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January 28, 1999 - Image 9

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The Michigan Daily, 1999-01-28

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Tha RA inhicScen i17iiw - The troAnti, 1nnf torir ")Q 1000 - GA

Sne macnga uaaiy - i nusay, Januay .05, .a -
, .4NATION/ WORLD --
Tope condemns death penalty in the heartland

yn

ST. LOUIS (AP) - Pope John Paul II brought his
'ampaign against capital punishment to a death-penal-
'ty state in the nation's heartland yesterday, urging
. 100,000 worshippers to spare even those who commit
"great evil."
, "Modern society has the means of protecting itself
without definitively denying criminals the chance to
reform;' he said during a Mass at the Trans World
Dome on the final day of his visit to the Americas.
"I renew the appeal I made most recently at
Christmas for a consensus to end the death penalty,
which is both cruel and unnecessary," the pope said.
The message may have had particular relevance in
Missouri, where the state Supreme Court, without'
explanation, postponed an execution that was to have
taken place while the pope was in town. Papal
spokesperson Joaquin Navarro-Valls called the delay
"a mockery."
Addressing the largest crowd of his 30-hour visit to
the United States, his fifth to the U.S. mainland, the
pope also lashed out against abortion, euthanasia and

assisted suicide, and declared that "the dignity of
human life must never be taken away, even in the case
of someone who has done great evil."
He also invited Roman Catholics separated from
their faith to return to the church, even if there are
"obstacles to Eucharistic participation," a reference to
divorce and remarriage.
And he called on his flock to end racism. Racism is "a
plague which your bishops have called one of the most
persistent and destructive evils of the nation," the
stooped, 78-year-old pontiff said, his voice hoarse and
his words slurred.
Late yesterday, John Paul was to meet with civil
rights pioneer Rosa Parks, the black seamstress whose
refusal to give up her seat on a segregated bus in 1955
led to the Montgomery, Ala., bus boycott.
The pontiff also was scheduled to deliver an
evening prayer service at the Cathedral Basilica and
meet with Vice President Al Gore before leaving for
Rome last night.
More than 100,000 people filled the seats of the Trans

World Dome and a convention center adjacent to the
football stadium, where the pope's image was projected
on giant TV screens with running captions of his homi-
ly. One thousand priests celebrated Mass with the pope.
The faithful came for blessings, cures or just a
glimpse of the man credited with hastening the fall of
Communism and easing religious restrictions in Cuba.
Ida Costa, a cancer-stricken 77-year-old woman
from Little Rock, Ark., looked for a miracle cure from
the pope: "I'll get the blessings God wants to shower
upon me in his presence."
Linda Mary DeLonais of Springfield, Ill., was a for-
est ranger when she saw the pope in Denver in 1993.
"Part of the pope's final blessing was a prayer for
vocations," she recalled. She since has become a nun.
The pope arrived in St. Louis on Tuesday after five
triumphant days in Mexico. He met with President
Clinton and attended a youth rally where he got rock-
star treatment from the crowd of 20,000. His message:
that Americans should use their freedoms responsibly
and strive for a higher moral standard.

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Pope John Paul i greets the crowd at the Trans World Dome In St. Louis
yesterday. He conducted Mass In Missouri today before returning to Rome.

ENGLER
Continued from Page 1A
improve the public education system.
"I think it's a very misguided propos-
al," Brater said. "In a lot of cities, the
school district and city lines don't match
up. It would make no sense to have the
mayor take over the school district."
Truscott said Engler also will lay out
a plan for cutting state income taxes
from the current 4.4 percent, which the
governor discussed extensively during
his campaign for re-election. The new,
figure of 3.9 percent would be the low-
est rate since the early 1970s.
The tax cut legislation began moving
through the legislative process Tuesday,
Truscott said.
Brater said she doubts the state has
the financial resources available to

offer the tax cut.
"The cost of the plan is $3.8 billion
over five years," Brater said. "It's very
misleading right now to say there's a
surplus in the state."
Truscott said Engler will reiterate a
proposal that he introduced at last
year's State of the State address involv-
ing drug testing for people on welfare.
Brater said the idea places blame for
an overloaded welfare system in the
wrong hands.
"I think it's an effort to scapegoat
people'" Brater said. "We shouldn't
have one standard for one small group
of people and another for the rest."
Although the speech will be Engler's
ninth, it will not be without suspense,
Truscott said.
"There will be a surprise that nobody
knows about," he said.

ADS
Continued from Page 1A
est to bring colleges in compliance with law;' he said.
The ads have run in more than 10 university news-
papers, including Duke University, Columbia
University and the University of Pittsburgh.
Although Pell contends that the placement of
the ads do not indicate problems with the admis-
sions policies at those institutions, he said the ads
are intended to motivate students and trustees to
examine their schools.
"The only people who would know that there are
problems there are the trustees and students," Pell said.
But Marques G. Harper, editor in chief at Rutgers
University's The Daily Targum. said he doubts
whether the ad that ran in the newspaper's Tuesday
issue produced the desired result.
"People probably skipped it. It was on page eight,'
Harper said.
In addition to the location of the ad, Harper said the

diverse atmosphere at Rutgers reduced the effective-
ness of the ad.
"If they wanted to make an impact, they chose the
wrong campus;" he said. "We are pretty multicultural
here."
Representatives from various college newspapers
said they think the ads could make an impression on
their campuses.
Sharif Durhams, editor of the University of North
Carolina's The Daily Tarheel, said affirmative action is
a highly visible topic on the campus, but added he did
not hesitate to run the ad in Tuesday's paper.
"The purpose of ad was ... to get the handbook to
people. I don't have a problem with that," Durhams said.
Affirmative action policies at UNC were recently
reviewed by UNC President Molly Broad, Durhams
said.
"Some people think the state is vulnerable,"
Durhams said. "A large amount of affirmative action
programs (in the state) have been cut back to comply
with laws."

The ad produced complaints from some Tarhel
readers. Durhams said the publication has received neg-
ative phone calls and complaints about the ad, including
one complaintant who requested a full-page apology.
The paper will not publish an apology, Durhams said.
The ad will run today in George Washington
University's The G.W Hatchet.
Hatchet Editor In Chief Becky Neilson said she has
made preparations in anticipation of similar complaints.
Neilson said a disclaimer will be put at the bottom of
the full-page ad stating that it is an advertisement.
"I've started telling people, 'If people call, direct
them to me,"' Neilson said.
Neilson said such preparations may prove unnec-
essary.
"Some ads never cause problems that we think will
cause problems," Neilson said. "We go to a school (in
an area) where politics is big but students are apathet-
ic on issues.
"It isn't something that's vocal on campus, she
said.

Ea(::]

BUILDING MONITOR NEEDED for
church/temple for weekday evening and/or
weekend day and/or evening shifts. $8-$9 per
hour. Call 665-8883.
CAMP SUMMIT in New York has summer
openings for qualified students. Cabin
Counselors, speciality instructions for ALL
TEAM SPORTS, SWIMMING (WSI/LGT),
TENNIS OUTDOOR ADVENTURE
PROGRAMS and more! Great salary and
-,benefits! Interviews on campus Thursday,
Feb. 18th in the UM Union.
Call 1-800-847-8664 or
e-mail Info@campsummit.com for
Interview time.
CAMP WAYNE FOR GIRLS- Sister half
of brother/sister camp in Northeast
Pennsylvania (6/22-8/20/99). If you love
children and want a caring, fun environment,
we need staff for: Tennis. Golf, Gymnastics.
Swimming. Sailing. Waterskiing, Piano,
Team Sports, Fine Arts and Crafts, Guitar.
Cheerleading. Aerobics, Video, Photography,
Drama, Self-Defense, Low Ropes,
Camping/Nature. On Campus Interviews
February 18th. Call 1-800-279-3019 or e-
mail: campwayneg@aol.com

ILI

CHEVAL
TIMEPIECE COLLECTION
Our studies have shown that 4 out
of 5 students would rather work at
Cheval than go to a Frat party
(perhaps because most Frats don't
pay the $8/hour that we do).
We are a small, growing watch
company that distrbutes its prod-
ucts in the equestrian industry.
Our office atmosphere is relaxed
and casual. We are looking for
help through this semester (and
-.perhaps the Summer).
If you are a fast learner and are
conscientious about the work you
do, we would like to hear from
you. We are looking for part-time
help (8-20 hours per week) to
assist with all aspects of our daily
office routine. Knowledge of
Word and Excel would be helpful.
Give us a call at 663-4533 to find
out more.
#CLEANER WANTED FOR church/temple.
9 hrs. per week, 3 hrs. per day, 3 afternoons
per week. $8-$9 per hour. Call 665-8883.
CRUISE SHIP EMPLOYMENT - Workers
earn up to $2,000+/month (w/tips &
benefits). World Travel! Land-Tour jobs up
to $5000-$7,000/summer. Ask us how! 517-
336-4235 Ext. C55983.
DATABASE CLERK Part time Flex. Hrs.
$10-12/hr. Must know File Maker Pro. Send
resume to S.P.S.S.., P.O. Box 1248, Ann
Arbor, Ml 48106. FAX 734-662-5607.
EARLY MORNING delivery Detroit News.
A reliable vehicle a must. Earn $300-400/wk.
Call 973-7047 or 973-7056.

EARN $11/HR.
University Tutoring Services is looking for
students to tutor UotM intro classes this
Winter. Good grades a must. Great part-
time job.. Information at 741-4200.
EARN EXTRA $-Need to make ends meet?
Join the team of a growing company, work
P/T, M-F, early evenings cleaning offices in
the A2 area. Own transportation needed.
Competitive wages + incentives. 677-6183.
ELECTION DIRECTOR wanted for LSA
Student Government Elections in March.
Must be a current-enrolled student who is
responsible with dealing with large tasks.
Will work in conjunction with the MSA
Election Director. Call 913-2406 for more
information.
EXCEPTIONAL SUMMER Opportunity--
Camp Wayne, NE PA (3hrs./NYC)-- Sports
oriented. Counselor/Specialists for all
Land/Water Sports: Tennis, Camping, Golf.
Climbing/Ropes. Mountain Biking. Rocketry.
Roller Hqckey, Sailing/Waterskiing, A&C,
Drama, Radio, Video. Campus interviews.
Please call 1-888-549-2963/516-883-3067 or
waynebovs@aol.com
EXPERIENCED TELEPHONE
Interviewers needed for established research
firm in Ann Arbor. 25 wpm req. No sales.
$8-10/hr. All shifts to start immed. (734)
973-1329 ext. 56.
FLYERING. DEPENDABLE person
needed to distribute concert flyers outdoors
and indoors. 10-20 hrs./wk. Hourly wage plus
concert tickets. 665-4755.
Full Time Summer Work
Selecting all majors
Average 1st summer $6520
Work out West
Call 971-0790 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
HOUSECLEANER/MORNINGS organize,
file, projects, errands, yard, pets, MAC skills.
Mon.-Sat. 9-1 pm. $8-$10/hr. 996-4847.
JOBS, JOBS, JOBS!!M
Chat with famous UM alumni.enhance your
resume while you earn some extra cash!!!
**Telefund needs you!** Flexible evening
hours, paid training. Earn up to $8/hour!!
Call 998-7420 for more info or stop by 611
Church #4F.
M OR F TO CARE FOR 2 boys ages 12 &
10 in my NE A2 home. 3pm-6pm M-Th.
Great kids. $7.50/hr. Must have own reliable
vehicle. ref. Call Mary Kay 668-0599.
MAC COMPUTER literate. Part-time
person needed at Publishing/ Ad Firm. Input
editorial copy, assist with production of pubs
and ads, Hrs. flex. $10/ hr. Jan 769-0939.
MACKINAC ISLAND RESORT Hotel
seeking summer staff/front desk, dinning
room, kitchen, and maintenance. Contact
Iroquois Hotel winter office (in Ann Arbor)
at 327-9660. e-mail: iroquois@freeway.net
MACKINAC STATE Historic Parks is now
accepting applications for the following
exciting and unique seasonal positions on
Mackinac Island and in Mackinaw City:
Historic Interpreters, Naturalists,
Grounds/Maintenance Crew, Guest Services
Representatives, Marketing Assistant,
Costumed Greeter, Office/Communications
Assistant, and Archaeology Crew Members
and Interpreters. Positions pay $6.50/ hr.. FT
during season, hours/ day vary. Applicants
must be available from June 6- Labor Day.
Dormitory housing available at
approximately $80/ mo. Call 616-436-4100
or e-mail LINNT@state.mi.us or write:
Mackinac State Historic Parks, Box 873,
Mackinaw City, MI 49701 for application.
Deadline March 15, 1999. EOE.

MOTOR GOPHER wanted for Automobile
Magazine on MWF from 1-5. Good driving
record and/ability to drive a manual trans. a
must. $6/hour. Fax resume. with two
references to (734) 994-I 153.Attn: Harriet.
PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST flexible
hrs. Proficient on Macintosh computer. Work
independently, handle multiple duties, be
organized and efficient. Send reusme to:
National Kidney Foundation of Ml. 2350
South Huron Pakway, A2, Ml 48103.
SCOREKEEPERS IS NOW hiring cooks
for the winter/spring. No exp. nec.
Hardworking, punctual applicants apply at
310 Maynard next to Kinkos
SECURITY GUARDS TO work on U of M
campus. Part or full time available. Apply at
State Security. 525 Church. 998-7201. EOE.
SUMMER CAMP COUNSELORS Needed
for Premier Camps in Massachusetts.
Positions available for talented, energetic,
and fun loving students as counselors in all
team sports. all individual sports such as
Tennis & Golf, Waterfront & Pool activities.
& specialty activities including art, dance.
theatre, gymnastics. newspaper, rocketry &
radio. Great Salaries, room, board and travel.
June 19-Aug. 18. Enjoy a great summer that
promises to be unforgettable. MAH-KEE-
NAC (Boys): 1-800-753-9118. DANBEE
(Girls):1-800-392-3752.
www.greatcampiob.com
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-College Pro is
currently seeking motivated, goal-oriented
tudents to till our remaining management
intern positions. For more info, call 1-888-
277-7962, or www.collegepro.com
SUMMER INSTRUCTORS: Spend the
summer in Maine. Outstanding 8 week girls'
camp needs male & female instructors.
Beautiful wooded. lakefront location.
Teaching positions available in tennis. swim.
land sports, all arts, gymnastics, rocks/ ropes,
water sports, riding, dance, office, nanny.
group leaders & more. Excellent salary.
room/ board, travel allowance. Tripp Lake
Camp, Poland, Maine. Call 800-997-4347 or
888-617-7477 www.tipplakecamp.com
TAMARACK CAMPS
Jewish Residential camp
hiring summer staff:
Counselors and special-
ists. Call (248) 661-0600
for more information.
U-M INSTITUTE FOR Social Research
seeks part-time RESEARCH ASSISTANT /
Office Help for an economic research office
Winter-Spring-Summer+. Word, Excel, WP
required. Helpful to know: PDFs, MS
Access, HTML, Scanner. Bring resume to
426 Thompson St., Rm. 3084. U of M is an
Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity
Employer.
WANTED: Business builders interested in
achieving optimum health through nutrition.
734-495-5044.

CHILDCARE WANTED IN A2 home
close to campus. 15-20 hrs./wk. incl. wknds.
Exp., refs., & trans. req. Price neg. Ages 2
yrs. and 4 mos. Please call 734-332-7921.
LOOKING FOR PART-TIME day help.
Two children, ages 4 and 2.5. Good wage for
the right person. Call 741-9626.
SEEK A RELIABLE individual to stay with
two school girls between 3-6 p.m. at Ann
Arbor area home M-F. Good driving record a
must. Good pay. Call 663-1484.
SEEKING BABYSITTER FOR two great
children, ages 3 and I, for some afternoons
and weekend evenings. Excellent pay. Close
to campus. Call Kate 669-6577.

U 'ltlr!
LI

roommates

CANTON/SALEM 10 min. from U oM.
beautiful home on 5 acres, $330 inc. til.
734-451-3292.

r

personal 1

FLORIDA SPRING BREAK
Sandpiper-Beacon Beach Resort. Panama
City Beach, FL. From $159 per person. 3
pools. I indoor pool/lazy river ride. Huge
bcachfront hot tub. Tiki bar, home of the
world's longest keg party. free draft beer all
week w/ cover. Suites up to 10 people. Free
nfo www.sandpiperbeacon.com. 800-488-
0828.
#1 PANAMA CITY vacations! Free Parties
- No Cover. Best beachfront hotels from $99.
Free "Spring Break Uncensored" Video!
1-800-234-7007.
www.endlesssummertours.com

L 4

BEACH HSE AVAIL. for Spring Break on
S. Padre Island. $1100/wk. 2 bdrms., sleeps
7. Call (956)-761-5332 or 8750 or on the
web spionline.com

WINTER ESCAPE--COZY log cabins on
lake. $54-79 ntly. Inc. hot tub, ski trails.
Near downhill. Traverse City. 616-276-9502.

Spring Break Travei was of 6 small businesses in the US in 1998 to be
recognized for outstanding ethics by Council at Better Buiness Bureas'
Bahamas Party
Cruise $279
5 days * Most Meals * Free Paties * includes Taxes
Panma $119
City- Boardwalk, Holiday Inn Suospres ore
amuadCa $439
7 Nights *An + hotel save 150 oulFood &Drinks
Cancun $399
7 Nghts * Air + Hotel * Free Food & 30 Hrs of Drinks
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8o-svrNC ASE
DOMESTIC IN ORMATIaN & RESERVATIONS
iNew for 19991
1-888 SUNCHA
INTERNATIONAL INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS
www.gsmchase.Com
GET THE HELL OUT of here to the sun w/
Air Tech! Mexico, the Caribbean or Jamaica
$250 r/t.. Other worldwide destinations
cheap. Book tickets on the line
www.airtech.com or 800-575-TECH.
SPRING BREAK -ACAPULCO REPS
WANTED ONLY! Copacabana f/ $569,
Club Bananas $599, Hyatt Regency f/ $659,
Radisson Acapulco f/ $579, Cancun f/ $559,
Puerto Vallarta f/ $619, Los Cabos f2 $659.
Call Dan @ Regency Travel 665-6122 209 S.
State.
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from $399 from $99 from $399
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ON-CAMPUS CONTACT
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SPRING BREAK '99- Panama City
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per person. Closest to Spinnaker and La

SPECIAL GIFT - We're looking for healthy
women between the ages 21-35 for egg
donation. All ethnic backgrounds are
encouraged. Fee paid. Send inquiies to
AARMA, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbcop,MI
48106.

The best way to say
I Love You

is with the
Michigan Daily
Classifieds
Valentine Page!
dc v C

WANT TO DO LUNCH????- The Ann
Arbor Public School District is currently
hiring Noon Hour Supervisors for our
Elementary School Lunch Programs. If you
enjoy working with children and can work
between the hours of I I am and I pm, please
call, 994-2300 ext. 239 or 256. Salary
commensurate with experience.

*Look for the
forn, fill it o
only $6, send
someone
Deadline:
Publication:

rough copy
out, and for

your love
special!
Feb. 9
Feb. 1

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12

YOU CAN STUDY in my law office.
Interesting work as needed for pay. Left or
strong Ist ammendment views a +. 994-4934.

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