LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 13, 1999 - 7 ADMISSIONS usd from Page 12 dents to the university is having administrators, faculty and students call admitted students. During the call, the university representative encourages the students' interest and answers any ques- tions they have about UCLA's campus or canmpuslife. The university has also sponsored eVepts such as the Academic Advancement Program Scholar, which *ured last weekend. At the one-day evnt, prospective minority students were given an overview of the campus and the opportunities available to them. Although UC-Berkeley does not have a special weekend set aside for underrep- resented minority students to explore the campus, Pamela Burnett, associate direc- tor ofundergraduate admissions and rela- tions with schools, said 250 airline vouchers have been given to its five cam- pus recruitment centers to encourage minority students to take the opportunity to visit during Cal Day. The university uses this day to ensure admitted students come to the school. Burnett said students who work at the recruitment and retention centers often provide the most effective recruitment efforts. "Undergrads are the best diplomats to newly admitted freshmen," Burnett said. UC Berkeley junior Solis Aguillera has worked at the campus' Native American Recruitment and Retention Center since his first year on campus. Aguillera said his efforts have included everything from showing high school seniors around campus to edu- cating students as young as kinder- garten about the opportunities the Berkeley campus has to offer. "Even if you just give them a T-shirt with a Native American Students at Berkeley logo, it helps remind them that college is an option," he said. Aguillera said the students use every opportunity they can to educate, and as a result not only recruit at community functions such as pow-wows, but also during summer vacations. Although Aguillera said he is inspired to do his work because "there has defi- nitely been in decline in people of color on campus,"adding that personal reasons also motivate him. Aguillera said he remembers being on the receiving end of the recruitment. As a part of low-income program for students of color, he was taken to Berkeley when he was younger and told, "You need to be here too." FROST Continued from Page 1 available to the public may answer why the poet actually left Amherst College, where he was a professor. University President Lee Bollinger has considered build- ing a Robert Frost Poetry House, describing the idea as "a comfortable place where students can read poetry to each other as well as to their teachers and guests," according to a press release. The president prognosticates the poetry house in the lobby of the Shapiro Undergraduate Library where students can drink coffee and hold literary meetings. University Chief Financial Officer Robert Kasdin said in a written statement, "We have considered building a new structure, but there is no current discussion underway to construct a separate facility to house a Robert Frost collec- tion." Previously, Frost was usually associated with New England, but "we now know he had deep and important asso- ciations with the University of Michigan," Bollinger said. Upon invitation from former University President Marion Burton, who created the first Fellowship in the Creative Arts, Frost came to Ann Arbor as a Poet in Residence. Frost lived at Greenfield Village in Detroit during his stay He was on campus from 1921 to 1922 as part of a one-year fellowship with no assigned work and returned later in 1 as the Fellow in Creative Arts. Former University President C.C. Little granted Frost a. permanent appointment from 1925 to 1926. Although he did not teach, Frost did meet with students during this time and "his presence touched the broader University commu- nity" said Anne Knott, the special counsel to the presi- dent. A manuscript about the time Frost spent at the University was recently finished by Robert Warner, dean emeritus of the School of Information and Library Studies. Bentley Library plans to publish its Bob Frost, Frost's great-grandson, who lives in Ann Arbor, also recently donated some documents and other items to the Rare Book Library. Frost "was quintessentially a 20th Century kind of person, and not the quaint New England pastoralist some have imag ined," Bob Frost said in a press release. SACUA offers opinion on life sciences plan services MACKINAC ISLAND RESORT Hotel Biology, Science, Education and Liberal seeking summer staff/front desk, dining Arts Graduates room, kitchen, and maintenance. Contact No Experience Required Iroquois Hotel winter office (in Ann Arbor) No EperinceRequredat 327-9660. e-mail: Iroquois@freeway.net CHINA & phone cards Liberty, SOUTH EAST Asia prepaid at Daikalok Cafeteria 510 E. COLLEGE CLEANER-Professional Dry Cleaning and Summer Storage available. Basement at 715 N. University. 662-1906. EDITING & FORMAT. Theses, books, journal articles, proposals. All disciplines. 734/996-0566 or writeon@bizserve.com LOANS, LOANS, LOANS! Need a loan. approval. Bad, good or no credit, please cwt-877-633-4621 toll free. t + HOUR! 15 Work Processing Mail or Email From Home or School! For Details Email: A ply4now@smartbot.net 770-937-64 $$$WORK STUDY STUDENTS: Spring/ Summer positions available with option to continue Fall/ Winter. Learn a variety of work skills related to conference planning in higher education. Positions available in clerical, accounting, and membership services. Computer exp. helpful. Casual attire, work on central campus! Contact Susan 998-6965. WORK IN CALIFORNIA$$ ing for something different this summer? Build your resume and make money, ave. made $2714/mo. Fun & chplienging job for ind. students. Call Casey 971-0790 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. $1500 WEEKLY potential mailing our circulars. For info call (203)-319-2802. A FUN SUMMER JOB that makes a DIFFERENCE. Work with children as general counselors from 6/21-8/13. Must live in Farm., Blm. Fld., Novi, Birm., or adj. .Email Willowaydc@aol.com or Call oway Day Camp 248-932-2123. A FUN WAY TO BUILD YOUR RESUME! Campus reps needed to perform year-round marketing and campus research functions. Must enjoy interacting with. other students/faculty, posses above average communication skills, and be a self starter. Flexible hours: 10-15/wk. average. Must be available over summer months. Great pay and fringe benefits, including discounts on your textbooks. CALL 1-800-921-1099 or e- maiL jobs@theuzone.com with a resume hment. EOE iTI-MEDIA GUIDE (AMG), the world's largest music database and reference website, has, two full-time openings for data linkers who will prepare information for inclusion in the classical music database. Classical music knowledge and database experience a plus. $1 0 per hour with benefits. For information call Gerald Brennan at 887-5600 ext. 143. AnT. COMPLEX- Ann Arbor. Part-time/ full-time leasing agents. Flex. hrs., walking distance to campus. Exp. helpful, but not req. Phone (734) 665-4331 or fax (734) 665-2354. ASSISTANT SYS. ADMIN. 3 ars experience with M.S. Windows 95/98/NT4, Solaris, and/or Linux. Networking experience a plus. Desirable qualities include troubleshooting software and hardware issues, and the ability to support a user base with a positive attitude JUNIOR PROGRAMMER 0.3 years experience with Visual Basic, C/C++, Java, SQL, or HTML. Oracle or other database experience is a plus. Ability to work independently and a strong willingness to learn. on the job training available to successful candidates. A.J. Boggs & Company 2853 Jolly Rd. Okemos, MI 48864 Fax to 517-333-0145 or e-mail to Info@ajboggs.com or visit us at www.aiboggs.com Free Training in a Field with Superb Opportunities: Biomedical Information Technology Start at 28K. Most people earn 34K within a year, plus full benefits. IMS, Inc. is offering a free 4 week programming course. In the last 2 years, IMS, Inc. has hired over 90% of the students who have taken this course. Courses start June 7 or July 12. Positions located in Silver Spring, Maryland 8 miles outside D.C. Call 888-680-5057. WWW.IMSWEB.COM. CAMP JOBS For residents of Chicago's Northern suburbs. DISCOVERY DAY CAMP is seeking nurturing staff: counselors and specialists in nature, ropes course, gymnastics, drama, tennis, and swimming. Bus driving positions available for over 21s. Call 800-659-4332 or email ilise@campdiscover.com CANOE LIVERY HELP. Accepting applications for seasonal positions, full & part time. Must be able to work Sat., Sun., and holidays. Bonus wage plan. Skip's Canoe Livery 769-8686 or 426-1651. CollegeBytes.com Internship! Interested in an internet-related career? join us this summer at CollegeBytes, a rapidly expanding college-oriented website founded by top executives from Lycos, Netscape, andhObject Design. Internships are available in the editorial, campus relations, marketing, and engineering departments. Interns will work on-site in Cambridge, MA. Housing is available. Interns should have completed their freshman, sophomore, or junior year. For more information, contact: Karen Hart at karen@commonplaces.com or 1-888-271-9854 ext. 213. COMPETITIVE WAGES, flexible shifts, weekend hours.. work at the Home Depot. Now hiring all positions, all stores. Call 1 877-WORK-4HD. EOE. COMPUTER NETWORK ENGINEER Challenging Career installing and supporting UNIX, Netware, and Windows NT networks in SE Michigan. Will train the right people. Controller, 4201 Varsity Dr. #D, A2 MI 48108. www.domss.com EOE. COOKS, $8-10 PER HOUR depending on experience. Apply in person at Ashley's 338 S. State St. between 2-5 p.m. Apply now to ensure summer employment. EARLY CHILDHOOD SUBSTITUTES needed for spring and summer. Have fun while earning extra cash. Work according to your schedule. $7/hr. Call Pat at 668-0887. FALL TEACHER (Love toddlers). Cook, clean, organize, yard work & pet care. Full time or afternoons. $8-$10/hr. 769-2795. FRIENDLY, ENERGETIC PEOPLE needed for first class, fast paced tanning salon. Apply at Tanfastic, 627 S. Main St. GOLF COURSE RIDERS needed by national golf pub syndicate to write reviews. Bad pay, free golf, email support at rockies.com or call 520-219-5760. GREAT SUMMER COUNSELOR POSITIONS Have Fun, Make a Difference,Summer in New England Residential Summer Camps seek staff in all individual and team sports: Baseball, Basketball, Tennis, Soccer, Inline Hockey, Golf, Swimming, Sailing, Water-skiing, Mt. Biking, Backpacking, Climbing wall/challenge Course, football, Lacrosse, Coaching, General staff positions, office, dance, and gymnastics. Located in the mountains of Massachusetts just 2 1/2 hours from NYC & Boston. Competitive Salaries + room/board. Call Camp Greylock for Boys (800) 842- 5214 or Camp Romaca for Girls (800) 779- 2070. Healthy summer - Stay in Shape - Work Outdoors. GREAT SUMMER JOB-Perfect for education majors. Work with children on field trips, help on farm, some fish cleaning. Job runs May-Aug. $7.50/hr. 40 hour week, Spring Valley Trout Farm, Dexter, MI. (734) 426-4772. HELP WANTED. Groundskeeper, gardener, odd jobs. Part-time, good pay, hours flex. nshure@ic.net or 994-3861. HOUSECLEANING and other chores. Evenings and weekends. Reasonable rates. 528-8845. JOBS, JOBS, JOBS!!! 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. LANDSCAPE ARCHITECT STUDENT wanted for contract job for rate neg. 248-640- 3021. LANDSCAPE ASSISTANTS - Summer employment with or without possible part or full time opportunity for Fall. Landscape MUSKIER TOURS AND SUMMER DISCOVERY SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES Counselors needed for our student travel programs and/or our pre-college enrichment programs. Applicants must be 21 years old by June 20, 1999. We need: *Mature *Hardworking *Energetic individuals who can dedicate 4-7 weeks this summer working with teenagers. To Receive an application or to find out more infomation: Call (888) 8SUMMER or E-mail: ien@sunmerfuncom NOW HIRING. Bussing staff, hostess or hostesses. Flex. hrs. Great pay. Exc. working environment. Apply in person at the Blue Nile Restaurant, 221 E. Washington St. by the 5th Ave. entrance. OFFICE ASSIST. May-Aug. 20-40 hrs./wk. $9/hr. General office duties ml. Word processing. This position requires moving & lifting of heavy boxes. Contact Jody Gray 764-5454. OFFICE MANAGER/ ASSIST. for landscape design build firm in Ann Arbor. Must be able to operate PC, communicate with clients, perform basic accounting. provide office support. Great opportunity for those who wish to run a business. F/T summer, P/T fall & winter. $8/ hr. 668-7519. PAINTERS RESIDENTIAL Interviewing for summer positions. No exp. needed. Reliable vehicle & valid driver license a must. Call 995-0715. PANIC ATTACKS? Suddenly, out of the blue, you feel frightened or anxious. Your heart may pound, or you tremble and cannot catch your breath. If you have had such attacks, and you are between 18 and 50 healthy, medication free including birth control pills and hormones, and not a shift worker, volunteer for a U of M research project. We are trying to understand the brain chemistry of panic and you could help. Evaluation includes physical exam, EKG, bloodwork and an interview. Study requires two half days at the hospital, an IV and blood draws. Compensation up to $150.00. Call 936-8726. PART-TIME OFFICE work available May thru August at Student Publications. We are looking for detail oriented, organized individuals. Retail experience a plus. 20 hours per week minimum. $7/hr. Send resumes or application letters to Summer Job, 210E Student Publications, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 PART-TIME TEACHERS needed for child care centers. $7.65 per hour. If you are available afternoons or full days, please call 761-2576. PAY FOR SCHOOL BY OWNING YOUR OWN BUSINESS. International communications company seeks independent representatives. Earn up to $1600/mo. P/T. Call 1-888-234-1950 ext. 6056. RETAIL NUSERY NEEDS sales staff! Must know plants and workweekends. Please call Lodi Farms 665-5651. SCOREKEEPERS NOW HIRING part time cooks, waitstaff, and floormen for March through July 30th (Art Fair). Must be available spring and summer terms. No experience needed but helpful. Apply today at 310 Maynard across from Borders books. SMOKERS WITH ADD needed for one more research studies on nicotine and attention at U of M Nicotine Research Lab. Must be 18-55 years of age. Pays up to $310. Please call 763-9000 and enter category #6329. STUDENTS! GET A HEAD start on your summer job. Small firm seeks data entry and light office production people. Hours flexible. Call 677-3400, M-F, 10-5pm. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT $9.00/hr. South University. Part-time. PMG - The Physician's Billing Specialist is a leader in Medical Billing and we are looking for Data Entry personnel to work in our campus office (above McDonald's). If you can accurately type 80+ wpm and are interested, fax resume to 734.677.7407 or email resume to rservis@pmgpays.com. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT available, earn up to $18.50 an hour. Michigan company seeking hard working, honest, dependable person to work the summer. Work available throughout Michigan. Send resume to: P.O. Box 80771, Lansing, MI 48908-0771. EOE. SWIMMING POOL SERVICE & construction. Top pay for hard-working, self- motivated people to work in the NW Detroit subs Must be trustworthy & dependable. 248- 477-7727. WANTED: HEALTHY VOLUNTEERS Healthy men and women ages 18-65 who are non-smoking and not taking any medications are needed to participate in a study examining the effect of commonly used medications on enzymes found in the liver and intestine. The study requires a physical exam and a 2 week stay in the General ABLE CHILDCARE NEEDED approx. 10 hrs./wk. after school & wknd. eves. 7 & 10 yr. old boys. 663-3482. BABYSITTER NEEDED for 3 children in West Bloomfield for Friday nights & some Saturday & Sundays (days). Great pay. Please call after 4 p.m. (248) 682-5582. BABYSITTER NEEDED in my Ann Arbor home after school for 2 girls. M-F 3-5:30 May 1-June 18. Non-smoker, must have own car. Call Jill at 482-4500 or 747-8748. BABYSITTER NEEDED some eves. & 2 afternoons per week for June, July, & Aug. Walking distance to campus. 663-5310. BABYSITTER NEEDED TUESDAYS in summer. Two boys, 2 & 5. Must have own trans. 996-8379. DAYCARE FOR TWIN BOYS (Perfect lob for college student attending spring/ summer classes.) Northeast A2 in subdivision with pool. Car req. P/T during school yr.; F/T in Aug. & some wks. in June & July. 734- 662-5392 eve. 8-9p.m. & Sat. GET PAID TO PLAY. Earn $7-8/hr. 10-20 hrs./wk. We will work around your schedule. 913-0677 or 913-5407. KIND, WARM, LOVING n-smkg. person w/ bright personality to babysit 2 small children. Mon., Wed., Fri. 10:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. $7/hr. Begin May 1. 994-0035. SUMMER BABYSITTER needed in my Ann Arbor home. Begin June 21, M-F 9- 5:30. Non-smoker, must have own car. Call Jill at 482-4500 or 747-8748. WANTED: EXPERIENCED BABYSITTER for part-time employment opportunities, flexible hoursmand days, must have car, start as soon as possible. References. Jenner 214-9050 or 214-9020. SCIENCE Continued from Page J. plex. Shaking her head "no," Cantor responded to Kossoudji, stating that the money allotted for the life science com- plex "is not attached to the individual as much astotthe infrastructure of the pro- gram. "I hope these earmarked funds will help with the high overhead associated with the life sciences," Cantor said. Bollinger said he had no desire to pay a life science complex faculty member an exorbitant salary, stating a large por- tion of the allotted money would be used to update some of the University's scientific equipment. "We have no desire to pay them 10 times as much; that's wildly out of line;" Bollinger said. "Parts of the Medical Center labs are in bad shape. We need to do something as an insti- tution to upgrade what needs to be upgraded." Bollinger added that the University community would not be able to sur- vive if there was an extremely vast salary difference between life science complex and other University faculty members. But Cantor acknowledged that the University pays professors in certain fields more than those in oth- ers. "We have already spent more on the science faculty than on the humanities across the board, so I don't see this as a new issue," Canter said. Sociology Prof. Donald Deskins also questioned Cantor and Bollinger about the involvement of the life science complex faculty with undergraduate students of the University. "Many of these 'stars' rarely ever teach - they have their own research agenda and minimal or no contact with the students," Deskins said. "We get the name but how do (the students) get meaningful contact with the profes- sor?" But Cantor said those professors hired by the University would have real. teaching positions, stating "the institu- tion will do real hard thinking on hQw to bring them from the lab to the class room and from the classroom to the lab." In addition, Cantor said undergradu- ates would be able to access the profes- sors through the Undergraduate Research Opportunity Program and possibly a new "Health Science Scholar" living-learning program. TIGERS OPENING (BLEACHER) - collective soul, Marilyn Manson(Main Floor) Violent Femmes, Dave Mathews, Aerosmith. 248-613-1632. FREE HAIRCUTS! Offer limited to Aaron Liepman only and not valid when Niki is busy. Expires 12/00. INTRODUCTORY ZEN MEDITATION COURSE. Five Thursday evenings 6:30 to 8:30 beginning April 15. Zen Buddhist Temple (734) 761-6520. LESSONS-STRINGS-WIND-PIANO. You can play today- Herb David Guitar Studio 302 E. Liberty 665-8001. SHOOTING STARS & Fox Networks will be in town to do a Naked Mile Documentary. We're looking for female students who wish to participate. Please contact us ASAP: nakedmile@yahoo.com WINTER ESCAPE--COZY log cabins on lake. $54-79 ntly. Incl. hot tub, ski trails. Near downhill. Traverse City. 616-276-9502. GREEN Continued from Page 1 In 1992 in Rio de Janeiro, during the United Nations Conference on the Environment, the panel leading a discussion on biodiversity was com- posed of actors and singers. Corporations, fisheries and whalers, Watson claimed, squeeze the last dollar out of natural resources and move on to gobble up more. When asked if he thought corpora- tions had any solutions, Watson admitted Paul Mitchell and Patagonia are two corporations doing some- thing to improve the planet. But he said these corporations have done something positive only because they are not led by a board of directors. Once a corporation only is "answerable to faceless people," it will lack compassion and be part of the problem, Watson said, repeating that it takes an impassioned and responsible individual to help the planet. But Watson said the media has never portrayed him as impassioned and responsible. Instead, he said he has been called a terrorist and a crim- inal. He asked the audience how he could be a criminal and still freely appear before them. He calls himself a pirate, explaining that "pirates can be good." Currently, Watson is fighting the Russian Mafia and its alleged illegal trade in caviar and the Central and South American drug cartels, who use tuna boats with false bottoms, thereby funneling money into a harmful marine industry. Watson said he has many targets - anyone who threatens what he calls the natural world; people who don't know that killing one species affects many others. Watson said he learned about the natural world when he fought Russian whalers, who shoot explod- ing harpoons at sperm whales, by sailing his boat between the hunted pod and the hunting ship. Rough waves dropped him into a trough and crested both the fleeing pod and the ship. The launched harpoon sailed over his head, struck a sperm whale in the back, and he said he heard it scream. e The bull of the pod dove and could have attacked Watson's boat - which was closer - but attacked' the whaler's boat instead. They were prepared for his charge and shot him point blank in the head. The whale dove again and surfaced next to Watson's boat - close enough that the whale could have killed him. But the whale didn't kill Watson. Instead he said he saw in an eye the size of his fist a very real under- standing, as well as pity. That hap- pened in 1975, and that's when he turned his back on humanity and "served the whales." Shepherd Sea, an organization which upholds international marine laws and doesn't protest them, was started with the aid of Buckminster Fuller, who told Watson not to "let the media set (his) agenda;" Cleveland Avery of Fund . for Animals, who donated the money to buy the first ship in Watson's fleet; and Margaret Mead, who told- him something he said twice last night: Never confide in government institu- tions to solve social problems; it is passionate people who make a change. "As long as you use your abilities to make this a better world, it doesn't matter what you do," Watson said. "Don't take any criticism to heart we haven't got anything right yet."-s f-- personal i ATTENTION BUSINESS MINDED SOPHOMORES AND JUNIORS The Michigan Daily is currently accepting applications for its Circulation Manager position to begin in late August. If you are I ing for... " real-world business experience * the ability to set your own hours (between 10-18 per week) " a fun, student-run work environment . an opportunity to market and handle distribution of 18,000 daily newspapers ..,then call Adam at 764-0558 for an AMATEUR VIDEOGRAPHERS - Documentary film makers looking for Hi- quality video footage-Naked Mile 1999. We pay top $$. Please contact us at Videocat @hotmail.com. LOVING COUPLE & adopted son long for new born. Stay at home mom, professional dad ready to open relationship with birth family. Allowable expenses. Shirley/ Drew 800-607-3632. SPECIAL GIFT - We're looking for healthy women between the ages 21-35 for egg donation. All ethnic backgrounds are encouraged. Fee paid. Send inquiries to AARMA, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. L This ain't your. parents' ,, travel agny With our staff of experienced travelers, a global network of offices, great prices, ticket flexibility and a ton of travel services; I AwS' u I