The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 11, 2000 -7 Time Warner/ AOL deal may lead to more inedia mergers LOS ANGELES (AP) - Merger mania is on the horizon: Entertainment giants such as Disney or Sony might have to strike some Internet deals of their own now that Time Warner has been snatched up by America Online. The sheer scope of the $160 billion Time Warner- AOL deal is expected to set off another round of *nergers or partnerships between studios with big film, TV and music libraries and Internet companies hungry for entertainment content, analysts said yes- terday. "Everybody on the Internet side of the street and the media side have to be re-evaluating their plans today, because this merger creates an 800-pound gorilla," said Dan O'Brien, an Internet analyst with Forrester Research. "Everyone has the same goal in mind to combine content and access." Besides gaining content, Internet companies with ew tangible assets can insulate themselves from stock market volatility by merging with traditional entertainment companies, said David Davis, an entertainment analyst with investment banker Houlihan Lokey Howard and Zukin. "AOL wanted to get more global. Now that they're armed with all those Time Warner brands,,it increases their chances of being successful," said Larry Petrella, analyst with Lehman Brothers. "Arguably, that hurts everybody else a little bit." And with the Web becoming a bigger player in entertainment distribution, analysts say studios will need better Internet connections to remain competi- tive. Potential technology players that could be looking to align themselves with entertainment companies include Microsoft, AT&T and Yahoo! Besides Disney and Sony, media companies that could be looking for new high-tech partners include News Corp.; Viacom, which merging with CBS; and MGM, which has been losing money for more than a decade but has a stel- lar film library. High court sides with tobacco industry in case WASHINGTON (AP) - The tobacco industry won a significant legal victory yesterday when the Supreme Court refused to let union health funds sue cigarette makers to recover the cost of treating smoking- related illnesses. The justices rejected appeals in which union health funds from Pennsylvania, Oregon and New York argued they should be allowed to sue tobacco companies under federal racke- teering and antitrust laws. "We're gratified," said Herbert Wachtel, a lawyer for Phillip Morris Inc. "Four courts of appeals have held unanimously that these third- party cases are without merit. Hopefully, this will put an end to them." Although yesterday's action set no national precedent, the three unsuccess- ful appeals had been viewed as health funds' best chance to reverse rulings that have thwarted their lawsuits against cigarette makers. John Banzhaf of Action on Smoking and Health lamented the court's action. "The tobacco industry gets to keep its ill-gotten gain and the public health loses;" he said. Banzhaf said the court's denial of review "sounds the death knell for these types of lawsuits by health funds and possibly by other third parties as well." Federal appeals courts also have dis- allowed smoking-related lawsuits by Blue Cross, foreign countries and smokers' employers. The health funds' lawsuits accused. the tobacco industry of defrauding them into paying to treat illnesses. caused by health-plantparticipants' smoking. The lawsuits contended cigarette makers and related industry organiza- tions withheld accurate information about smoking's health effects that might have led the funds to more aggressively discourage their mem- bers from smoking. The lawsuits were patterned after similar state claims that led to.settle- ments in which the tobacco industry will pay the states $246 billion for health care costs. America Online CEO Steve Case (left) and Time Warner CEO Gerald Levin embrace after a press conference yesterday announcing a merger between the companies. With its acquisition of Internet portal Infoseek, Disney is trying to build up its presence on the Web. A Disney spokesperson said the company had no comment on whether the AOL-Time Warner deal would affect its Internet plans. Disney, its stock slumping as earnings plunged 28 percent last year, could become an attractive takeover target for technology companies, O'Brien said. The company has been slow to recognize the value of pushing its entertainment content over the Internet, he said. "Traditional media companies have had a hard time understanding the dynamics of the Web," O'Brien said. "It's not just a matter of digitizing your content, setting up a site and expecting people to beat a path to your door. It doesn't work that way." While Time Warner and AOL may have the momentary edge, other media companies have not necessarily been left behind, analysts said. "One guy going out and being successful doesn't mean anybody else can't," Petrella said. "Viacom and CBS have a big future in their own right. Disney just needs to exe- cute better. To some extent, these companies just have to stick to their knitting, what got them there in the first place." Gore seeks $1lOM for global AIDS programs The Washington Post UNITED NATIONS - Vice President Al Gore pledged yesterday to seek more than $100 million from Congress next month to fund programs designed to prevent the spread of AIDS in Africa and Asia and remove the stigma attached to the deadly disease in the developing world. "AIDS is a global aggressor that must be defeated," said Gore, the first sitting U.S. vice president to preside over a U.N Security Council meeting. "For the nations of sub-Saharan Africa, AIDS is not just a humanitarian crisis, it is a security crisis." Gore said the U.S. commitment to halting the spread of AIDS would bring America's financial commitment to fight- ing AIDS overseas to $325 million. The additional funding will be targeted primarily at sub-Saharan Africa countries, which have been struck with particularly ferocity by an epi- demic that is threatening to undermine the political and eco- nomic gains of the past two decades. Most of the money would be spent on education and pre- vention programs. It would also pay for additional AIDS tests and blood screening programs in high-risk African nations, and finance care for some of the I I million children orphaned by AIDS. Gore said that the AIDS epidemic, if allowed to spread at the current rate, will exact a death toll in the first decade of the 21st Century that will rival that of all of the wars of the 20th Century. "This is a new security frontline," said Mark Malloch Brown, head of the U.N. Development Program. "Many times more people are being killed from the disease in sub- Saharan Africa each year than in the world's wars." More than 69 percent of the world's AIDS cases occur in sub-Saharan Africa, accounting for more than 14 mil- lion lives, according to the United Nations. Each day in Africa, 11,000 people contract the HIV infection that causes AIDS, which now has infected more than 23 mil- lion people in Africa. The plague has taken a huge toll on the region's young professional, political and military elite. L ASSISTANT: Prepare solutions, m ain glassware, & assist w/ basic procedures in cancer research lab. Bio student willing to learn. 8-12 hrsJwk. Michelle 647-9650. LAWYER'S CLUB dining is hiring students & work study students for lunch & wknds. $7.80-S8.90/hr. to start. Catering opportunities, meal benefits & flex. sched. Apply in person @ Lawyer's Club. 551 S. State St. Call 764-1115. LIKE WORKING WITH KIDS? The UM N al History Museum is looking for m educators to lead tours, narrate planetarium shows, and teach workshops. Work-study and non-work-study positions available. Call 647-6421 or email annetteb @umich.edu LOCAL MORTGAGE company seeks telemarketers for loan origination. $8-10/hr. to start. Call Craig @ 888-547-0757. MARKETING REP. ON CALL for film advertising, place movie posters in stores. Need car/camera. $9-11/hr., plus $0.21/mi. (800) 852-6250. MESSENGERS (2)-deliver campus mail on roj Other misc. duties. UM student pref. have valid drivers license & be familiar wI campus. Mon-Fri, 8-12, or 1-5. $8.50/hr. Call Joann at 764-7234. NEW OFFICE. Part-time workers needed who have exceptional communication skills to set appointments for our counselors. Earn $8.00 per hour, plus cash bonuses. No selling. Call 734/623-8431 for an interview. NOW HIRING for winter sem. school age childcare staff. Paid holidays and sick time. Weekdays 7-9 am and/or 3-6 pm. Call Vicki 994-2313 or Connie 996-3189 for interview. ICE ASSISTANT NEEDED. Approx. 20 hrs/wk., M- F. Good phone etiquette, organizational skills, and previous office exp. helpful. $7-8/hr. DOE. Call Wendi @ 763- 3265. P/T CHILDCARE for youth w/ emotional impairments. $8-1I/hr. Transportation req. Flexible hours. Next training Jan. 29th. Call Carolyn at 971-9605. P/T OR F/T SALESPERSON needed at Fashions-N-Things in Kerrytown. 994-6659. PAID LISTENERS NEEDED for semester long study, at Kresge Hearing Institute. . act emacpher@umich.edu PMSICAL ASSISTANT NEEDED for disabled male law student. Pay negotiable, will train. Call Chris 761-9551. POSTAL JOBS to $18.35/hr. Inc. Benefits, no experience. For application and exam info., call 1 800-813-3585, ext. 3608, 8 am-9 pm. 7 days fds, inc. RESEARCH ASSISTANT for downtown A2 marketing research firm. Flexible hours. You're smart, computer literate, detail oriented. You work well with others, but d' mind working on your own at times. $' per hour. Fax resume to 662-3255. RESEARCH DATA COLLECTION AND PROCESSING The University of Michigan, Survey Research Center Survey Lab is now recruiting people with excellent communication skills and interest/. SCOREKEEPERS IS NOW HIRING cooks, floormen and waitstaff for immediate openings. Apply TODAY at 310 Maynard across from Borders Books downtown. SEMINAR ASSISTANTS-evenings, $7- 10/hr. Please call Allan 996-1107. SOFTWARE ENGINEER (Mechanical Engineering). Conduct research. Simulate cutting forces of machining operations on Windows and Sun UNIX OS using C++ and international application framework. Design RAD tools to cut costs of info. system development. Providing engineering support to clients. Req: Masters in Mechanical Engg/Computer Sc/Computer Engg with knowledge in Mechanical Engineering. Sal: $55,000/year. 40 hr./wk. Job/Interview Site: Ann Arbor, Michigan, Please send this ad and resume to A2 Automation, Inc, PO Box 131335, MI 48113. SPEND YOUR SUMMER in a lakefront cabin in Maine. If you're looking to spend this summer outdoors, have fun while you work, and make lifelong friends, then look no further. Camp Mataponi, a residential girl's camp, has over 50 openings for M/F staff for Land/Watersports, Ropes Course, Tennis, H.B.Riding, A & C. Theater, Nature, Gymnastics, Dance, Photography, Martial Arts, Group leaders & more. Top salaries plus room/board & travel provided. ON SITE INTERVIEWS WILL BE CONDUCTED ON FEB. 1. Call us today toll free, 1-888-684-2267 or apply online at matanoni.com STUDENT EDITORIAL ASST. needed. Reading/Clipping newspapers. Tues. & Thurs. mornings. Call Kim at 763-5800. STUDENT RESEARCH assistants needed for short term data collection for UM acad. lang. reseach project Jr or Sr in Bio. SNRE. Eng. or other arts/hum majors to tape record classes, study groups, and other events equipment provided total of 10 to 20 hours per person for 2 or 3 weeks. $8/hr 763-7133. SUBJECTS NEEDED FOR experiment in cognitive psychology. Must be 18-30, native English speakers, right handed, w/ normal or corrected vision, normal color vision, and normal hearing. Pay is $10/hr., plus bonus based on performance. Call 936-2056 or email MHRI-Subjects@umich.edu TEACHERS ASSISTANTS- needed to work in childrens ESL classes in the family housing language program on North Campus. Call 763-7729 or e-mail cfalconi@umich.edu EOE. TELEMARKETER'S DREAM! XFER International, a messaging technology company. currently has an opening for an aggressive, motivated individual to work as a Telemarketer for our Sales Department. This position offers a competitive starting salary with many incentives and offers excellent growth potential for the right individual. Fax copy of resume, including three references, to (734) 913-4205 or email to larry@xfer.com U OF M HOSPITAL Child Care Center is hiring P/T assisting teachers in exciting Early Childhood Program. Flex. sched. Good Pay. Call 998-6195. WANTED: TWO PROGRAMMING ASSISTANTS starting WinterTerm: 2000. *Persons will be responsible for assisting in the planning and implementation as well as marketing of the Michigan League student programs and events. *Knowledge of and/or experience in implementing educational, social/cultural, and musical programs are preferred. *Skill in computer software (Adobe Pagemaker, Adobe Illustrator, etc.) applications is desirable. *Must be creaive, self motivated, reliable and able to work well with diverse groups. Apply at the: Michigan League Programming Office 911 N. University. Ann Arbor For more information, call 763-4652. WANTED: 29PEOPLE to get paid $$ to lose 30 lbs. in 30 days. 888-879-004) WEB DEVELOPMENT. Seeking talented creative web designers to subcontract Part time on various projects. $10-$15/hr. Email talents and URL's to: iobs@intergalactic.com WILDLIFE JOBS to $21.60/hr. Inc. benefits. Game wardens, security, maintenance, park rangers, no exp. needed. For applic. and exam info, call 1 800-813- 3585, ext. 3609, 8am-9pm, 7 days fds, inc. WORK STUDY STUDENT NEEDED: Assist staff by assembling packets, filing, running errands & light lifting. 10-15 hours per week. Qualifications: Good organizational & time management skills, works independently, pays attention to detail, follows directions accurately, dependable & punctual. Minimum of 2 hour blocks of time during the M-F, 8-5 workday. Call Catherine Philbin at 615-4859. WORK STUDY WEB JOB Premier organ transplantation web site (www.transweb.org) needs help with all aspects of web publishing. Great experience. $8-10/hr., 998-7314, transweb@umich.edu YOUTH SPORT COACH: Ann Arbor YMCA is looking for a P/T Youth Sports coach for kids 4-10 yr. Includes YMCA b hirhin & bir na Plac ral Am C@ CAREGIVER P/T for 3 sisters (6-9 yrs.). Afternoons, trans. & refs. req. 663-2773. CHILD CARE NEEDED in home for 2 yr. old and 10 wk. old. 15-20 hrs/week, mornings. Call Andrea 994-9817. CHILD CARE NEEDED. Your Schedule. Transportation & food provided. $7/hr. No house work. Call Karen 665-0166. ENTHUSIASTIC, responsible person needed to care for 2-1/2 yr old and 9 mo. old in our A2 home. N-smkr, own trans, refs. req. Avail. Fri, approx. 10-15 hrs/wk, flex. 665- 4093. FEMALE PREF., MUST be non-smoking, with car to drive two girls to middle school. Great money for little inconvenience! $70/week. Pick up at 7:10 a.m., drop at. school at 7:45 a.m. Leave msg. at 996-9077. FUN AND RESPONSIBLE person to care for our 7 yr. old daughter in our home. Mon. & Wed. 3:30-6pm. $7/hr. 665-5938. HOUSESITTER/ PET SITTER needed. Non-smoker, car nec., references. 434-2878. LOVING BABYSITTER needed in our home for our shy 2 year old son. 8-12 hrs/wk. $10/hr. We are looking for someone who can make at least a year long commitment. 623- 8460. NEED STUDENT to care for our 2 and 3 yr. olds in our Ann Arbor home. Tues. and Thurs. 8am-10:30 am for the winter semester. Own trans. and ref. req. Call 214-0024. SEEKING CHILDCARE for our 2 1/2 yr old boy in our west side home. 8-10 hrs/wk. Daytime. Flex. Good pay. Must be n-smkr, have trans., & ref. 995-9938. SEEKING ENTHUSIASTIC, responsible, warm individual for P/T, in home care of 3.5 yr. old. Winter semester Fridays 9-1 + other times. Call 995-9557. SUBSTITUTES NEEDED. St. Paul Early Childhood Center needs substitutes. No teaching required. Fun job working w/ young children. Great for Education & Psych. students to gain exp. Call 668-0887. SPRING BREAK BAHAMAS PARTY CRUISE! 5 DAYS $279! INCLUDES MEALS & FREE PARTIES! AWESOME BEACHES, NIGHTLIFE! DEPARTS FROM FLORIDA! CANCUN & JAMAICA $399! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678- 6386 SPRING BREAK PANAMA CITY $129! BOARDWALK ROOM W/KITCHEN NEXT TO CLUBS! 7 PARTIES-FREE DRINKS! DAYTONA $149! SOUTH BEACH $159! COCOA BEACH $179! springbreaktravel.com 1-800-678-6386 SPRING BREAK PANAMA CITY BEACH FLORIDA FROM $99 PER PERSON SANDPIPER BEACON BEACH RESORT THE "FUN PLACE"! HOME OF THE WORLD'S LONGEST KEG PARTY DRINK DRAFT BEER ALL WEEK LONG TIKI BEACH BAR ENTERTAINMENT BY BOOGIE INCORPORATED BIKINI CONTESTS MALE HARD BODY CONTESTS 3 POOLS LAZY RIVER RIDE WATER SLIDE HUGE BEACHFRONT HOT TUB MINI GOLF GIFT SHOP SUITES UP TO 10 PEOPLE. 1-800-488-8828. WWW.SANDPIPERBEACON.COM EXPRESS PARTY SHUTTLE TO AND FROM PANAMA CITY BEACH, FL.- CALL B&W CHARTERS 1-616-345-4222 OR 1-800-536-7000 Y2P Ply 0) Spring Break' is just around, the coner! -o And The Daily's 40,000 readers are looking for deals.' Advertise with the Classifieds. Call 764-0557. www.OPENSEATS.com Michigan's online ticket source buy/sell tickets REPAIR-RESTORE-MAKE-World Class Endorsed. Herb David Guitar Studio, 302 E. Liberty. 665-8001. UM BOXING CLUB- Meets at the Coliseum. M,W 7-9. Tu, Th 4:30-6:30. Beginners welcome. Come and try a new sport! Good athletes wanted for NCBA competition. Call 764-7952 or 930-3246 for details. GO DIRECT! #1 Internet-based company offering WHOLESALE Spring Break packages by eliminating middlemen! Al L Destinations! Guaranteed Lowest Price! I- 800-367-1252 www.springbreakdirect.com SPRING BREAK at Panama City Beach! "Summit" Luxury Condos Next to Spinnaker. Owner Discount Rates 404 355-9637. 0BDV 4OEs 83.-- .8 -QETTERI memnersnx p us pa 663-0536 ext. 252 o Ave. to fill out an app SUBSTITUTE TEACHERS needed at all. levels. 90 hrs. college credit required, $69 per day to start, 15 minutes north of Ann Arbor/Ypsi area, call 248-573-8140. South Lyon Community Schools. SWITCHBOARD OPERATORS needed r stop by 350 S. Fifth ; I...by booking a lication. Millennium Spring Break with Sunchusel child care { V _ ROOMMATE NEEDED in 2 bdrm. apt. Female preferred. 769-5992. OM3? peonal I More Parties. t is ;>i ! ia-' t I SPECIAL GIFT- We're looking for healthy ;;" . "., qw low m AW 7 - T- am I LE / IDS