The Michigan Daily - Monday, March 10, 1997 - 7A
Albanian president aims
for united government
ATTENTION ECON AND ENGLISH
majors! NATIONAL PARKS HIRING " Also
Find out why our 130 year old summer Beach Resorts, Ranches, Rafting Companies.
program will place over 90% of our interns in Up to $12/hour. Nationwide openings. Call
career positions. Average summer income (919) 918-7767, ext. R189.
$7300. Call 973-9985. NATIONWIDE INSURANCE - Ann Arbor
r
CAMP COUNSELORS - Outstanding Sum-
mer slim down camps on university cam-
es in Massachusetts, Pennsylvania. All
cialties: Athletics, Dance, Swim,
erobics, exercise, Nutrition, Tennis. 7
WEEKS. AGE 20+. 1.800-421-4321,
wuf.campcamelot.com
CAMP WAYNE, (sister half of brother/sister
cauip. Northeast Pennsylvania 6/22-8/2097.)
Have the most memorable summer of
your life! Coaches, teachers, students. Pre-
requisite: Must love Children, enjoy living
and working in a group situation. On Campus
Initerviews March 21st. Call 1-800-279-3019
for more information.
FULL-TIME SUMMER
TEACHING POSITIONS
$450-500 PER WEEK
Reading Enrichment Programs for
children of all ages and adults.
Graduate students and graduating
seniors from any discipline who
love books and reading are eligible
apply. We are seeking people
with warmth, intellectual authority,
and a commitment to high personal
standards. Previous teaching expe-
rience (with adults or children) is
valuable, though not required. We
provide a paid, comprehensive
training program to equip you for
reading instruction. Requires an
undergraduate degree and a reliable
r.
(313) 665-8934
COUNSELOR POSITIONS: Opens in
all team & individual sports, also Wate ront-
Ai-Drama-RN's-Competitive sellers. Lo-
cated Berkshire Mts. of Massachusetts - 212
hrs. from NYC-Boston. Call Greylock for
boys 1-800-842-5214/Romaca for girls 1-
888-2-ROMACA.
COUNSLERS: TOP BOYS AND GIRLS
jVORTS CAMP IN MAINE Get in on an
Witing, fun summer! Must have good skills,
able to instruct, coach or assist. Openings in:
Vseba l, Basketball, Soccer, Tennis,
Hockey, Lax, Swim (WSI), Waterski & All
Water Sports, PLUS: Camping & Hiking,
& CimbngWall, SCUBA, English
back Riding, Archery. Riflery, Arts &
gIJts, Martial Arts, RN's, Secretaries. Top
salaries, Awsome facilities, Rm/Bd/Ldry,
TraveL. Call, E-mail(cobbacamp@aol.com),
orWrite: Steve Rubin, (800)473-6104,
CAMP COBBOSSEE(kah'buh-see) 10 Si-
v!rutine Dr., South Salem, NY 10590.
CRUISE & LAND-TOUR EMPLOY-
M NT-industry offers Travel (Hawaii,
eelico, 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,
bang, cleaning, baby care, pet care, and fun
4mv'es. $6-8/hr. 9964847.
'W WHEALTH CARE attendants for lo-
cal student. No experience necessary, will
tram. Great opportunity for Nursing, OT, &
Medical students. Very flexible schedules,
must have own transportation. Call 930-
6152.
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 616181-9732
or after 5, 6168781-2602, or leave a message
at 971-2205.
office looking for PIT employee. Duties incl.
clerical & phone work. Approximately 20
hrs./wk. flex. Day & eve. hrs. avail. Call Deb-
bie @ 3131213-6736.
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 & earn 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.
PART-TIME ASSISTANT needed in Mon-
tessori classroom. Call 663-8050.
7
STUDENf9 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.
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.
TIOS SELLS MICHIGAN'S finest
Mexican style food and the world's hottest
sauces. Stop by 333 E. Huron, or call 761-
6650. We deliver!
The Washington Post
VLORE, Albania - President Sali
Berisha, confronted with an armed
civilian revolt throughout Albania's
south, said yesterday he sought a "new
government of reconciliation" to repre-
sent all political parties and offered to
set new elections.
Opposition leaders accepted the pres-
idential offer even as rebel groups in the
south dismissed it as a tactic and con-
tinued to demand that Berisha step
down.
In a tense, televised session with
main opposition leaders, Berisha said
he wanted to send a "civilized message"
from the embattled Balkan country to
its neighbors and to "those who are
watching very closely what is going on
here."
The new Parliament, Berisha said
with some ambivalence, should include
members of the Socialist Party, whom
he has long derided and who, after
widely criticized elections last summer,
have been boycotting the legislature.
Berisha's statement came the day
after the army lost the key town of
Gjirokaster to insurgents who have
demanded his resignation for more than
a week.
Here in the coastal town of Vlore, a
stronghold of the revolt, automatic gun-
fire greeted the president's 3 p.m.
announcement and rattled throughout
CONGRESSIONAL
POSITIONS
Senate and House of
Representatives JOBS
Legislative, Press, and
Administrative Opportunities
average call 5 min., must be
18 yrs. of age, touch-tone
phone required, Info-Source-
Boston, MA, 617-491-7824,
cost of call is $2.95/minute.
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! Also helpful:
Exp. w/ credit collections, releases, invoicing
& credit file maintenance. Pays $15-18/hr.
Call Performance Personnel 668-6933.
POSTAL JOBS, 3 positions available. No
exp. necessary. For info call 1-818/764-9016
ext. 6000.
r0
. l't :a# M1 : :8
AP Photo.Y
Albanian insurgents celebrate yesterday as they drive a commandeered army tank
through the center of Gjirokaster.
the night. But leaders of the rebellion here, try-
No one seemed to control bands of ing to form a military organization and
young men and boys, some looking no holding daily rallies to stoke the rene-
older than 12, who swung Kalashnikov gade armies, described the display of
rifles around their shoulders and point- firepower as celebrating rebel courage:
ed them at motorists' faces in shows of and what they called a public admission:
strength. by Berisha of weakness.
PREGNANT? Young Christian family with
lots of love wishes to adopt infant. Can offer
love and hel. Call 930-9269.
PeES
FISH DOCTOR'S- Everything for your
a uarium! Next to Putt-Putt Golf on
Washtenaw. 434-1030.
Watchdog groups examine GOP
campaign funding, lobbying
PREMIERE BROTHER SISTER CAMP
IN MASS.
Counselor positions for talented & energetic
students a Program Specialists in all Team
Sports, especially Baseball, Basketball,
Roller Hockey, Gymnastics, Field Hockey,
Soccer, Volleyball 30 Tennis openings; also
Golf, Archery, Riflery, Pioneering/Ovemight
Camping, Ropes r. Rock Climbing, Weights/
Fitness & Cycling; other openings include
Performing Arts, Fine Arts, Figure Skating,
Newspaper, Photography, Yearbook, Radio
Station & Rocketry; All Waterfront/Pool
Activities (Swimming, Skiing, Sailing,
windsurfing, Canoeing/Kayaking). To p
salaries, room, board & travel. June 22nd-
August 20th. Inquire: MAH-KEE-NAC-
Boys-1800/753-9118. DANBEE-Girls-1800/
392-3752.
SECRETARY/OFFICE ASSISTANT
Half-time position w/ fast growing Internet
co. Required skills: MacOS proficient, touch-
typist, good communications & people skills,
strong organizational skills. Desired skills:
Filemaker Pro, Internet knowledgeable. Fax
resume to 313/665-9353 or email resume to
iobs@diamondbullet.com-
.
SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for an infer-
tility clinic. Male students or grads. 20-40
yrs. old are sought. Donors are paid $60 per
ac table donaion Write APRL, P.O. Box
2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106.
SUMMER JOBS
for the
Environment
$2500-$4000/summer
Campaign for clean air and water
Protect endangered species
Make A Difference
Offices in 33 states
Campaign To Save The Environment
1-800-75EARTH.
IINTERNAT'L STUDENTSJ
HTML PROGRAMMER
Full-time position w/ fast growing Internet
Required skills: MacOS proficient,
L-expert, Internet-savvy, demonstrated
layout skills, good communication skills. Fax,
resume to 313/665-9353 or email resume to
jobs@diamondbullet.om
JURORS NEEDED for Mock Trials at the
Law School: 3/31, 4/1, 4/2, 4/3, 417, 419, & 4/
10. Sign up for one or more! Call 763-4319.
LARGE INCOME
Fast growing company in Ann Arbor has a
need for hard working men and women to
start immediately. Our company offers great
rnings with fast track to management. No
tperience required. Openings in all
departments.
$400/WEEK AND UP
Start working on
your future now
Call 677-5531.
MEDICATION RESEARCH studies: The
Wamer-Lambert/Parke-Davis Community
R~esearch Clinic is seeking healthy males,
ages 18-55, for participation in medication
research studies. Length of study time is
approx. two-four weeks. Research subjects
i be paid approx. $500-$1000 for
ation. For more information please
call ob at (313)996-7051, Mon.-Fri.,
8:0a.rn. to 4:00p m. 2800 Plymouth Rd.,
Ann 'Arbor, MI 48105.
I I
:Hey1
'Designerli
i et oar
1*
cal 76-0#v56I.
anIs
Sua r i
sI o mr
*nemtto :I
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON - Campaign
watchdog groups and government regu-
lators are concerned about the emer-
gence of mysterious organizations that
funded a flurry of attack ads at the end
of the 1996 election and could play an
even larger role in coming campaigns.
The groups, with bland names such
as Citizens for Reform and the
Republic Education Fund, spent mil-
lions of dollars on television advertis-
ing, mailings and telephone banks in
the closing weeks of the campaign,
mostly on the side of the Republicans.
None of their activities was reported
to the Federal Election Commission.
"The public has no idea who these
people are or where they're coming
from or who funds them," said Charles
Lewis, executive director of the Center
for Public Integrity, which monitors
political ethics. "They are trying to
influence the political process, and the
public is in the dark."
APPLICATIONS
Continued from Page :A
the College Republicans Nick Kirk said
the University is picking and choosing
the students it wants to bring in. Kirk
said this strategy could be unfair to stu-
dents who do not fall into the designat-
ed categories.
"I think this is just an example of the
University's policies of creating a
diverse student body at any cost," said
Kirk, an LSA junior. "I think this is
unfair to students who fall into the mid-
dle - students who are not minorities
or are not gifted. These students fall
through the cracks.
"If you look at (the University's
actions) from the point of view from a
student in the middle, a case could be
made that (the policy) is unfair and dis-
criminatory," Kirk said.
Monts said it is the responsibility of
the University to take actions that main-
tain diversity.
"The University has an obligation
to itself and the state to have a
diverse student body, and to use
affirmative action to ensure that,"
Monts said.
For example, a group called the
Coalition for Our Children's Future spent
more than $700;000 on television and
radio ads, mailings and telephone banks
to bolster GOP candidates in key races.
The last-minute onslaught, financed
in part by a donor who demanded a
written confidentiality agreement, was
conducted without the knowledge or
approval of the group's directors.
Two of the directors resigned in
protest after The Washington Post
informed them of the late ads, saying
they never approved the expenditures.
They said they still do not know exactly
what was done or the soured of funding.
Former director Deborah Steelman, a
GOP lobbyist, said she thought the group
had been inactive since spending more
than S4 million on advertising backing
the GOP's legislative agenda in 1995.
Like the more identifiable AFL-CIO
and environmental groups that also ran
advertising, leaders of organizations
such as the coalition say their television
commercials were not political because
they did not explicitly endorse a candi-
date. Since they were engaging in "issue
advocacy," they said, they were not
required to report to the FEC the source
of their funds or how much they spent.
One group created last spring and
calling itself Citizens for Reform spent
S2 million in the closing days, accord-
ing to its president, conservative activist
Peter Flaherty.
In California, it sent mailings into the
district of Democratic Rep. George
Brown accusing him of being sexist and
anti-consumer. The Consumer
Federation of America, cited as the
source in one flier although it endorsed
Brown, denounced the mailing as
"extremely misleading and grossly
unfair."
In Montana, the group bought televi-
sion time calling Democratic congres-
sional candidate Bill Yellowtail a con-
victed criminal who "preaches family
values ... but took a swing at his wife,"
Harrison said information he. has
received from the Chronicle of Higher
Education indicates that minority appli-
cation rates are down across the country R
this year.
Harrison said that although some
people speculate the drop in applica-
tions is a result of the addition of a sec-
ond essay to the University application
this year, he does not agree that this
caused the decrease.
"A student who wants to apply to the
University of Michigan should not be
put off by having to write an essay,"
Harrison said.
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 9 two paid interns 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
GAME
Continued from Page IA
"It was hard for me personally,"
Michigan forward Maurice Taylor said.
"When I heard the first 64 teams called,
I wanted the season to end. It felt like
the season ended"
Michigan's 19-11 overall record and
9-9 mark in Big Ten games was not
enough to impress the nine-member
NCAA tournament selection commit-
tee.
The Wolverines apparently were
eliminafed from consideration after
Wisconsin - which beat Michigan the
only time the two teams met this season
- upset No. 2 Minnesota on Saturday.
Six Big Ten teams made the field and it
was unlikely that a seventh would be
invited.
Even if the choice didn't come down
to Wisconsin or Michigan, it appeared
that the outcome of the Wolverines'
game with Ohio State yesterday was not
important to the selection committee
when committee chair Terry Holland
said the bracket was finalized by 3:30
or 4 p.m. yesterday - more than 1 1/2
announced.
The team watched the CBS broad-
cast of the selection show on a small-
screen television. After the Wolverines
found out they hadn't made the 64-
team field,
hours before
Michigan beat
Ohio State in
overtime.
"I would like
for (Holland) to
say that to me,
that our game
RI felt like the
season ended."
- Maurice Taylor
Michigan forward
Fisher said he
spoke with each
player individu-
ally to discuss
whether they
wanted to play in
the NIT.
Then, after a
15-minute meet-
didn't matter,"
an angry Fisher
said when told of Holland's comment.
"I thought it might."
After their win over the Buckeyes,
the Wolverines seemed optimistic they
would make the NCAA tournament.
After meeting with the press, Fisher
took the team onto the bus for the ride
back to Ann Arbor about 15 minutes
before the NCAA pairings were
ing at Crisler Arena, the entire teaM
made the decision to play.
If the Wolverines had rejected the
NIT bid, they wouldn't have been the
first team to do so. Both Louisville and
Georgia Tech have turned down NIT
invitations in the past, most recently the
Yellow Jackets' snub of the tournament
bid last season.
STAYING FOR SPRING!?
FIND A
SUBLET
IN THE
[ISF DS
mw - M m
TRAVEL
Continued from Page 1A
seeing" in Washington D.C.,
Philadelphia and New York instead of
studying for an exam he's scheduled to
Arbor.
LSA sophomore Bethany Burnett
said she spent the break working on
campus.
"There were actually more people
here than I thought there would be,"
Burnett said. "I think it's nice to be here
was nice being off."
Although many students wanted to
prolong their time away from school, a
few were eager to open their books and
get back into the swing of things on
campus.
Engineering first-year student
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED for 1 wk. camp
I
I
.I