The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 19, 2003 - 7 STUDENTS Continued from Page 1 between countries and cited French disapproval of war as one example. Gabrail, who has family in Baghdad, said he doesn't have a single family member who is against the war. "I want people to realize that Iraqi peo- ple's concerns are how to get rid of Saddam," he said. El-Jawahri said Iraqis are prepar- ing for war. "A lot of my family don't feel threatened - they have seen a lot of war in the past 27 years of Saddam," she said. She added that her family members are trying to stock up on food, gas and supplies for war. She said many Iraqi youth are being deported to southern Iraq to fight ERRORS Continued from Page 1 felt doctors' fatigue contributed to risks in the healthcare industry. "I know transplant surgeons work incredibly long hours. If you're sleep- deprived as a physician, you're more likely to overlook things and make mistakes," Winfield said. Like any other profession, there is a learning curve for medical stu- dents, but healthcare providers said they felt that did not contribute sub- stantially to medical errors. Naseer Ahmad, endocrinologist at Provi- dence Hospital in Southfield, said he felt that healthcare providers at the lower level of the curve were more careful and more worried about mak- ing a mistake. Ahmad said that poor handwriting is often the cause for medication mis- takes. With many medications holding similar names, poor handwriting and error on the part of the pharmacist could have serious consequences. against the United States. "There is a lot of talk among youth that when they see U.S. troops they will drop their weapons," she said. Gabrail said it is hard to tell what the people of Iraq actually think because of restrictions on speech in the regime. He told the story of his father's med- ical school professor in Iraq who spoke out against Saddam Hussein and disap- peared overnight. "If you try to say something in Iraq, it's dealt with immediately," Gabrail said. Ghalib said it is difficult for her family to get information about life in Iraq from relatives still living there. "They're not really allowed to speak about anything political. We don't really know what's going on," she said. Technology is being used to prevent such errors. Ahmad said there are lap- tops available on the floor where he works so that doctors can just click on a medication instead of having to write out a prescription. Many hospitals are also starting to use electronic records so that medical information is accessible faster. Tech- nology is also available so that the records come with prompts that will bring certain aspects of the records to the physician's attention. For example, if a dosage of medication seems too high, a prompt will come up on the screen asking the healthcare provider to check the prescription. The University Medical Center has already begun to use electronic records and University Health Ser- vices is looking to acquire the tech- nology sometime in the next five years, Winfield said. "No profession is mistake-free, but in medicine the risks are more costly," Ahmad said. "We are trying all the time to minimize these risks." BRIEF Continued from Page 1. and GPAs than 69 minorities rejected during the same period. CIR spokesman Curt Levey said some exceptions exist in each admitted class, but "on average (admissions officers) subject whites and Asians to a much more rigorous standard." He said while the Law School con- siders many factors other than grades and LSAT scores in its policy, minorities would only be dispropor- tionately admitted if on average they performed better than whites across other admissions factors. "The huge discrepancies can only be explained if minorities perform much better than whites and Asian on those other factors," Levey said. "But I don't think the University is claiming that blacks and Mexican- Americans write much better essays" The University's brief also said when administrators drafted the poli- cy in 1991, they took precautions to ensure the policy would not "author- ize, require, or encourage admissions officers to admit a predetermined number of minority applicants." As evidence that the Law School is not employing a secret quota, the brief cites statistics showing that minority enrollment does not hold steady, ranging from 13.5 to 20.1 per- cent from 1993 to 2000. Levey said that in the last four years minority enrollment has fluctuated from only 13.5 to 13.7 percent, but Krislov said the composition of the applicant pool cannot be expected to vary greatly across a four year span. Even if CIR successfully proves the University is giving a significant plus factor to blacks, Hispanics and Native Americans, it still has to convince the Minority enrollment Powell: 45 countrks has fluctuated, ranging from 13.5 to 20.1 percent from 1993 to supp0at U a ctio.s 2000.1rA court that race is receiving too much weight. The University's brief says the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled the Law School could not enroll meaningful numbers of minorities by placing less weight on race. Race-blind admissions would pit a handful of black applicants against thousands of whites with similar test scores and GPAs. In 2000, only 26 blacks in the entire nation had a 3.5 GPA and 165 LSAT score, while 3,173 whites and Asian Americans achieved similar results, the brief said. "If you don't consider race as one factor among many, than because of the pool size ... you would have a devastating drop in the number of minority students enrolled at the Uni- versity," Krislov said. Yet Levey said the University's policies should be overturned because they target enrolling a meaningful number of minorities, which he said contradicts then-Supreme Court Jus- tice Louis Powell's ruling in Regents of the University of California v. Bakke. The 1978 ruling banned racial quotas but permitted the use of race as a factor in a narrowly tailored admissions program. "Powell did not say achieving racial diversity was a compelling state interest, he. said achieving intellectual diversity was," Levey said. "Achieving racial diversity for the sake of racial diversity is uncon- stitutional." IKA Continued from Page 1 and chemical plants, and in ele- ments of the nation's food supply and distribution system. Ridge said governors are being asked to deploy National Guard troops or extra state police to help. At the State Department, Secretary of State Colin Powell said 30 nations had joined the administration's "coali- tion of the willing," and that another 15 had quietly pledged support. But at least two of the 30 nations, Spain and the Netherlands, have explicitly ruled out the use of troops to invade Iraq. Another, Japan, was iden- tified as only a post-conflict member of the coalition. State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said some of the countries "may put troops on the ground" and others may take on roles such as assisting in a defense against the use of chemical and biological . weapons. Intelligence reports indicate that Saddam has given his field-level commanders the power to use chemi- cal weapons, without instruction from the leadership, Pentagon officials said yesterday. With war looming in the Persian Gulf, the diplomatic and political fall- out circled the globe. In London, the House of Com- mons backed British Prime Minister Tony Blair's strong endorsement of Bush's policy, defeating an anti-war resolution and then voting in favor of using "all means necessary" to disarm Saddam. Blair has suffered in public opinion over his support of Bush, a stance that led three min- isters to resign from his government this week in protest. French President Jacques Chirac, whose country led opposition to war within the U.N. Security Council, said Bush's action would undermine future efforts at peaceful disarmament. "Iraq does not represent today an immediate threat that would justify an immediate war," he said. German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder concurred, and said U.N. weapons inspectors should have more time to try to disarm Iraq of weapons of mass destruction. Both European leaders were sending their foreign ministers to a Security Council meeting set for today in New York. But by Bush's word, laid down in a stern speech Monday night, the time for diplomacy - and weapons inspec- tions - had clearly come and gone. Arab League Secretary-General Amr Moussa scrapped plans for a last-minute peacemaking trip to Iraq. And the U.N. peacekeepers boarded a plane out of Iraq, their mission at an end. For his part, the Iraqi leader appeared on television wearing a mili- tary uniform for the first time since the Persian Gulf War in 1991. Iraq's al-Shabab television, owned by one of Saddam's sons, said the deci- sion to defy Bush's ultimatum was made in a leadership meeting chaired by the Iraqi leader. the michigan daily EFFICIENCIES $580-$610 CLOSE to ur campus - Fall 734-944-2405 FALL '03 SIX bedrooms & study, 3 bath- rooms, great football parking, $2500/month. Contact hutch@provide.net or 769-2344. FALL 2 BDRM. near campus, town, upstairs, mostly fu., free prkg. 12 mo. lease $850/mo. Call 734-663-1639. FALL 2003 - THE VISCOUNT! Incredible 3 bdrm. tri-level penthouse unit avail. Easily fits 5, furn., modern kitchen, dwshr., heat & H20 incl., free prkg., A/C, directly across from CCRB. $1899/mo. 665-8825. FALL 2003 CAMPUS AREAAPARTMENTS Efficiency thru Six Bedrooms Furnished & Unfumished Apartments & Homes Great Locations & Amenities Wilson White Company, Inc. 734.995.9200 www.wilsonwhitecompanycom Equal Housing Opportunity FALL 2003 ONE, two, & three bdrm. unfurn. apts., in turn of the century homes avail. Lo- cated at Fifth Ave. & Williams. Off street pikg. included. Call 761-8990 for details. FALL 2003- HUGE 4 bdrm. bi-level pent- house unit avail. near CCRB. Balc., 2 baths., modern kitchen w/ dwshr., A/C, furn., free prkg., $1999/mo. 665-8825. FALL, 2003- STUDIO furn. apartments. Call Varsity Mgmt. for appt. 668-1100. FOOD, FUN, FRIENDS, FACILITIES! Student Co-op Housing. Rooms available campus-wide for next Fall/Winter and Spring/- Summer 2003. Includes utilities, laundry, park- ing, meals, social activities! F/W approx. $425/mo. Sp/Su $120-400/mo. Contact ICC Office at 662-4414 or www.icc.umich.org FURN. RM(S). IN Coed prof. frat hse. for fall/ winter. Util(s). included, free prkg. $300- 400. E-mail: amagar@umich.edu FURN. RM. W/ living space, avail. March 16 03, Ann Arbor Woods. Close to bus stop, 5 min. from campus, $480/mo. Days: 761-7833, evenings: 971-4146. GREAT 6 BDRM. home for Fall 2003- located near Michigan Stadium (great for those fall tailgate parties!) with new hardwood floors and carpet. PRICE REDUCTION. A MUST SEE! Lots of street parking. Wilson White Co., Inc. at 734.995.9200 E.H.O. GREAT HOUSES FOR spring & fall. All re- modeled, 2 refrigerators, trash compactor, hard wxd floors, lots of prkg. 973-7368. LARGE FURNISHED 2 & 3 bdrm. apt. on S. State, Near UM bus stop, 5 min. to Michigan Union. Avail. Now, Winter & Fall '03 lease. Heat & water incl., 2-sink bath., Intercom/sec. buzzer, New furniture, New appliance, Bac., A/C, Prkg., Ldry. For 2-4. $1100-$1600, no smoking/no pets. 734-996-3539 or 734-678-7250, ehtseng@comcastnet LARGE STUDIO- CENTRAL campus at Tower Plaza, furn. full kitch. I full bath. plenty of closet space, 24 hr. security & well lit Idry. facilities, $800/mo. + elec. avail. Sept. '01 2003. Call Ely 248-626-3800 ext. 116. LOOKING FOR FEMALE grad. student to lease, in August, 1 bdrm. in a townhouse. Brand new. 2000'sq. ft. $550 + util(s). Furn. 5 min. from central campus and hosp. 677-4383. MAY 2003-MAY 2004 lease 907 Greenwood $550/mo. + util. Sharing w/5 other girls, but you have you own bdrm. 810-664-8654 kborck@umich.edu MAY LEASES AVAILABLE! Large con- temporary 1&2 bedroom apts. 741-9300. MCKINLEY ST. SPACIOUS 1&2 bdrm. apts. Bay windows, fireplace, bale., A/C, cov- ered prkg. A private shuttle to North Campus. Fall leases avail. 741-9300 www.annaborapartments.net MEDICAL STUDENTS. AVAILABLE FALL. Large efficiencies, one and two bedroom apartments located near the Medical Campus. Lots of Amenities. Call Michigan Realty, 662-5500 or www.michcornealty.com. EHO. MODERN 2 BDRM. apt. @ 1015 E. Ann. 2 blocks from hospital. $1165-1220/mo., 12 month lease, begins Aug. 29th. Prkg., ldry., no pets. 663-6138. NEAR KERRYTOWN! GREAT LOCATION! Spacious studio & 1 bdrm. apts. Fall leases avail. 741-9300 www.annarborapartments.net NEAR U OF M STADIUM Avail. Aug. 1st. 4 bdrm., 2 bath home with common kitch. and living room. Off -street prkg. and on-site laundry. $2200/mo. + util. Non-smoking. 734-930-8686. NEAR UNION LARGE contemporary stu- dios, 1,2 bdrm. apts. Fall leases avail. 741-9300 www.annarborapartments.net NOW LEASING FOR Fall at Spring Prices 1 & 2 bedrooms starting at $659 734-761-1897. OLD WEST SIDE- Great 1 & 2 furnished bdrm. apts. for the economy-minded student. Bus stops outside your door. Call 668-1100. OLDY BUT GOODY -Great 2 bdrm. Apt w/lots of nooks & cmnnies. Call Varsity Mgmt.for appt. 668-1100. PETS WELCOME- CONTEMPORARY 1&2 bdrm. apts. Great campus locations. Call for details 741-9300. RESIDENT MANAGER monthly rent credit for your May and Fall lease. Call 741-9657. RIVER'S EDGE APARTMENTS !!!! Why pay the high A2 prices? Ypsilanti is only 15 min. drive to campus. Leasing now and fall. 1, 2, and 3 bdrms. From $595. Free Heat and Water. 487-5750. Virtual tours and apply on- line at www.riversedge.org ROOMS ABOUT CAMPUS. Short term leases, shared common areas, all remodeled. Prkg. avail. From $450/mo. 973-7368. SPACIOUS 6 BDRM. FOR FALL. Located near Yost Ice Arena. Living room, kitchen and 1/2 bath on first floor. 6 bdrms. and 2 bath- rooms on second floor. PRICE REDUC- TION. ACT NOW! Wilson White Co., Inc. at 734.995.9200 E.H.O !!FREE!!! SPRING/SUMMER SUBLET apt. finder. 21 distinctive locations to choose from. Studio to 3 bdmrs. 741-9300. 1 OR 2 BDRM. avail. in 2 bdrm. apt. Spring/- Summer Sublet fully furn. Price neg. Call Elise @ 327-7646 or Divya @ 248-763-4449. 2 BDRM. APT. May-Aug. 1-3 people. 7 min. to diag, A/C, prkg., dwshr., spacious! Price neg. archmanor@umich.edu 734-347-1657. 2 BDRM., 1 bath., (furn. or unfum.) @ 5th & Packard. Avail. 5/14-end of Aug. Huge kitch., Idry. in basement, prkg. for 2, $800/mo. OBO. 846-1673. 2 BEDROOM SUBLEASE on S. University. Free parking & ethernet. Furn., great loc., laundry on premises. Price neg. Avail. May to Aug. Call Adam @ 327-4073. AVAIL. IMMED. FOR SUBLET $475/mo. plus util. 1211 Prospect. Contact 810-664-8654 or kborck@umich.edu AVAIL. MAY-AUG. RMS. in 6 bdrm. hse. $400/mo. utils. incl., 5 min. from Diag. Call Joe,jglionna@umich.edu or 416-801-7667 AVAIL. NOW WILLIAM & Division Sub- lease. Eff. Sec. Buzzer, Laundry & Storage. Gallatin Realty Co. 994-1202 ext. 16. BEAUTIFUL 6 BDRM., new interior, A/C, porch, ldry., wood fir(s)., rec. room, furn., spring/summer, negotiable. 717-7609. MAY- AUG. SUBLET free prkg./ldry. great loc., rent neg., 1-2 bdrm., 369-2843. MAY-AUG. SUBLET 1 bdrm. 713 E. Kings- ley, share w/ quiet female, unfurn., free prkg., $275/mo. neg. kgillis@umich.edu SPRING/SUMMER SUBLET - 4 bdrm. house, furm., free ldry., lots of prkg., near cam- pus, $2000/mo. neg. call 332-1859. SPRING/SUMMER SUBLET, $400/MO. neg. Great location, flee prkg., wshrldryer. Call 734-834-7256. SUBLET AT INTERNATIONAL residence, central campus, . to ., 1 or 3 bdrm. apt., May - Aug. Call Esperanza 662-5529. !!BARTENDERS WANTED, $300/DAY potential, no experience necessary, training provided. 800-965-6520 ext.125 $1500 WEEKLY POTENTIAL mailing our circulars. Free information Call 203-683-0257. **RESIDENT MANAGERS NEEDED. Part time employment. Call Varsity Mgmt. at 668-1100. BARTENDER POSITIONS! MAKE up to $300/shift no exp. req., flexible hours, great pay! call 800-806-0085 ext 1445. BARTENDER TRAINEES NEEDED $250 per day potential, local positions Call 1-800-293-3985 ext. 504. BARTENDERS, SERVERS, & beverage cart servers needed. Also looking for golf course maintenance workers. Positions avail, for spring-fall. Apply in person at Stonebridge Golf Club in A2, or call 734-429-8383 ext. 13. CO-REC SLOW PITCH softball team seeks women for season running May-July. Email dsa@umich.edu EARN $3500 OR MORE. Finally, SAT scores and GPA matters! Donor Solutions (206) 778-3022, info@donorsolutionsilc.com or come visit our website at www.donorsolutionsllc.com HAVE THE SUMMER of Your Life & Get Paid For It!! Camp Counselors needed for Tennis, Arts, Athletics, and more! Apply on- line at www.pinefoeswcamp.com IMMED. OPENING P/T janitorial 3rd shift in A2 area. 248-332-4242. INSTRUCTIONAL ASSISTANT NEEDED in one of our mulit-age, k-2nd. grade class- rooms, full-time position. Must be CPI certi- fied, with prior experience working with Gen- eral Ed. and Special Ed. students. Salary $12/hr. Call Honey Creek Community School at 994-2636 or visit hc.wash.kl 2.mi.us JUNGLE MARKETING GROUP. HOME BASED OPPORTUNITY To make e- commerce work for you! Call 877-851-0128 or email malong@tbigj.com LIKE TO SMILE? Energetic individuals needed for busy but fun apt. leasing office. P/T to start, F/T in summer, Saturdays req., thru Labor Day. Send resume or apply to 1099 Maiden lane Ann Arbor 48105. 665-4331. fax: 665-2354,.islanddrive@mindspring.com MAKE MONEY WHILE in college, serious inquiries only. Call (734) 913-0686. MECHANICAL ENGINEERING INTERN needed P/T or F/T at suspension spring sup- plier in Wixom. Immediate opening. 2 $15/hr. E-mail: linguasci@aol.com MICHIGAN TELEFUND NOW hiring stu- dents for flexible night and weekend sched- ules. Fun work atmosphere and great job ex- perience. Start at $7.25/hr. plus nightly bonuses. Apply online or stop by 611 Church, Suite 4F. www.telefund.umich.edu. 998-7420. PART OR FULL TIME person needed for construction, general maintenance, and paint- ing. Unlimited hrs. avail, for the right person. Kerrytown area, start immed. @ $10/hr. Good exp. for architecture students. Call 996-0119. SALES LEADERS INT'L Co. Expanding in the Greater Metro area. Seeking exp. leader in Sales and/or Marketing, PIT & F/T avail. $50k + (Commission) 1st yr. Call 248-746-3399 for local interview. SCOREKEEPERS IS NOW hiring Cooks, Floormen and waitstaff for immediate open- ings. Bring your class schedule and apply to- day at 310 Maynard A2 - Across from Borders Books Downtown. 995-0100. ST. THOMAS GRADE School seeks Preschool director/teacher, practicing Catholic w/early childhood background. Fax resume by March 28 to 734-769-9078. SUBSTITUTE TEACHER LONG-TERM needed to fill a full school day, multi-age. 3rd. -5th grade classroom position. Must be a certi- fied teacher. Call Honey Creek Community School at 994-2636 or visit hc.wash.k12.mi.us TEACH ENGLISH OVERSEAS: Jobs $$ guaranteed/great pay. TESOL certified in 5 days in-class (Windsor, May 7-11) on-line or by correspondence. FREE Infopack: 1-888-270-2941 or www.globaltesol.com TEEN PROGRAM COORDINATOR (FIT). Experienced; for the Ann Arbor YMCA. Must have excellent communication skills, good driving record, knowledge of service learning & community programs, & strong grant writing skills. Send resume: Sam Humphrey, 350 S. 5th Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48104. Resumes until March 30th. EOE' TUTOR NEEDED 8TH grade core subjects homework, 3 sessions/wk. $75 must have transportation. 734-995-9732. MOVIE EXTRAS/ MODELS NEEDED!! No experience necessary. Earn up to $150- $450 per day! Call 1-888-820-0164 ext 1079. 2 CHILDREN ALMOST 4 & 2, looking for caring, fun-loving babysitter. Needed immed. for Tues. mornings, then beginning in May for Tues. AND Thurs. mornings. Own transporta- tion & ref(s). req. Please call 623-9545. BABYSITTER NEEDED - some regular & evening hrs. and occas. Sat. AM. NE AA, 1 child, must have own transportation, bilingual English/Spanish A+. 3 refs wanted. 995-3027. LIVE-IN NANNY NEEDED. Free apt. in ex- change for 16-20 hrs./wk. child care. Start Spring or Fall 2003. Call Katie at 213-0889. MOTHER'S HELPER NEEDED Mon.-Fri., 3-6 PM. I child 21t2years old. 327-9781. P/T BABYSITTER NEEEDED for 10. mo. old. Around 10 hrs./wk. exp. and refs. re- quired. Call Debbie @ 975-2512. SMEMP- k j NECK PAIN OR BACK PAIN? Health care in- tro. 4 Chiropractic treatments $75. Near U of M. 734-994-5966. Earn $1.000 - $2,000 for your Student Group in just 3 hours! Multiple fundraising options available. No carwashes. No raffles. Just success! Fundraising dates are filling quickly. Get with the programs that work! o TaC pus Your Trusted Soure efor College Fundraiing. INTERESTED IN A LOAN? We can help con- solidate all your bills. Good or bad credit ac- cepted. Call @ 1-866-210-6801. LAW SCHOOL ADMISSION TEST Get private coaching with TESTGURU. Ace the freakin' LSAT. Smile. 734.996.2861 www.TESTGURU.com PROFESSIONAL DRY CLEANERS! Shirts and drop off service. Summer storage avail. Comer of N. University & Thayer. 715 N. University or Call 662-1906. AAPS COMMUNITY ED. & Rec is looking for Swim Instructors for Spring Session (Apr. 28 - June 14) & Summer Session (mid-June - mid-Aug.). Weekday and Sat. shifts avail. Desired Qualifications: W.S.I. & LGT. For more info please call 994-2300 ext. 232. EOE. EARLY CHILDHOOD SUBSTITUTES needed, no exp., will train. Fun job working w/ young children, Call St. Paul Early Child- hood Center 668-0887. FUN SUMMER JOB! Starting Apr. Early Childhood Center needs your help closing Mon.-Fri. 3:30-5:30. Call St. Paul Early Childhood Center 668-0887. PAINTING, brick paver exp., private home close to UM, $8-10/hr. flex. sched. 971-3321. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT, FULL TIME, work outside, opportunity for advancement. make $3000-5000. P/T avail. now. 1-888- 277-9787. www.collegepro.com SUMMER HELP WANTED on crop farm. May - August. Ann Arbor area. 734-663-8981 SWIMMING POOLSERVICE and construction. Fast paced outdoor work, Weekends off. Top pay for hard working, self motivated people to work in the NW COLLEGE IS NO TIME TO SUFFER WITH ACNE! It's time to look good, feel great, have fun. Our dermatologist recom- mended acne treatments heal acne fast and are tint adjustable to perfectly hide blemishes. For free information email clearskin@aweber.com or call 1-800-818-2669. GREAT SPORTSWEAR!! GREAT PRICES!! Jackets, Warmups & Bags. Try it - you'll save $$$ everytime. www.Kammanlnt.com SPECIAL GIFT- WE'RE looking for healthy women between the ages 21-25 for egg dona- tion. All ethnic backgrounds are encouraged. Fee paid. Send inquiries to AARMA, P.O. Box 2708, Ann Arbor, MI48106.