The Michigan Daily - Monday, February 5, 2001=-7A the michigan daily CAMP COUNSELORS gain valuable STUDENT experience while having the summer of a interviews lifetime. Counselors needed for outdoor be availab adventure, athletics, aquatics, and more. In M, T, W, the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania. amscotta Apply online at www.pineforestcamp.com C,, Michigan deals with less money in state's coffers IT NEEDED to schedule phone for U of M research study. Must le 6-10pm for 1-2 nights/week on , Th, or Su. Pays $9/hr. Contact >jmi h.edu if interested. " k BEST DEALS! - Daytona/Hilton Head SDestin/Steamboat f .800 " SUNCHAS E www sunChase eCOM CAREGIVER eeded to help with 2 small children in our Ann Arbor office. References a must. Call Amy (734) 216-5370. CqOLOR IMAGING person. Computer applications knowledge a must. Flex. up to $12/hr. Call Stacy 665-9200 or stop by Dollar Bill Copying at 611 Church. CUSTOMER SERVICE-20HR/WK. Techstreet seeks enthusiastic customer service assistance in our fast paced office. Customer requests are handled by phone, fax, and email. Solid computer skills required. Send resume to jobs@techstreet.com LIVERY PERSONS & cashiers $100 bonus. Part time (Ex: 10-2pm or 4-8 pm) Ideal 2nd job. Great cash. Call Mr. Pita (734)623-0700. DESIGNERS! Create the cover of next year's Student Directory; add to your portfolio and get paid! Your design could be on 15,000 official University of Michigan student phone books distributed to students in the fall. If this bpportunity sounds interesting, mail your ume to: dent Directory Cover Nancy Cudney 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327 or fax to: 936-1054, attn: Nancy Application deadline is February 16, 2001 SUMMER DISCOVERY/ JR. DISCOVERY/ MUSIKER TOURS www.summerfun.com Counselors wanted to share a great experience working/traveling with middle/high school students this summer. 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Questionnaires, blood withdrawal and smoking abstinence required. Pays $275 upon completion. Call 734-763-9000, #6321. LANSING (AP) - Michigan is heading into the next budget cycle with less flamboyance than in recent years. Gone is the extra money that has made it easy in the past to hand out tax cuts, build new prisons and boost the number of state troopers. Instead of debates over how the flood of ever-higher revenue will be spent, lawmakers and state fiscal experts will have to cope with a bud- get expected to increase only 0.5 percent, far less than the rate of inflation. "It's clear we're going to be asking departments to begin to implement some belt-tightening measures," said state Budget Director Mary Lannoye, who will deliver Gov. John Engler's proposed budget at 11 a.m. Thursday to a joint session of the House and Senate Appropriations committees at the Capitol. Lannoye said the prudent fiscal poli- cies of the past have left the state in good shape even though revenue growth is expected to slow for the bud- get year, which runs from Oct. 1, 2001 to Sept. 30, 2002. A surplus in the state's fund for K- 12 education means the state will be able to give each school $6,500 per student and stick with the education budget already in place through the 2002-2003 school year. And tax cuts already enacted won't "We aren't going to be able to afford any new programs. - State Sen. Harry Gast (R-St. Joseph) Senate Appropriations Committee chairman be touched. The Single Business Tax will drop from 2.1 to 2.0 percent next Jan. 1, and the state income tax will drop from 4.2 to 4.1 percent. Those are the bright spots. But money for new initiatives has disap- peared. During his annual State of the State address last Wednesday, Gov. John Engler presented no new proposals that would-cost the state money other than a tax exemption for new high-tech busi- nesses that, as of yet, don't exist. Lannoye already has said the esti- mated $50 million increase expect- ed in new revenue will fall far short of the $300 million needed to keep up with inflation in the new $9.8 billion general fund budget. The state's overall budget, including fed- eral dollars and the $10 billion School Aid fund, is expected to stay close to this year's $36.5 billion. "We aren't going to be able to afford any new programs," warns longtime Senate Appropriations Committee Chairman Harry Gast (R-St. Joseph). "We'll have to be restrained and con- strained." Engler's proposed budgets have grown 3 percent overall in the past decade and went up 4 percent ilk the current budget year. This year's'pio- posal is expected to grow less thati 1 percent. Even that could prove optimistic. Senior economist Robert Kleine of Public Sector Consultants, a Lansing think tank, expects slow economic growth throughout 2001 before things pick up early in 2002. That could mean more economic pain, especially for Michigan, where December revenues from the state's 12 major taxes dropped 9.1 percent from a year ago, according to the Senate Fiscal Agency. The national unemployment rate went up to 4.2 percent in Janiiary and many economists now say the manufacturing sector is in a eces- sion. Factory orders for computers, office equipment, communications products and primary metals, including steel, fell sharply in December. i 1 Bahamas Party Cruise $279 5 Days. Most Meals " Free Parties includes Taxes Jamaica $439 7Nights."Air & Hotel " Save$150on Food & Drinks Cancun $399 7 Nights . 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"The University (of Michigan) campus is set up so that the roads weave through the community" Cunningham said the goal of the University is not to reduce the service, but to improve it. The efficiency of the system would undergo continual examination. "We believe any contract we have will specify service stan- dards. We will do this only a year at a time, so if we are unsat- isfied with service, we can try to improve the service," he said. A union bus driver who asked to remain anonymous said the University community will be unhappy with AATA's service because they will not be able to operate buses which stop at a location every two and a half-minutes. "The Bursley-Baits route operates at peak times when people are. going to class in the morning," the driver said. "AATA is not going to do that." Some drivers said the main consequence of a partnership with AATA is the loss of service to students. Widespread AATA bus use might mean fewer stops on mornings when students need to go to class and no late-night service oh the weekends. Cunningham refuted the possibility of less stops and locations. "It is our goal not to reduce service, but to improve it," Cunningham said. "We have the NiteOwl that goes till 2 a.m., and the AATA would also have to operate until 2 a.m." Cunningham also said the waiting period between bus arrivals will remain the same or will be improved. "The bus stop time has to be as short or shorter and we have to be able to stop at all the places we have currently," he said. The drivers have formed a committee of student and union drivers who will speak at the University Board of Regents meeting on Feb. 15. 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Conroy said Yale has the facilities to handle any complications from the drug. "If the (Yale) UHS offers any treatment or procedure or drug it has the expertise and personnel that is needed," he said. RALY views the drug as "just a new method. If there were a new method of cataract surgery the university would offer that" Barber said. The Pro-Life League also fears that the new drug will make abortion more convenient. "As a compromise, Yale should make it just as easy for women to have chil- dren, and Yale doesn't do that," Vilen- sky said. Yet Barber said she does not see the new drug as making abortion a more viable option. "It is not a major concern," she said. "Any woman who's in this situation will carefully weigh all her options and sim- ply having another procedure is not going to make her want to elect abor- tion." TELEFUND Continued from Page 1A receive a $1,000 grant for that univer- sity's general scholarship fund. Michigan Telefund began calling seniors yesterday. They hope to reach 3,500 students. Donating over the phone is not the only way seniors can contribute. Any senior who would like to can make his or her contribution online. The calling will continue through Feb. 11, but the com- petition with Michigan State seniors does not officially end until March 30. Leigh Sanderson, the Michigan Tele- fund program manager in charge of the senior challenge, cautions students that "Michigan State is already ahead to date, so we really need to get moving. We can beat State by having a higher percentage of participating seniors, I am pretty confident." Brian Griffin, assistant director of annual giving at Michigan State, said he is equally optimistic. "I think it is going to be a great competition, hope- fully we can keep our lead." Although the chance to compete with a rival university is incentive Follow the leader DU DERSTADT Continued from Page 1A and heading in the right direction," said Philip Power, a University regent during Duderstadt's presidency. Duderstadt said he believes the small liberal arts colleges will have the easiest time adjusting but that he has not lost hope for the University. "The Harvards and Oberlins will be very nimble in changing while still protecting their values. Some people think that universities won't survive, but not me of course;" Duderstadt said. Duderstadt said that as society changes, so will its needs, thus chang- ing the kind of education required for success. "The needs of society are no longer confined to four years, it is a lifetime of learning," he said. Duderstadt has made his commit- ment to the University evident in his 32 years here. As a professor, he teaches a class for graduate students to prepare them for academic careers, as well as a first-year class on the dangers of technology. "You can't understand what the Uni- versity is about unless you teach. In addition, serving as a leader of a uni- versity gave me a much broader view,' Duderstadt said. KHANG TRAN/paily LSA sophomore Nayyera Haq, junior Sarah Hekmati, and senior Shehrzad Rabbani skate at Yost Arena Friday as part of a week of activities sponsored by the University Activities Center. DONORS Continued from Page:1A tion in this country," said newly appointed U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thomp- son in a speech to federal health employees on Friday. "There is a waiting list of at least organs because of the myth that nany religious groups are opposed to it. "Most religious organizations encourage organ donation," Gavin said. The website serves as a medical study as well as a public site. Those who visit it can fill out a survey-about how much they know about organ :i I I