf," and suggested the only way U.S. stu- dents will be able to catch up to those in other industrialized countries is if peo- ple stop talking about states' rights and start giving students national tests that reflect global standards. "I say, from Maryland to Michigan to Montana, reading is reading and math is math," Clinton told members of the Maryland Legislature gathered in the ornate House chamber of the state capi- tol. "No school board is in charge of algebra, and no state legislature can SPRING BREAK PANAMA City Beach Florida. Sandpiper Beacon Beach Resort 3 pools, 1 indoor pool, huge beachside hot tub, suites up to 10 people, Tiki beach bar, home of the world's largest keg party! Free info: 800/488-8828. www.sandpiperbeacon.com SPRING BREAK South Padre Island $118.50/person. 6 nights, 7 days on the beach, quad occ.' + tax. 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Although Clinton made a point of describing his quick trip to Annapolis as an effort to persuade states to support his education priorities, he was clearly preaching to the converted in Maryland, where both legislative houses are con- trolled by Democrats and state officials already are pursuing education initia- tives similar to the president's. "He has very little to sell here," said Nancy Grasmick, Maryland's state super- intendent of schools, adding that the president's proposals are "totally congru- ent with what Maryland is doing." But the president clearly would receive mixed reviews on his testing proposal in many other state capitals, and in Washington the GOP-controlled Congress has already expressed skepti- cism. "This is not the federal government's job. It's the state's job," said Robert Calfee, a professor of psychology at Stanford University charged with devel- oping statewide academic standards. CHILD CARE in my A2 home. Full-time or 2 part-timers for 6 month old. 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Endless Summer Tours 1- -234-7007. o y D8 DRIVE YOURSE F & SAV. 1 ingBra LAST CALL"' Panama City Beach,,, From $129 7/nights Beachfront Daily Free Drink Parties Walk to Best Bars!!! Group Discounts Available!!! Endless Summer Tours 1-800-234-7007 V/MO/DISC/AMEX TOKYO (AP) - Stirring up new ill will with authorities on Okinawa, the U.S. military acknowledged yesterday that its jets mistakenly fired 1,520 ura- nium bullets during shooting practice near the island, then waited a year before notifying Japan. U.S. officials said the bullets posed no environmental or health threat. It wasn't clear why they waited until Jan. 16 to tell Japan about the gunfire at a firing range on an uninhabited coral island in late 1995 and early 1996. But the incidents occurred at the height of tensions on Okinawa over the heavy U.S. military presence there and the rape of a schoolgirl by three U.S. servicemen. Okinawa's governor was furious at the delay in potification. "They keep saying they will make improvements, but it never happens," Masahide Ota said. "When I start wondering how much longer this kind of thing is going to con- tinue, I feel miserable - really depressed." Foreign Ministry official Sadayuki news confer- ence only after the report of the bullets first sur- faced yesterday in The Washington Times. Hayashi said the delayed notification was as regrettable as the accident itself. But the Japanese government also stalled the disclosure, hastily calling a "These i con ventoa weapons.. -- Lt. Col. Ke U.S. militaryC Japan also failed to tell local Okinawan officials until Lt. Col. Kevin Krejcarek told The Associated Press. Some Japanese were not convinced. "This is outrageous. The U.S. mili- tary often tries cover-ups. This time, the notifi- are cation came so late. It is insult- Na ing," Meisuke Kohiruimaki, r who works with vin Krejcarek a group oppos- ing the U.S. mil- spokesperson itary presence in Japan, told Asahi. The uranium bullets are not classi- fied as nuclear weapons. But Japan, the only nation to sustain an atomic bomb- ing, is extremely cautious about any- thing radioactive. Uranium, rounds are not allowed on training ranges in Japan under U.S. Marine Corps policy, although they are used during exercises on approved ranges in the United States. after the news- paper report, the Asahi newspaper said in yesterday's editions. The U.S. government said the bullets pose no health or environmental dan- ger, and that they are only as radioactive as old color TV sets. "These are conventional weapons, the gunnery range is isolated, and we felt this should not have caused undue concern," U.S. military spokesperson SUMMER CHARTERS. Athens $759, Frankfurt $589, London $449, Paris $579, Rome $679, Shannon $409. Restrictions -oly. 209 S. nSta St 65-622 *Jamaka *ranama Ciy *Cal!u foryFree *Padre *ayham ~ If Paet! 1-800-420-7710 WINTER ESCAPE- Cozy log cabins $54- 75 nightly. Incl. outdoor hot tub & ski trails. Traverse City 616/276-9502. TIMING Continued from Page 1 the office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs. "I think that it's a valiant attempt to celebrate the different ethnicities and cultures here," Eden said. "But I ticipation of student-of-color groups they already made a mistake in not involving students of minority groups (in their programming)," said Jeannie Harris, speaker for the Black Student Union. LSA senior Adam Schlifke, one of the week's organizers, said the plan- think where it may be slightly flawed is the lack of overall student support or participa- tion;' he said. Some student leaders said they felt the I hope they do Well=" - Roberto Rodriguez La Voz Mexicana co-chair ning committee included people of all back- grounds. "I sent out an e-mail to every student group on cam- pus," Schlifke said. dent groups at Winterfest and encour- aged their involvement. Among the sponsors of the cultur- al-awareness fest are the Michigan Student Assembly, the Business School, Hillel, and the University Activities Center. The event also has several corpo- rate sponsors. Eden said the lack of minority student groups as sponsors is unusual for an event promoting diversity. "You look at the sponsors, and it's like, 'wow,"' Eden said. One student said his group was approached to participate in Diversity Days, but could not be involved due to other committments. "We had stuff going on all last week," said LSA senior Roberto Rodriguez, a co-chair of La Voz Mexicana. "It's not a good time for us." "I hope they do well," Rodriguez said. A SOUTH PADRE ISLAND n - e -"- -----f *. PER PRSON DEENDING ON ESTIlA1MN JBREAK DATES ILENGTH OFSAY H SPRING BREAK '97. Cancun, Jamaica, & Bahamas!i! 7/nights w/air from $399. En- joy Daily Free Drink Parties, No Cover @ Best Bars. Group discounts!i! Endless Sum- mer Tours 1-800-234-7007. JUDY'S BED & BREAKFAST- Near campus. Phone 662-4812. Open all year. planning committee for Diversity Days could have done more to include minority student groups when orga- nizing the week-long celebration. "I feel that if they really wanted the par- "I met with three of the four (minority) task forces," Schlifke said, referring to the student task forces organized by the Office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs. Schlifke also said he contacted stu- DIVERSITY Continued from Page ± HOUSEMATE NEEDED for 7 bdrm. house. May 97 - May 98. Own room. Great location. Great girls. Call 669-0335. MALE/FEMALE share small home in East Ann Arbor. Non-smoker, cooking, ldry., & prkg. $300/mo. share utils. 971-0735 call after 5 p.m. % pets still must accomplish much more in order to be a true "community." "Our tendency is to stay within or selves, within our community, he! ,Ad. "We do not have, in the inner ense, 'community.' The question v ich 'is before us is how we can for.n a com- munity which is and will remain diverse;" Williams said. Williams said if people continue to regard each other with animosity, the end result could be violence. "I suggest that we take the responsi- bility for making the lines of differ- ences not ones of violence, but ones of love" he said. Students gave positive comments about Williams' presentation. "I really liked it. I think he's very enthusiastic about his subject," said Engineering junior Janet Booth. "He also brings in a lot of different references. It broadens the spectrum a lot and shows a lot of different aspects." LSA first-year Buchsieb said she enjoyed when Williams talked about how "it's not nec- essary that you pick a religion, but that you love humanity itself." Diversity Days continues tomorrow with the theme "Gender Issues." Dr. Susan Peterman, a radiologist from Emory University will speek in Angell Hall Auditorium C at 7 p.m., and the film "The Joy Luck Club" will follow her pre- sentation. student Molly $29 SPRING BREAK package. Boardwalk Beach Resort - Panama Ciy's Spring Break headquarters. Only $29 per person. Restric- tions apply 1-800-224-4853. SUMMER HELP WANTED: Full time, for delivery of packaged ice, part time fall, winter and spring work available. Flexible CAN'T GET OFF CAMPUS for the weekend? Come spend a few hours in Ireland. See the Dept. of Theatre's produc- tion of DANCING AT LUGHNASA this 's., V C'-./M v% min.l 2 n _ r y FISH DOCTOR'S- Everything for your 1 f.