The Michigan Daily - Friday, March 17, 2000- 7 men indicted on weapons charges in school shooting FLINT, Mich. (AP) - Indictments g nsealed yesterday accused three men of deral weapons counts involving a pistol police say a 6-year-old used in killing a first-grade classmate.* Grand jurors on Wednesday charged Jamelle Andre James, Robert Lee Morris Ill and Sir Marcus Winfrey, all of nearby Mount Morris Township, with possessing stolen firearms and being unlawful users of marijuana in possession of firearms, U.S. Attorney Saul Green said. Authorities say Morris in December pos- essed and sold a stolen .32-caliber semi- automatic handgun that made its way into the possession of James and Winfrey. Prosecutors say that weapon ultimately got into the hands of the 6-year-old boy police say fatally shot classmate Kayla Rolland on Feb. 29 in Buell Elementary School in Mount Morris Township. James, a friend of the boy's family, earli- er had been charged with involuntary manslaughter in Kayla's death for allegedly *eaving the handgun within easy access of the boy. Genesee County prosecutors say investi- gators believe the gun had been left under James' blankets at the house where the boy was staying with Winfrey, his uncle. Since the shooting, Winfrey has been jailed in Genesee County on unrelated, out- standing warrants. Morris, who had not been charged previ- ously, was arraigned later yesterday in fed- eral court on one indictment count of possession and sale of the stolen pistol, and one count of possession and sale of a 12-gauge shotgun found in a "flophouse" where the boy had been staying. Two other counts allege Morris unlaw- fully used marijuana while in possession of the firearms. Morris posted S 10,000 secured bond and was released to his father's custody. As part of his release, Morris was ordered by U.S. Magistrate Wallace Capel Jr. to wear an electronic tether, spend weekends under house arrest and remain home unless work- ing his job part-time for a plumbing con- struction business. "If you fail to follow any of the condi- tions of my bond," Capel told Morris, "I'm revoking the conditions of bond, and you're going to be locked up." After his son's arraignment, Robert Lee Morris 11 said his son was only a middle- man in transactions involving the weapons and that "I believe he's learned his lesson." "He's a good kid, just made a mistake," the elder Morris said. "If you hang out with a bunch of winos, you're a wino," he said. "He hung around with the wrong people. He made a mistake, and now he's going to pay for it." In the indictment returned Wednesday, James and Winfrey are charged with two counts alleging they possessed the stolen handgun and shotgun, and unlawfully used marijuana while possessing each of those weapons. Authorities have said the boy told them he took the gun to school to scare Kayla. Prosecutors have said they will not charge the boy because he is too young to under- stand his actions. The indictment was unsealed after Mor- ris' arrest yesterday morning at his resi- dence, assistant federal prosecutor Robert Haviland said in a statement. Calls yesterday to Haviland were referred to Gina Vitrano, spokeswoman for Green's office. She declined to elaborate about the indictment's charges. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Special Agent Vera Fedorak said the charges came following an investiga- tion that focused on the home and any adults who may have had illegal weapons there. AP PHOTO Jack Hagen, 8, of .itchfield Park, Ariz., builds two snowmen in the backyard of his grandmother's home in Traverse City yesterday. PETA pulls 'Got beer?' ads FLOOR MANAGER HANDS-ON STORE Exiting opportunity to join the Hands-On Museum team. Retail experience preferred. 9:30am to 5:30pm Wednesday through Saturday. Some flexibility in schedule required. Call Pam Smith at 734-995-5439. FRONT DESK CLERK PT Spring/Fall FT Sumnmer. Customer service, computer usage. Faee bus pass. bonus potential Med-Inn. ,36-)3-01001 i am - 4 pm. MEAL SEASONAL opportunity. Seeking F/T summer sales person, customer service or tles exp. desired. Commissioned position. *[.Paid training, and min. monhly garanle. Same eves, and wknds. re. Apply in person A Apartment Search. 2877 Carpenter Rd- I'MEDIATE INCOME Opportunity. ake money while attending college. serious iquiries only. 734-9132194. INDEPENDENT FILM needs actors All types, m/f. Asian female lead role. 734-817- 594 11. Email tlmx @hotail.com IN PEACE ORIENTED Income-sharin lop trying to have smart kids. Near Univ. Illinois. Students Welcome. 1-800-498-7781 tarty childrenfor'hefuture.og V Y OPERATOR-Come join us at our new Vje Immediate F /PT opening for energetic otson in copy center serving UI eomninunity. Job responsibilities mncluding scheduling production and operating copy equipment. Must be detail oriented, well organized. and able to meet deadlines. Will train. Xerox 5090 experience helpful. but not required. Send resume to Grade A Notes. 't n: Sarah Gerrard. P Box 4274. A2. M. 06. Fax (734) 741-8877. email: annarhom radenotes.com LAWYER'S CLUB dining is hirng studens & work study students for lunch positions. 57.80-$8.90/hr. to start. Caterin opportunities, meal benefits & flex. sched. Apply in person @) Lawyer's Clb. 551 S. State St. Call 764- 15._ LEASING AGENT NEEDED part-time for student housing apartments. No experience necessary- we'll train. Call 668-1100 LIFEGUARDS, INSTRUCTORS & Coaches needed for Huron Valley Swim Club. Call Melissa for more info. 668- i)07. 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SALARY +BONUS For additional information Call: 734-883-2434 MOTHER'S HELPER/HOUSEKEEPER. 81 hours/week light housekeeping and ands in Ann Arbor. Hours flexible. On bus 11e. but own vehicle a plus. Call Nina at !34-975-9401. MUSIC LOVER concert promoter has staff openings for office and/or flyring. Mon.. Wed. Fri.. I I a.m. - 2 pm. Tues. and Thurs. I0 a.n - 6 p.m.. Hourly wage plus concert ickets:665-4755. SALES ASSOCIATES Gala Hallnark-Briaiwood Mall NORFOLK, Va. (AP) - An animal-rights group yester- day pulled its "Got Beer?" ad campaign, which anti-drunk- en driving activists had criticized as a misguided promotion of underage drinking. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals unveiled the campaign on college campuses this week. The Norfolk- based group contends that milk cows and their calves suffer on factory farms and that the fat and cholesterol in milk make drinking beer look good by comparison. PETA said it stopped the campaign out of respect for concerns raised by Mothers Against Drunk Driving. "MADD got their message out. We got our message out," Gala Hallmark has immediate openings for days & weekends (PT). Flexible scheduling competiive starting pay, generous employee discount. previous retail experience helpful. bt nt necessary. Come n or call for app. 734-668-1 151 or fax to 734-665-161. atm: Vmck K SEEKING TENANT Advocates. Serve your comunnmv & earn S8/r 763-6876 STUDENT GROUNDSKEEPER HELP WANTED Responsible for maintaining campus grounds and nurturing plant materials on campus. As seasons dictate: assist with nowing: weed whipping: weeding leaf pickup: shrub and flower bed clean-up: preparing for planting flowers bulbs: pruning ornamental trees and shrubs. Duties also inclue litter pick-up and snowremoval. Pay starts at )800 per hour: flexible schedules available. Desired qualifications: self-motivation: dependability: enthusiasm: genuine imerest in creatimg beautiful and safe campus area. To apply: call 763-5539 or visit our website vwv,.plontbt'uiich.cdlul ruldN/ Employmenopportunitiesht1iil or slop b\ UM Grounds Depnlrient offic fi)r an application betwcen 7am-3pm weekday Grounds & Waste Management. Plant Services Building (first floori II If) Palier Dr. (behind the Power Center, An equal opportunity. affirmative action cmplovori STUDENT ORGANIZATION FUNDRAISER The original CIS student organization fundraiser is back! Student organmizations all across the US have earned 1.000-$2,000) with our easy three hour fundraising event. Now it's your turn. Call (888) 923-3238, or visit www.cisfundraising coin STUDENT RESEARCH ASST. or work study position in Med. School lab for spring, sumier. & fall. Learn/assist with research techniques (DNA. RNA tissue culture..) & housekeeping. Research lab experience & science background preferrd. 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We are lookin for outgoing. self-motivated leaders on this campus to market Virtuaintern.con. It's a great resume builder with an awesome compensation package. For more information, email vihr@virualintern.com WANTED HOUSEWIFE HELPER. P/T flex hrs. various duties. Must have own transportation. Call after 4 pm. 761-9551 WANTED. Enthusiastic, responsible, & flexible students to work w/ the traumatically brain injured in a semi-independent living environment. We offer flex. hrs., competitive wages & benefits. P/T & F/T positions avail. The ideal job for college students. Interested applicants contact Jason at Residential Placement & Consultants. Phone 677-3222. Fax 677-3348. WANTED: Women smokers ages 18-55! .- Xint n 1if..M4 c nA .... nn..,.....,,i.-.R BABYSITTER WANTED to care for cheerful older infant in Ann Arbor during snmei. 21- 30 hours/week. Hours flexible: will consider spring-time start date. Call Nina at 734-975-9401. 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Mexico/ Caribbean S 199-5299 (i/i + taxes) Call: 800-326-2009 www.4cheapair.com PROTEST Continued from Page 1 Although TerHaar said the protest did not cause the MIRLYN online library catalog to overload, library staffers spent much of the day reshelving books that the group took off shelves but did not check out. She added that workers from other University libraries helped in the effort. The library has about 190,000 books in circulation, Terl-laar said. Circulation staff member Becky Katzman, an LSA senior, said she was concerned that the group of graduate students was targeting the undergraduate library. "They are only checking out books from the undergraduate library, which is a collection of books geared toward first- and second-year stu- dents," Katzman said. Hashimoto said the undergraduate the most attention. TerHaar said the! had a right to che but said reshelving day was difficult. "They have v cards," TerHaar sai library does not pl number of books check out. LSA junior Jos looking up books c ing the protest. "Ni view may be on Mi think it's right for t lives of other stu said. Brentwood, Ten Campion and his1 the University for a terday and were at the protest was occt said Bruce Friedrich of PETA. "Our goal was always to raise awareness about the suffering of cows and their calves, and we've certainly done that." PETA will give MADD $500 collected from employees and include a link to MADD on its Website as goodwill gestures. "As spring break and St. Patrick's Day is upon us, we hope we helped save lives and prevented injuries due to underage drinking and impaired driving by speaking out against the campaign," MADD spokeswoman Tresa Hardt said. The animal-rights group plans a different approach, using an ad showing a calf modeled after the pictures of missing children seen on the backs of milk cartons. the group chose "It's free speech," the father said. library to attract His son Tom said such protests would not affect his decision to group of students, attend the University. "It's a part of ck out the books America, why not?" the books in one Hashimoto said the group agrees with the previous demands of the alid borrowers Students of Color Coalition but d, noting that the emphasized that they are a separate ace a limit on the group. a cardholder can SCC spokesperson Joe Reilly said he appreciated the group's efforts but h Hartman was did not know about the event until on MIRLYN dur- yesterday afternoon. o matter what:my "Just because the occupation is chigamua, I don't over doesn't mean the fight for hem to affect the equality is over," Reilly said. dents," Hartman Michigamua spokesman Nick Del- gado said he heard about the protest n., resident Tom after it happened. son Tom, visited "This type of action only impedes campus tour yes- progress," Delgado said. "It's impor- the library while tant for Michigamua to distance urring. itself from the political rhetoric." gural season in the league. Michigan swept the season's only meetings by scores of 6-2 and 6-1. But something can be said about being the hot team in the tournament. And there is something to be said about having the hot player. Nebraska-Omaha junior Jeff Hoggan, who has been playing with a torn knee ligament since Janu- ary, scored all three of the Mavericks' game-winning goals in postseason play. He currently leads the league in game- winning goals. "It's the playoffs," freshman Andy Hilbert said. "They are going to get up for it, they are on a really big high and they will be unbelievable." Fatigue could play against the Mavericks. The fact that Nebraska-Omaha has traveled across four states and back in the span of a week could factor into its play. "The travel has taken its toll on us," Kemp said. "It's hard since we've gotten out of our routine. We've been out of that routine since last Thursday before we went to Mar- quette. There was a large snowstorm, so we had to fly into Green Bay and we missed our normal practice times. It's been tough, but right now we're just going on adrenaline." It's just another obstacle the Mavericks have overcome. But it's the adrenaline that the Wolverines have to be careful about. "If they get down by three or four goals -that would dis- courage them enough to realize that they are really, really tired," Berenson said. "But if they are up two or three goals, do you think they are going to get tired? There is no way. Their eyes will be shining and they will fired up. HOCKEY Continued from Page 1 of the regular season. At that point, the Mavericks had only a remote possibility of returning to Omaha. But the team proved the workers - and the doubters - wrong as it defeated fourth-seeded North- ern Michigan in Marquette in the best-of-three first round series of the playoff. Bowling Green's defeat of Lake Superior allowed Nebraska-Omaha to host the play-in game. "It was not until Sunday night at around nine that the crew started putting the ice down again," Kemp said. "There were 60-degree temperatures in Omaha last weekend so the workers had to work from Sunday night straight until after the game on Tuesday in order to get the ice under playable conditions for the play-in game. They never left the center in those two days." But in order to shock the NCAA selection committee for a bid on Sunday, the Mavericks must first beat the Wolver- ines at Joe Louis Arena - a place Michigan is quite famil- iar with but a venue that Nebraska-Omaha has never played in before. "Half of our kids have never even been to Detroit before" Kemp said. The winner of the Michigan-Nebraska-Omaha matchup will face the winner of the No. 2 Michigan State-No. 5 Notre Dame game in the final tomorrow evening. . Michigan is the only team in the 12-team CCHA that the Mavericks have not beaten or tied in their impressive inau- LESSONS: Guitar. Bass, Banjo, Piano. H. 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