NATION/WO RLD The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 22, 1997 - 7A 4(eno to review Chnton s iding Y .p SAN CARLOS, Calif. (AP) - -Attorney General Janet Reno has taken 'a'first step toward naming a special prosecutor to investigate President Clinton's 1996 fund-raising activities. The president's lawyers insisted Y Saturday no laws were broken. The Justice Department opened a 30- ay review of Clinton's involvement in campaign money-raising irregularities in.the last day or two, officials said. The 'White House was notified on Friday. Reno must now determine whether to launch a more extensive, 90-day inves- tigation that could lead to her request- ing the appointment of a special prose- cutor. During this 30-day review, Clinton's *ttorneys hope to convince the Justice Department there is not enough evi- dence against him to even begin the 90- day review. "The Justice Department is review- ing whether allegations that the presi- dent illegally solicited campaign contri- butions on federal property should war- rant a preliminary investigation under the independent counsel act," Justice Department spokesperson Myron arlin said. WA similar initial review is already Wnder way in the case of Vice President Al Gore. ' "We understand the Department of Justice is in the process of determining whether a preliminary investigation is warranted," said White House attorney Lanny Davis. "We are cooperating and will continue to cooperate with the Department of Justice to ensure that it as all the information it needs. "We are confident that no laws were broken," Davis said. Word of Reno's action came one day West Coast's 9th Circuit Court may face break up .; Los Angeles Times 1. WASHINGTON - The judges of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals have called it "idiotic," "silly" and "very odd." No, they were not referring to their usual nemesis, the US. Supreme Court. Rather, the target of their complaints was a plan by Senate Republicans to break up the West Coast's large and lib- eral-leaning judicial district. In July, shortly after the 9th Circuit suffered a rapid-fire round of reversals in the Supreme Court, the Republicans pushed through the Senate a measure that would remove several Western states from the California-dominated appeals court. Under this plan, which is pending in the House, the 12th US. Circuit Court of Appeals would be created to hear federal cases from a seven-state region stretching from Arizona to Alaska and Hawaii. Its judges would sit in Seattle or Phoenix. Only California and Nevada would remain in the century-old 9th Circuit, which is based in San Francisco. The House, whose leaders have favored buying time by studying the AP PHOTO way the circuit courts are working, is of scheduled to act on the bill this rday. week. Those pushing for the breakup usual- to raise ly cite good-government reasons, such "The 9th circuit is undeniably out of touch with the rest of the nation. - Conrad Burns i U.S. Sen. (R-Mont.) as greater efficiency and collegiality among the judges. The 9th Circuit is "huge and unwieldy,' says Sen. Slade Gorton, (R- Wash.). By far the largest of the nation's regional appellate courts, the 9th Circuit covers an area with 50 mil- lion people, or nearly one in five Americans. Typically, the 11 regional courts, which hear appeals of rulings in US. district courts, have II to 16 judges and meet regularly at their main courthouse. The 9th Circuit, however, has 28 judges who regularly hear arguments not only in San Francisco, but in Seattle, Portland, Ore., Pasadena, Calif., and San Diego. Despite the 9th Circuit's size, howev- er, scholars who study the federal courts say it decides cases with roughly the same dispatch as the smaller circuit courts. "The size of the circuit is not corre- lated with the speed of the disposi- tions," says University of Montana pro- fessor Carl Tobias. "There is a national problem of heavy caseloads (in the appellate courts), but it is certainly ndt unique to the 9th Circuit." If the Senate Republicans truly seek to speed up the decisions com.- ing from the 9th Circuit, says its chief judge, Procter Hug Jr. of Reno, Nev., they could best do so by accel- erating their response to vacancies on the court. Though the 9th Circuit has 28 authorized judgeships, only 18 seats are filled with active judges. Many of the senators who are accns- ing the 9th Circuit of being slov 'to make decisions have urged the Senate to go slow in approving President Clinton's judicial nominees throughout the federal judiciary. "Shortly after I came on the court in 1978, our authorized judges were 23 tp handle 3,100 cases" a year, Hug said. "Today, we have 18 active judges-to handle 8,600 cases." To most observers, it is apparent that the drive to split the 9th Circuit is fuele4l by a dislike for its decisions. Sen. Conrad Burns, (R-Mont.), has admitted as much. "In my view, the 9th Circuit is undeniably out of touch with the rest of the nation," he said. President Clinton and First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton wave to the crowdo onlookers as they leave the first of three fund-raisers in San Francisco yeste after officials told the AP that Gore had hired two defense attorneys to try to head off the appointment of a special prosecutor. Clinton already retains defense attorney David Kendall for Whitewater counsel. Kendall said he expected the Justice Department to resolve the matter speedily and used language similar to Davis: "No laws were broken and any kind of enforcement action would be absolutely unprecedented." Congressional and FBI investigators have been conducting a sweeping inquiry into the actions of Clinton, Gore and senior White House officialst money for the 1996 presidential election, including allegations that foreign dona- tions were funneled to the campaign. Although White House officials said they did not know how Reno reached her decision, congressional and Justice Department investigators have been studying whether Clinton made fund- raising calls from the Oval Office. The president has said he does not remember making any fund-raising calls, and White House officials contend he and Gore are exempt from the law that prohibits fund raising in government buildings. .- UDENT CUSTODIANS wanted for Fall/ WORK-STUDY STUDENTS: Looking for **SPRING BREAK BAHAMAS Party Winter 1997-98. Good physical condition: a variety of work experiences? Flexible Cruise! 6 days $279! Includes meals, free cleaning, lifting, odd jobs. Students hours. Computer skills (word processing, parties, taxes! Get a group - go free! Prices enthusiastic, punctual and flexible will data entry) a plus. Will train. Positions avail- increase soon - save $501 ftC.eve top consideration. Good working able in accounting, Web design, member springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386, conditions. Good pay. Must be available 8:15 services, and conference planning. Off-cam- **SPRING BREAK CANCUN & a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Tues. and Thurs. Work s office. Own transportation necessary. JAMAICA $379! Book early - save $50! Get Study welcome but not required. Apply now. Free Parking. Contact Heidi or Peg at: 998- a group - go free! Panama City $129! South Cal 764-O50 orstop by room 210AStudent 7832 to schedule an interview. Beach (bars close 5 am!5) $1291 Publications, 420 Maynard Street. YES HIRING NOW! t 1AA7"AQI STUDENT EMPLOYEES needed at Cris- lir Arena for event staffing, set up, tear dow, & some cleaning. $5.50/hr. to start. Call'Lisa at 998-7236. OL&EMARKETING Eve. $7/hr. 10+ hrs./ wk. No selling! Call Allen 996-1107. -TEMPORARY DELIVERY POSITION AVAILABLE Drivers are needed to deliver construction material on U of M campus. lyIeroday through Friday, 7 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Pay rate of $6.75 per hour. Valid drivers license is required. Applicant must not have -any lifting restrictions. Vehicle will be iprovded. Fill out application at: 326 E. er, U of M Plant Contract Group ffie located behind U of M ootball Stadium. Phone 936-0264. THE UNIV. OF MICH. Golf Course has jgmporary fall groundskeeper positions avail- .e. both full & part-time. Pay will range Trom '$7-$8jhr. + golfing privileges. Please contact Chris Bollinger for more info. at 998- 7395. THE UNIVERSITY of Michigan Medical School seeks !knowledgeable students to work in the Leaming Resource Center's com- putersite. Tasks include staffing the circula- tion desk & assisting patrons with computer questions. A working knowledge of acin- tosh computers is essential. The most impor- tant skills being knowledge of MS Word, Telnet, WWW, & the UofM computing roment. IBM compa. knowledge is a 'cus, but not necessary. Good communica- tion skills are a must since dealing with the public amounts to 95% of the tasks involved with the position. Pay starts at $5.75/hr. Only a few shifts remain to be filled. Call Marc Stephens at 936-2241. TOP OF THE 1 764-8512 Student managers needed 10-20 hrs./wk. For flexible hours 7- 11 am. & 3-5 p.m. Beautiful view of campus in new 6 floor facility. Ask for Charles. TRAVEL - TEACH English$:5 day/40 hr. (Windsor, Canada Oct. 29-Nov 2) TESOL Certificate course. Jobl Free info. pack. Toll -jm1-888-270-2941. ~NIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE needs studs. to work at least 4 hr. shifts Mo.-Fri. Selecting, listing, packing lots of great books. Math skills, ability to lift and carry70 lbs. w/o assistance. $7/hr. Call us at 96=2227 or e-mail recs@umich.edu WANT TECHIE STUDENT to set up com- pur- network & support at Tumer Senior dsource Center. Working with older adults and teaching classes. 7 hrs./wk. Flexible hrs. Contact Carol at 764-2556. WANTED Register Operator Receptionist r indoor track. Part-time, weekends, vEnings. Call Peter at 764-6400. WANTED!! Full time aid for 3rd grader who has, autism at an elementary school in ,Hamrburg. Aid will monitor his academic skills and deliver facilitation in the regular ed. classroom. College degree desired. Con- tact Nina (810) 231-7374. WEB DESIGNER. Intemet-based advertis- ing agency is seeking a creative and -motivated intern to help with web design. A w, a l'l VWi Paid training, talk on the telephone, never sell, get paid to do interviews for medical research [and more], flexible scheduling, part-time or full-time. *Choose 10 to 40 hours per week! *Set your own schedule and stick to it! *Choose to work evenings and/or weekends!*Consume free coffee, tea or hot chocolate even as late as midnight! *Resume builder! *Eam $6---$9.50 per hour! *Wear whatever you want to work!* am$$$ in 10days or lessi Every "yes" directs you toward a telephone research or interview position with DataStat, No sales, ever! Make your progressive step toward DataStat Come over and see us now, in Ann Arbor, at 3975 Research Park near Briarwood. CALL 994-4199. 1 /CREATIVErand energetic 3-yr.-old girl needs P/T sitter Wed. and Fri. from 9;30- 5:30. Well paid. 769-7245 Rita. A WONDERFUL BABYSITTER Needed. Part-time. Flexible hrs. Walking distance to campus. 747-9493 or 668-2467. ABLE CHILD CARE 5 & 9 year old boys. 3 afternoons after school. 10-IS hrs./wk. 663- 3482. Exp. reference nec. ADORABLE TODDLER needs care in our home Monday 3:30-7:30. Light housekeeping, own car, non-smoking. Call 747-9324. BABYSITTER NEEDED for I night/week for 3 yr. old & 3 mo. old. 764-6782. CAREGIVER NEEDED for our 9 yr. old daughter after school. Transport from school to our home and some activities. Occasional errands, but No housekeeping. Comfortable environment, excellent compensation, great kid! Mon:-Fri., 2:30-6:00 p.m. preferred, but some flexibility possible. Call 769-1895. CHILD CARE NEEDED FOR two boys ages 2 & 5. 15 hours/week. Flexible hours. 1 mile from campus. 761-1306. CHILD CARE NEEDED. Days T-Th. Two children 3 & 18 months. Call 741-9626. CHILD CARE NEEDED. 10-15 hrs./wk. -for 5 year old twin boys. Light housework and cooking. Call Jan 663-6338. CHILD CARE 10 HRS./WK. For 3 boys ages 10, 8, 5. Wed. a.m. definite other time is flex. Non-smoker. Own transportation. Must have lots of energy & a good attitude. Bums Parks area. 994-5368. OAY CARE PROVIDER WANTED, weekdays, 3:00-5:30 p.m. Two children, 10 & 13. Must have car. Call 994-0353. EXECUTIVE WITH three older children needs overnight babysitting-Ann Arbor. Must have own car. Needed for 9/'28 to 10/3 and 1... - 11120" 101117A L- spnngorea trave.com I -uu-aJ' - Ua1 . FLORIDA SPRING BREAK from $129/ person. Sandpiper Beach Resort. Panama City, FL. Tiki Bar, hot tub, world's longest keg party. Free info. 1-800-488-8828. I NEED YOUR Notre Dame & Iowa tixl! Please call 662-7243. IOWA VS. MICHIGAN football tickets wanted. Seating flexible. Call Dave at 764- 0550. LOOKING FOR 2 TICKETS for UM vs. Notre Dame. Any section. Call 313-561- 8316. LOOKING TO TRADE my 2 tickets for UM v. Penn St. for your 4 tickets to UM v. Iowa. Call George (610) 779-7456. NOTRE DAME VS. UNV.OF MW.-. Tickets wanted Not in student section 1-800-901-8497 LOW FARES WORLDWIDE Instant pur- chase Eurail passes issued. Regency Travel 209 S. State 665-6122. MICHIGAN SEASON TICKETS for sale. Two great seats. 313-485-8813. ROMANTIC GETAWAY- Cozy log cabins on lake. $54-79 ntly. Inc. hot tub, canoes & more. Traverse City. 616/276-9502. SPRING BREAK Reps wanted for Acapul- co from $559. Quad Call Dan Regency Travel 665-6122. SPRING BREAK '98 - Sell Trips, Ear Cash & Go Free!!! STS is now hiring campus reps. Check out our great trips to Jamaica & Mexico. Call 800/648-4849. SPRING BREAK! Free travel/highest commissions. Jamaica, Cancun, Bahamas, Barbados, Florida, Padre & More! Free parties, drinks & eats! FRee info packet. Sunsp ash Tours 1-800-426-7710. SPRING BREAK '98 Cancun from $389 Reps wanted! Sell 15 and go free! 15 free meals Lowest Prices Guaranteed Call 1-800-446-8355 www.sunbreaks.com STUDENTS Purchase your tickets with Con- tinental vouchers & Amex card. Regency Travel 209 S. State St. 665-6122. U OF M - NOTRE DAME tickets needed. Call Chris at 332-4646 WANTED 6 Notre Dame Tickets. Reasonable offers. Call Nathan 747-9573. WANTED Notre Dame vs. U-M. General Admision tickets. 1-800-955-2916. AP PHOTO, Storm-generated winds batter the Malibu, Calf. coastline In January 1993, as a series of winter winds similar in ferocity to the coming 'El Nino' wind storms swept across California. El Nino expected to hit ,,. .. hard this winti World prepares for worst predicted El Nino in 15 years, which left $1.5 billion in U.S. damages The Washington Post There's trouble in the air. Specifically, in the air off the west coast of the Americas, where the sea surface has been heated to abnormal extremes by an ominous, intermittent flood of hot water called El Nino. The last time conditions looked like this was when the strongest, most destructive El Nino on record struck in 1982-83. By the time that event subsided, some 2,000 people had died in flooding,. mud slides, droughts, fires and sundry related calamities, hundreds of thousands were forced out of their homes, and economic losses topped $8 billion worldwide - $1.5 billion in the United States. This year's version promises to approach or even equal 1982-83, which climate researcher James O'Brien of Florida State University's Center for Ocean- Atmospheric Prediction Studies (COAPS) calls "the mother of all Los Ninos." Already, El Nino has begun to have dramatic effects in some parts of the world and the U.N.-sponsored World Climate Research Programme warns it "could be the climatic event of the century." er and spring "This one leapt out of the starting blocks" said Ants Leetmaa, director of the National Weather Service's - Climate Prediction Center. "By this summer it was ahead of all the others we've seen" since 1950 in terms of early and strong sea-surface warming. Unlike 1982-83, the world has advance warning this: time and the opportunity to protect itself. The threat of a - repeat has prompted a rush of scientific symposiums, con- gressional hearings and anxious regional palavers from' Zimbabwe to Australia to flood-leery California, where a federal-state "El Nino summit" has been scheduled for next month in Los Angeles. "We're preparing for the worst, but hoping for the best" said Douglas P Wheeler, California's secretary for resources. In addition, the likely ferocity of this year's event has scientists wondering whether the frequency and intensity of El Nino episodes is suddenly on the rise - and what that might mean. El Nino, the Spanish term for the Christ child, got its deceptively soothing name decades ago because it tended to show up around Christmas in Peru every three to seven years. It is part of a larger natural pattern, the combined El Nino-Southern Oscillation, causing a vast, periodic rever- sal of conditions in the equatorial Pacific that unsettles weather patterns worldwide. Yugoslavian elections face weak opposition from Serbs 1 BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - Many Serbs boycotted yesterday's elec- tions, fed up with the hard times they have seen under Slobodan Milosevic's decade-long autocratic rule. Although turnout was slow into the afternoon, the boycott - called by two of three maiin Annos'ition leaders - K The independent radio station B 92, which has supported the opposition, said only 10 percent had voted. The vote would be invalid only if 51 percent of the 7 million eligible voters failed to participate. The elections were expected to munist revolutions of 1989 and the post-communist upheaval, voted yester4 day in Belgrade's Dedinje district with his wife and son, Marko. "Serbia needs to maintain its peace and stability, to continue on the road of recovery and economic develop- ment and mnantain the crse o~ nf ACCORDIANS. 4 different. Used. They're hip. 995-0528. ATTRRNAT1VI'DROVK AND.1flwe.IFa