NEWS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 11, 2006 - 7 LEAK Continued from page 1 from his first-floor window. The flood "had a lot of impact on a lot of people who didn't ask to have their nights disrupted in this way," Housing spokesman Alan Levy said. At least one student's computer was destroyed. LSA freshman Julio Domin- guez's roommate called him and deliv- ered the devastating news. A catastrophe recovery company arrived at the scene to extract the water and mitigate further damage. The University will cover the expens- es of the hotel stays. Levy said he has to wait for the evaluation of the dam- ages before providing an estimate of the total costs. The University's Risk Management Office will file an insurance claim for the University's property and the personal property of residents. Usu- ally, the University does not cover damage to personal property, Levy said. At the scene were the director of housing, an associate director of Hous- ing, a head staff member of Residen- tial Education and security personnel. The West Quad building staff was also involved in minimizing the impact of the flood. Until last night, housing administra- tion has had a "nice, quiet year," Levy said. Wensley residents will not be able to return until the electricians can do a safety check. Dean of Students Susan Eklund, who oversees assistance in emergency situ- ations, has been notified and probably will let professors know some students may miss class or need extra time to complete work. "This is obviously not a terrific time of the year for this to happen," Levy said. The new sprinkler system was installed last summer in the dorms as part of a $50-million investment in fire and life safety enhancements. This is the second incident with the new sprinkler systems. The first inci- dent occurred last year in South Quad, also the result of a resident "inappropri- ately using a football or soccer ball in the hallway," Levy said. LEVIN Continued from page 1 According to Levin, Defense Department inter- rogators employed questionable tactics while dis- guised as FBI agents at the prison so their agency would not "take the fall." After the committee obtained partially censored e-mails through a Free- dom of Information Act request, members learned the FBI alerted Department of Justice officials, yet nothing was done. Levin said he has been actively trying to get cer- tain names from the memo declassified, or released through a committee subpoena, to continue the investigation and fulfill his duty. According to Levin, the inability to get the names released had important implications in the confir- mation of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who was the head of the criminal division of the Department of Justice at the time of the e- mails and possibly knew of the FBI allegations. "The abuse of power by this administration will continue unless it's checked by Congress or in the courts," Levin said. "Since the Republicans control (Congress), there are no meaningful hearings being held, and this hurts the government." In November, every seat in the House and 33 Senate seats are up for election. The Democrats would need to win six additional seats in the Senate and 15 in the House to gain control of either. "I think there's at least a 40-60 chance the Democrats will recapture the Senate and a 30- 70 chance of capturing both," Levin said, adding if the election were held tomorrow he would up the odds to 50-50. He said the Republican party's monetary advantage and its ability to buy more advertising will eventually shift public opinion to some degree. "The low level of support for (the Bush adminis- tration) is not sustainable," he said. If the Democrats were to gain a majority in the Senate, Levin would become chairman of the Sen- ate Armed Services Committee. He said he would reassert the committee's over- sight role. "There would be a series of hearings and investi- gations immediately;"he said. - Walter Nowinski contributed to this report. GRANTS Continued from page 1 hoping that his research will earn him a piece of the $100-million pie. Ulsoy said he hopes to create a better system for applying force when stamp- ing sheet metal into different materials and car parts. When sheet metal is molded into different parts, it is done using three main components: a die, a punch and a blank. The die and punch stretch the sheet metal into the required shape and the blank applies a restraining force to control the process. Tears and wrinkles in the metal sometimes occur when too much force is applied during the stamping process. Ulsoy said he hopes his research will help develop a sensor that will automati- cally adjust the force applied to the sheet metal. "The system will allow lighter-weight cars through cost-effective stamping of lighter materials such as aluminum alloys," he said. Submitted proposals will be reviewed by the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Shore said. The association will make recommen- dations, and then the proposals will be assessed by the Strategic Economic Investment and Commercialization Board to determine what research will be most beneficial to the economy. The amount of money awarded will be determined in late July. Ulsoy said funding is always com- petitive but it has been useful to have state funding available along with other federal and private grants. the michigan daily * Broadview Apartments " Spacious 1 bedroom apartments Spacious 2 bedrooms with master bath * Shuttle around campus - Large private balconies with wooded views Pets welcome -Models Open Daily r o. j -7741-9300 L 1 " i. (EXTENDED HOURS) www.annarborapartments.net PRIME STUDENT HOUSING.. The name says it all. Limited Locations and Apartments remaining. 1021 Vaughn - Efficiency 344 Division - Efficiency 515 Lawrence - 1 bedroom 511 Hoover - 1 bedroom 610 S. Forest - Efficiency 734.761.8000 www.primesh.com RIVER'S EDGE APARTMENTS! Half off 1st. mo. ! Why pay the high A2 prices? Ypsi- lanti is only 15 min. drive to campus. Leas- ing now! 1, 2, & 3 bdnns. From $595. Free Heat & Water. 487-5750. Virtual tours and apply online at www.iversedge.org ROOMS FOR RENT avail. immed. Campus area. From $350/mo. 769-2344 or hutch@provide.net LG. 1 BDRM. University Towers. Fits 2, great view/loc., A/C, free prkg. spot. May 1- Aug. 20. $750/mo. 616-550-4893. SUBLET $530 FOR 3 bdrm. @ 1600 Packard. 769-7025. CAMPUS CLEANERS: PROF Dry Clean- ing & Ldry. Free summer storage. 1305 S. University next to Campus Rental. 662-1906. EGG DONORS LARGE FURNISHED 2 Bdrm. Apts. located in the heart of Central Campus. Lots of am- menities. Call Michigan Realty at 734-662-5500 or www.michcomrealtycom LARGE FURNISHED 3 bdrm. apt. on S. State, Near UM bus stop, 5 min. to Mich. Union. Avail. Now, winter, Fall '06. Heat & water incl. Balc., A/C, prkg., ldry. $1400 -$1550. No smkg./no pets. 734-996-3539 or 734-678-7250. ehtseng@comcast.net LARGE ROOMS IN REMODELED HOUSE. Also, 2 room suites. Now to fall. New fum., deluxe kitch., ldry., great prkg. 6 min. walk to main campus. 973-7368. LEASING FOR FALL '06. Efficiencies, 1 bdrm., 2 bdrm., 618 & 624 Packard, 820 Ann & S. Main, & 537 Division. 734-260-3619. LOW SECURITY DEP., $1200 off w/6-12 Mo. Great North Campus loc. Lg. apts. Heat incl. & pets O.K. Beautiful, landscaped grounds, 1g. walk-in closets. 734-663-8463. MADISON PROPERTY COMPANY 734-994-5284 !Attention bargain hunters! 8 bdrm.-- $3400 6 bdrm.- $2700 5 bdrm.- $2350 4 bdrm $2000 ~-Fully fumished- -Great Locations- Brand new 3 & 4 bdms. Awesome 2 bdrms., $800+ Spacious, fun 1 bdrm. Custom apts. available Hurry!!! MAY LEASES AVAIL.!!! Studio to 3 bed- room apts. on Central Campus. 741-9300. NEAR UNION: CONTEMP. studios to 3 bdrn. apts. 741-9300.annarborapartments.net NEED HOUSING FOR FALL 2006? Fantastic Apartments, Great Houses. Convenient Central Campus locations. Stop by our office for a complete brochure! Campus Rentals 734-665-8825 www.campusrealty.com NORTH CAMPUS 1 & 2 bdrm. apts. avail. immed., May & August! Dogs welcome! FREE winter shuttle around Central & North campus. MODELS OPEN DAILY! 741-9300. Priced Right Reliable Maintenance Internet Included More for your Money Exceptional Staff 734.761.8000 www.primesh.com PRIVATE/SHARED RMS. AVAIL. now and fall/winter. $203-419/mo. + food/utils. ICC Stud. Co-ops, 662.4414 www.icc.coop SPRING/SUMMER 2006 Campus Area Apartments Great Selection REDUCED RATES Wilson White Company, Inc. 734.995.9200. Equal Housing Opportunity. START THE NEW SCHOOL YEAR OFF RIGHT WITH ANN ARBOR REALTY, INC., voted Best Realtor in Ann Arbor. 616 Church St., Mon. - Fri. 9 am - 5:00 pm or call us at 734-663-7444 to set up an appoint- ment. Ask us about A/C, pets, laundry facli- ties, dishwashers, and more! OPEN SATURDAY! Noon -4 pm. TREE CITY PROPERTIES Available Fall 2006 5 Bdrm: 407 Hamilton $250( 3 Bdrm: 1219 Packard $1650 2 Bdrm: 506 S. Fifth ave $1200 1 Bdrm: 1004 Vaughn $975 Check website for more houses & apartments! www.treecityproperties.com 734-994-8733. WALK TO NORTH Campus. 1 & 2 bdm. apts. Free heat & H20. May & Aug. leases avail. www.collegeparkweb.com 769-1313. WILSON WHITE COMPANY LEASING FOR Fall 2006 Availability and pricing listed at www.wilsonwhitecompany.com Call us to set up a showing (734)995-9200 Equal Housing Opportunity. WITH ALL THE stress of finals, don't worry about fall housing. Holler at Prime. 734.761.8000. www.primesh.com Your Home Away From Home- Madison Property Company--MPC 734.994.5284. I will make your apt. search stress free. Let me do the work for you. Find apts., advise you on landlord requirements, tell you about the neighborhoods, and lead you through the process. I have access to the largest rental database in Manhattan. Call Cheryl at 91 7-821-4783 or email me at cvasios@citi-habitats.com. I look forward to hearing from you! NEEDED IVF Michigan, P.C. The Recognized Leaders in Infertility Treatment are looking for women between the ages of 21-35 to donate eggs. All ethnic backgrounds are needed. This program is completely anonymous. Qualified donors who are accepted into the program will be financially compensated for their time. If interested please call 734-434-4766. LEASING AGENT Looking for a leasing agent for a part to full time position starting imme- diately. Will train. Please fax resume to 734.663.3641 or stop in at 625 Church St. LIFESTYLE MODELS NEEDED: For stock photo agency. Email: photo/age/ethnicity/tal- ents/phone to sfcastingmich@earthlink.net www.shannonfagan.com P/T OFFICE ASSISTANT needed. Flex. sched., $12/hr., if you are a highly organized, high achiever, w/ strong computer, analytical and writing skills. Send resume to www joinourcompany@gmail.com PALIO IS NOW hiring servers, hosts and bussers for our summer rooftop dining. We're looking for people who have enthusi- asm and energy, intelligence, good judge- ment, great people skills and an eye for detail and quality. Competitive pay, dining dis- counts and a great working environment. Candidates must be able to work weekends. Apply in person daily after 3:00 p.m. 347 S. Main. PERSONAL CARE ASSISTANT for 12 YR. old boy with special needs. Weekends and evenings, excellent experience for teaching or healthcare students. $12/hr 734.572.9861. POSITION AVAILABLE IN FINANCE! The Michigan Daily is now hiring a Finance Tearsheeter beginning Fall '06. Gain busi- ness/finance experience and build your re- sume as a member of The Michigan Daily's Finance Team while attending school. Applications are available at the Student Pub- lications Building on 420 Maynard, or call 734-709-7158 (Andy Tai) for more informa- tion. SCOREKEEPERS IS NOW hiring cooks and floor men for the Spring/Summer Terms. Bring in your schedule and apply today! 310 Maynard Street,AA. 734-995-0100. SUMMER WORKERS NEEDED, property management company looking for summer help for painting and demo work, $8-$10/hour based on experience, email re- sumes and questions to cappo@cappomanagement.com THE POLO FIELDS Country Club in Ann Arbor is now hiring for the following part-time positions: Hostess (Full time available) Grille Room Servers Banquet Servers Beverage Cart Attendants Concession Stand Attendants Please apply in person at: 5200 Polo Fields Drive Ann Arbor, MI 48103 or fax resume to (734) 998-1092. 17 ar.' Daily Clssifieds: serving the Uoftl YOU community for been hundreds Upon served hundreds or so yea rs.. - . aNII !!GREAT SUMMER JOB!! Perfect for edu- cation majors; work with children on field trips, birthday parties, work outside, some fish cleaning. May thorugh Aug. $8/hour. Spring Valley Trout Farm. Dexter. 734-426-4772 or springvalleytroutfarm.com A FUN SUMMER JOB that makes a DIFFERENCE. Creative, caring students needed as general counselors to work w/ chil- dren from 6/12-8/18. Must live in Farming- ton, Bloomfield, Novi, Birmingham, Troy, Milford, or adj. areas. Call 248-932-2123 or www.willowaydaycamp.com GARDEN WORK 1 hr./wk. $15/hr. 805-565-4799. Email veinhom@gmail.com NECTO NIGHTCLUB SEEKING doorpeo- ple/security and bartenders for spring & sum- mer employment. Apply M,T,W 1230-5pm. 516 E. Liberty St. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT College Pro is now hiring painters to work outdoors with other students. $3000-5000 ad- vancement opportunities. 888-277-9787 or www.collegepro.com WANTED: JOHN BUTLER tickets. Blind Pig, April 14. Call John 708-288-1117. P/T CHILDCARE NEEDED for summer weekdays. May-Aug. 2 mornings/wk. (will work w/ your schedule). 9-IPM for 2 sweet toddlers. Need exp., excellent refs., & a car. 15 mm. from Central Campus. Early child- hood ed. a plus, but not necessary. $10/hr. Resume to lovemychildren@gmail.com CARE NEEDED FOR my sweet 3 yr. old and 6 yr. old girls & 6 mo. old boy in my West Side Ann Arbor home, Fridays, more hours possible. Must have excellent skills and refs. Call 734-930-1970. CHILDCARE WANTED FOR 4 yr. old son of UM professor. Care in A2 home for 12 hrs.- /week @ $10/hour. Great ref(s) req., 1 yr. preferred, must have car. Call 327-9993. ADOPTION. HAPPILY sional couple seeks baby1 Expenses paid. Call 866-623-1591. MARRIED profes- to love and cherish. Lidia/Michael at CHILD CARE-SUMMER. MON. & Thurs. 9-530. For 8, 12 yr. girls. Responsible, ener- getic, w/. exc. ref. apply. Debbie 332-4232. EDITING. PRE-PRESS FORMATTING books, theses, journal articles. 996-0566 writeon@iserv.net for or Debt Consolidation Business Home Refinance School - Mortgage " Personal " Car " Equity " Many More SWIMMING POOL SERVICE and construction. Fast paced outdoor work, -weekends off. Top pay for hard working, self- motivated people to work in the NW DETROIT SUBURBS. 248-477-7727. WOLVERINESNEEDJOBS.COM __ We need Paid survery takers in Ann Arbor. 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. For Tuesday, April 11, 2006 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) Please remember that this is your spe- cial time of year! It's all about you now. Recharge your batteries, and make a list of what you want to accomplish in the coming year. TAURUS (April 20 to May 20) Continue to seek out opportunities for solitude. As your year comes to an end (before your upcoming birthday), now is the time to look back and give yourself a report card on how you're doing. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) We need our friends and associates. They help us define who we are. Give some thought today to the kind of friends you want to have in your life. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) People notice you now because the Sun is at high noon in your chart. This acts like a spotlight on you. Why not use this to your advantage? Lobby for what you want! LEO (July 23 to Aug. 22) Now is the time to study new subjects or explore opportunities in travel and publishing. You want more out of life - so go get it! VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) Your research skills are tops right now. year. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Since you have a burst of energy to get better organized and work hard now, do so! Capitalize on this blessing. Make hay while the Sun shines. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) This is a creative time for you! Love, romance, fun and pleasure are in the air. Time spent with children is important. Make plans for a vacation. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) You value home and family in a tradi- tional way. They provide an emotional, tangible security for you. Talk to family members today. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) This busy pace will not stop for at least a few weeks, so get used to it. Read, write, study and talk to siblings. Communication is important now. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) What will make you happy? What will it take? Think about this today. If you don't define these goals, how will you know when you reach them? YOU BORN TODAY Basically, you are a wise person. You are practical, and you know how to be useful. You don't crave publicity, but you often get it because you're so capa- ble. You have strong diplomatic skills Two Bedroom Apartments As low As $1,280 Per Month! MAY LEASES ONE (1) MONTH FREE!!! !!! FREE SPRING/SUMMER sublet finder!!! 22 premier Ann Arbor locations to choose from with studios-6 bedrooms. Call 741-9300 for your complete list. 1 BDRM. SUMMER sublet. 913 Dewey, flex. dates. Prkg., A/C, full kitch. $550/mo., neg. scharlin@umich.edu or 510-872-1258. 1 RC M AVATV on OA-Ind Th rn A/C !!!BARTENDER WANTED!!! $300 a day potential, Age 18+ ok. No experience neces- sary, training provided. 8(X)-965-6520 x 125. $9.00/HR. MICHIGAN TELEFUND is now hiring. Awesome Resume Builder! Apply on- line: www.telefund.umich.edu or 763-4400. CITY OF ANN Arbor Canoe Liveries accept- ing applications for Canoe and Day Camp Staff Apply at www.a2gov.org EOEJAA. Study Participants Wanted The University of Michigan Department of Dermatology is enrolling psoriasis patients (cases) and normal controls for a genetics study [IRBMED 1990-0381]. This type of study INHousE LAUNdRY FACILITIES