The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 28, 1997 - 7 In the crossfire SPR.ISUM. SUBLET coed house off BE THE BOSS THIS SUMMER! We are Hoover. Prefect for 2-3 people. Ldry., prkg., currently interviewing highly motivated, hard INTERNAT'L ST DENTS rent neg. 764-8683. working college students to fill summer SPRJSUM. SUBLET avail. for 2 bdrms. in management positions. NO experience Summer Internships house Parking spot incl. $290 mo. each or necessary, we provide comprehensive train- for all majors. Aeg. Call Jason 663-5654. mg to qualified applicants.Salary - $400.00 per week plus company profit sharing plan. 2 Call (703)67-48 SPRING & SUMMER SUBLETS positions need to be filled by March 5th, call - mar an@ca pitol.net WilejiswWhite Com anv has 2 and 3 bedroom today for more info. 1800/405-6227. apartments available for lease May-Septem- 'r 1997. Low prices and many great tures. For more information call 995- 9200. Equal Housing Opportunity. SPRING/SUMMER sublet Huge single room! Only 1 blk. from campus. Great rmmte. Covered prkg. Rent neg. Fem. only. Alex 997-9226. SUBLET NOW THROUGH Aug. Rm. in 3 bdrm. apt. $320/mo. Contact Sarah 997- 9503 services 1AAHH! THINK MONEY-Find sources of aid to pay for college, it's there. TechLink Systems msg. 973-8719 x112. SANDI'S WORD PRO: Resumes. Letters. Papers. Theses. Law. Editing. Tapes. Fax. Rush. U-M $ Discount. 426-5217. ANN ARBOR INSTITUTE of Massage Therapy's daily student clinic is avail. for student massages. $25/hr. Call 677-4430 to make an appi. XIOUS ABOUT SCHOOL or ationships? Consultations with a ogist can help. Call Dr. Merton Shill ATTENTION ALL STUDENTS!!! Grants, scholarships, aid available from sponsors!!! No repayments, ever!!! $$$Cash for college $$$for info.: 800/243-2435. RESEARCH REPORTS Largest Ubray of Information in U.S. 19,278 TOPICS - ALL SUBJECTS Order Catalog Today with Visa / MC or COD 8003351; 0222 HOT uNEor (310) 477-8226 Or, rush $2.00 to: Research Assistance 11322 Idaho Ave., #206-RR. Los Angeles, CA 90025 -COLLEGE FINANCIAL AID - Student Financial Services profiles over 200,000+ in- :divjdual scholarships, grants, loans, and fel- lowships-from private & government funding sources. A MUST FOR ANYONE SEEKING SEE MONEY FOR COLLEGE! 1-800-263- 95 Ext. F55984 (We are a research & publishing company). EXPERIENCED TUTOR for stats., econ., math, undergrad/grad level. Call 668-1628. Consuting avail. for research/thesis papers. IMONEY FOR COLLEGE We can help you obtain funding. 1000's of awards avail, to all students. Immed. qualification. Call 800/651- 3393._ NEED HELP WITH ENGLISH Composition? Former professor of English. Tutoring. 761-3427. PHONECARD $0.19/min. Anywhere in . S.A. For information call 1800/279-6566 t. 05000755. WRITE ON... Writing, editing & word processing 996-0566. CAMP COUNSELORS - Outstanding Sum- mer slim down camps on university cam- puses in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania. All specialties: Athletics, Dance, Swim, Aerobics, exercise, Nutrition, Tennis. 7 WEEKS. AGE 20+. 1-800-421-4321, www.campcamelot.com COUNSELOR POSITIONS: Openings in all team & individual sports, also Waterfront- Art-Drama-RN's-Competitive sellers. Lo- cated Berkshire Mts. of Massachusetts -21/2 hrs. from NYC-Boston. Call Greylock for 1 1-800-842-5214/Romaca for girls I.- -2-ROMACA. f i CRUISE & LAND-TOUR EMPLOY- MENT - Industry offers Travel (Hawaii, Mexico, 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 LINES HIRING - Earn $2000+ mo. plus free world travel (Europe, Caribbean, etc.). No exp. necessary. Free Room/Board. Ring (919) 918-7767. DAYCARE NEEDS organizing, cooking, baking,eaning, baby care, pet care, and fun activities. $6-8hr. 996-4847. FUNDRAISER- Motivated groups needed to eam $500+ promoting AT&T, Discover, gas and retail cards. Since 1969, we've helpd thousands of groups raise the money they need. Call Lynn at 800/592-2121 ext. 174. Free CD to qualified callers. HOME HEALTH CARE attendants for lo- cal student. No experience necessary, will train. Great opportunity for Nursing, OT, & Medical students. Very flexible schedules, must have own transportation. Call 930- 6152. HOUSECLEANING - Walking distance to campus, 8 hrs./wk. $9.50, laundry, vacuum, dust. Call 662-7169 after 6 p.m. HOUSEKEEPER/ELDERLY care: live-in for ambulatory 75 yr. old in her Ann Arbor home. Non-smoker, room, board & salary. Kindness a must. Call Cindy 616781-9732 or after 5, 6161781-2602, or leave a message at 971-2205. LARGE INCOME Fast growing company in Ann Arbor has a need for hard working men and women to start immediately. Our company offers great earnings with fast track to management. No experience required. Openings in all departments. $400/WEEK AND UP Start working on your future now Call 677-5531. LSA SUMMER ORIENTATION Peer Ad- visor positions. Full time; pays room & board plus stipend.Must be ISA student. Applica- tions & details available in 1255 Angell. Deadline 3/14/97. Questions? Contact vjreese@umich.edu MAKE THE MONEY you deserve! Excellent earning potential w/ explosive new company. Simple product, corporate giant. Looking for motivated team players. Recor- ded msa. 800/640-2374. MEDICATION RESEARCH studies: The Warner-Lambert/Parke-Davis Community Research Clinic is seeking healthy males, ages 18-55, for participation in medication research studies. Length of study time is aprox. two-four weeks. Research subjects will be paid approx. $500-$1000 for participation. For more information please call Bob at (313)996-7051, Mon.-Fri., 8:00a.m. to 4:00p.m. 2800 Plymouth Rd., Ann Arbor, MI 48105. MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS! Color- Works is currently recruiting on campus for a limited number of summer '97 management positions. Gain hands on experience in managing a business in your hometown. Op- portunities available in Shelby Township, Clinton Township, Livona, Faington Hills, Novi, Grand Rapids,FSaginaw, Kalamazoo, and other areas. Summer earn- ings $7 - $9000. To speak to a campus rep- resentative call 1800-477-1001. NATIONAL PARKS HIRING - Also Beach Resorts, Ranches, Rafting Companies. Up to $12/hour. Nationwide openings. Call (919) 918-7767, ext. R189. NOW HIRING - part-time cooks for Winter term- Flexible hours. Great pay - meal dis- count - no experience necessary. Apply at Scorekeepers310 Maynard. 995-0100. NOW HIRING CIRCULATION MANAGER for next fall. Work for The Michigan Daily-great management ex- perience & excellent pay. Full academic year commitment, but what better atmosphere to work in & eam a salary! You even get your own beeper. Talk about prestige...stop by our office-420 Maynard St., in the Student Publications Bldg. & ask for Eric to fill out an application. Act fast if you want to beat the rush! OFFICE ASSISTANT AND word processing. 70 w.p.m., IBM based. 12 hours/ week, flexible daily times. Call Judith Skiff at 996/8585. OFFICE WORKER. 20 hrs./wk., flex. hours. Friendly environment. Downtown A2. Phone and Mac skills a must. 761-7204. PART-TIME CREDIT ANALYST wanted! Manufacturing co. in suburban A2 has an opening for p.t. assistance in the credit/finan- ce dept. Flex. hrs. 4/hrs. 5 days/wk. Requires finance degree or related field! Alsohe ful: Exp. w/ credit collections, releases, invoicing & credit file maintenance. Pays $15-18/hr. Call Performance Personnel 668-6933. RECEPTIONIST Part-time position available with Property Management firm. Position requires 8 to 15 hours per week with Saturday hours. Please Iy m person or send resume to Wilson toCo., Inc., 608 Packard, Suite 2, Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Equal Opportunity Employer. SUMMER 1997 Seasonal positions available. Ottawa County Parks and Recreation. Outdoor work at County's parks and beaches. Grand Haven, Holland, and Jenison areas. $5.80 to $6.90 per hour. Con- tact Parks & Rec. Dept. at 616/846-8117 for more information. SUMMER JOBS! $7-10 per hour. Have a job this summer where you actually enjoy going to work in the morning! We are filling painter and crew chief positions with motivated, hard working students. Call today for more info. (810)738-2144. SUMMER JOBS! Painting, full-time, no exp. necessary. $7 per hr. Call 1(800) 477- 1001. Ann Arbor area. 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. UMI is an established information services company with operations throughout the world. The International Sales and Marketing department is seeking to fill two 40 hrs./week positions of two paid intems starting in mid- March, 1997. The individuals should have a strong interest in the international market, be very organized and able to handle many projects at once, and be willing to take on a wide range of tasks. 40 hours/week, Monday- Friday. A background in business, knowledge of a foreign language, and ex- perience living or studying abroad are also preferred. All interested persons should send or fax a cover letter and resume to: UMI International Sales and Marketing 300 N. Zeeb Road Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Fax: 313-973-7007 VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for 1 wk. camp for kids with Muscular Dystrophy. 6/13-6/21. Call Molly at 517/694-7787. child care s: 3 BOYS 7,9,11 Seek After School Care in their southwest Ann Arbor home! Trans. req., light housekeeping 761-5149. AP PHOTO, Yvrose Joslyn stands in front of her burnt down house yesterday in a slum in Pele, Haiti, after a fire broke out between the home bases of gangs that have sparked violence in this town. BURGER Continued from Page 1 Jancasz said local McDonald's fran- chises have a good deal of autonomy. "Until we hear it from our supervisor, we don't have to do it," Jancasz said. However, he did say that if the 55- cent deal materializes, his franchise would probably participate. "Generally, we follow the nationwide trends, just because it's good for busi- ness," Jancasz said. At the nearby Burger King, assistant manager Jeff Frontiera said he is not alarmed at the prospect of a Big Mac price cut. "It doesn't bother us," Frontiera said. "We don't even think it will affect us." Frontiera said that in many ways the Burger King Whopper is a "high- er quality product." He said the Burger King burger is superior in its freshness and that it contains 75 per- cent more meat than its McDonald's counterpart. University students are divided about which restaurant is better. Heiko Leopold, a first-year graduate student in the School of Business Administration, said each chain has its specialty. As he sat in Burger King, Leopold said, "The burger is probably better here. But the fries - at McDonald's, the amount of fries is more." Engineering graduate student Richard Levi held a similar view. "The fries are better," he said of McDonald's. But as he sat in the McDonald's dining room eating a cheeseburger, he said that he generally prefers Burger King. "Burger King tastes better than McDonald's. I don't know why I keep coming back here;' Levi said. Overall, students said the price -of their fast food is important, but not'the definitive factor in their choice. LSA student Heiko Zuchel said heis unwilling to spend more than $4 fof a meal. "For example" Zuchel said, "the double-cheeseburger meal at Wendy's is more than $4. (That's) too expensive." Kinesiology sophomore Amy Getdes agreed with the $4 limit. However, :she was not excited about the possibilityof a 55-cent Big Mac. "It doesn't matter. I really don't eat Big Macs," Gerdes said. Gerdes said she prefers plain cheese- burgers, and if presented with the option of a 55-cent Big Mac, she wrld "ask for it plain." GEO Continued from Page 1 ed colleagues of mine put out (says) that GSIs are not real workers, that they are merely apprentices in training, should be anathema to any working fac- ulty member," Wald said. "Sometimes I wonder if the faculty who say these things really do their work." LSA senior Mandy Odeir told audi- ence members she was proud to be taught by GSIs. "I'll take my education with a union label," Odeir said. "Go GEO!" U.S. Rep. Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor) was unable to attend, but in a statement read by a spokesperson, Rivers said she commended the GSIs' dedication to the preservation of the quality of education students receive. Rob Gordan, a graduate student instructor from Wayne State University, spoke about the need for Wayne State graduate students to unionize to combat proposed cutbacks in their health cover- age plan. "The University of Michigan's GEO is a wonderful example of what hap- pens when you just stick together and stand up for your rights," Gordan said. Launa Schweizer, a GSI for American Culture 201, said she didn't think her students would be embar- rassed by the pictures of them she sta- pled to the blackboard. "I'm doing this to show my students how much I think about them, the class and how much I care about teaching;" Schweizer said. "This is part of the point - to reach out to more under- graduates and give them a sense of what we do and how we improve the University." Great Books lecturer Mark Bucham said he attended the celebration because he was formerly a graduate student and sympathizes with the GSIs' values and ideas. "I don't think the University's admin- istrators are very serious about un r- graduate education,' Bucham said. "One of the things GEO does is bring that to the floor." "They have a broad vision of social justice at the University which is very worthy of support," Bucham said. s Micah Holmquist, an RC first-year student, said he came to show his support for unions and "the movement of the working class." "I think this event is a good idea and it's unfortunate that there aren't more people here," Holmquist said. "It would be nice if there were more students here but it doesn't surprise me becaitse University students are primarily Id- dle class and don't realize the impor- tance of unions." ABLE CHILD CARE 3 afternoons, 5 and 8- yr-olds. Exp. & references. 930-6274. $1000'S POSSIBLE reading books. Part-timie. At home. Toll free 1-800.218-9000 ext. R-1864 fog lisings $ e POSSIBLE TYPING. Fart-tme. At home. Toll fee 1-800/218-9000 ext. T-1864 for istings. _ ............. $1500 WEEKLY potential mailing our cmoculars. For info call 301429-1326. .64 : W/WK Smer Internships placing All Majors/Earn 3 Credits Call 975-9817. iJASXA EMPLOYMENT - Earn $3,000- $60+Iro. in fisheries, parks, resorts. Aifa)e! -oodL odgingt Got all the options. Cal 9 1 ) 918-7767, ext. A 189. BABYSiTTER WANTED for 2 kids, ages 7 & 3. Weekend mornings or weekday nights, about 8 hrs./wk. Must have car. $6.00/hr. Call Rich at 936-2122. CHILDCARE for happy healthy 3 yr. old girl. Previous experience & references required. 6-16 flexible hours/week. 3 miles from U of M campus is ideal for students. Call 936-1110 or 913-3205 days. CCHA HOCKEY tickets, 4 tickets for 3/7& 3/8. Great seats. Call Kyle at 930-2681. SPRING BREAK South Padre Island, Tx. 2 bdrm. Condo, Avail. March 1-8. Call Debbie by 5 PM today at (817) 267-6702. STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con- tinental voucher & AMEX card. Doris at Regency Travel. 209 S. State, 665-6122. LAST CALL" Panama Cty 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 MC DISC AMEX SUMMER CHARTERS. Athens $759, Frankfurt $589, London $449, Paris $579, Rome $679, Shannon $409. Restrictions apply. 209 S. State St. 665-6122. WINTER ESCAPE. Cozy log cabins $54- 75 nightly. Incl. outdoor hot tub & ski trails. Traverse City 616/276-9502. RANK Continued from Page 1 "Using the methodology that was used, this is an accurate rating," Snyder said. "(U.S. News & World Report) puts a lot of weight on median starting salary. Michigan graduates get salaries that are con- sistently high in each of their (spe- cialized) areas." Snyder said this type of analysis may hurt the University's rankings. "But our students tend to pursue a very balanced set of careers, which we value;' Snyder said. "The rankings do not look at where the salaries are condi- tionally. That ends up generating pretty important differentials in terms of the medians." Whether or not the rankings are the most accurate, they are significant because they attract people's attention, Martin asserted. "I think they are serious to the extent that people think they're serious," Martin said. Law first-year student John Signorino said U.S. News & World Report rankings did not affect his deci- sion to come to the University. "I am not concerned at all about rat- ing," Signorino said. "I picked;this school because of a recommendation from a friend. I did not rely on what these reports say." ;; 0 .F.._ ._ HERE'S A BRIGHT IDEA FOR YOUR FUTURE! AIDS Continued from Page 1. grams. What's still unclear is the impact of a new class of drugs called pro- tease inhibitors. The AIDS death rate leveled off in 1995, before those medicines became widely available. Not all doctors are sure that AIDS is making an about-face, however. "In my view, this decline is unfortunately only a lull," said Dr. Irvin Chen, director of the AIDS Institute at UCLA. "Not all patients are responding as effectively as the majority of patients. There are some patients for whom! the drugs are not effective," he said. And some advocates point out that AIDS patients, as they live longer, will need more help, not less. B~e an Aoaount Exeotive for that Display soles epartm ent of great . cume BIilder Excellent Experience Any Questions? Call "704-0062 todyl a,.pplications avilable @? 42C Maynard. udent Publicoations idg. ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - bjing ,industry. Learn how students can takce up to $2,850/mo. + benefits (room & beid/tiasportation). Call S.ES.: 206-971- 3514 Ext.A55982 (We are a research & publishing company)- -- --- PREMIERE BROTHER SISTER CAMP IN MASS. Counselor positions for talented & energetic students a Propam Speciaists in all Team Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball, Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey, Soccer, Volleyball; 30 Tennis openings; also Golf, Archery, Riflery, Pioneerng/Ovemight Camping, Ropes & Rock Climbing, Weights/ Fitness & Cyclin.other openings include Performing Art, Fine Art, Figure Skating, Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio Station & Rocketry; All Waterfront/Pool Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing, windsurfing, Canoeing/Kayaking). Top salaries, room, board & travel. June 22nd- August 20th. Inquire: MAH-KEE-NAC- Bovs-1800fl53-9118. DANBEE-Girls-1800/ YOU DON'T KNOW what "hot" is 'til you have tried Dave's Insanity Sauce. Tios Mexican Restaurant - We Deliver! 333 E. Huron, 761-6650. , elts Pt pencil hands .U a su...nS ATTENTION ECON AND ENGLISH majorst Find- out why our 130 year old summer program will place over 90% of our interns in carer ositions. Average summer income FISH DOCTOR'S- Everything for your aquarium! Next to Putt-Putt Golf on Wan. w_-- -MOm- I I <