The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com
Thursday, November 29, 2007 - 7A
ZA'S
From Page 1A
including cleaning agents and
paper products - were stored in
the basement, but Vogel said the
basement sprinkler prevented
the fire from spreading.
Building manager Myrna
Kweit was upstairs in her office
when Marino told her the build-
ing needed tobe evacuated.
"I saw the fire trucks coming
down the street, never dreaming
it was our building," Kweit said.
"I'm glad the fire trucks got here
as fast as they did."
Firefighters extinguished the
fire in fewer than 10 minutes.
In-N-Out reopened at 6 p.m.
last night, 15 minutes after
receiving approval from an Ann
Arbor Department of Health
inspector.
Marino said restaurant man-
agers aren't sure when Za's will
reopen but will try to make that
decision sometime this morning.
"Everything needs to be
cleaned to get rid of the smoke,"
she said.
The cafe's cleanup will be
more time-intensive than the
four-hour effort to clean In-N-
Out. The Department of Agri-
culture needs to approve the
reopening.
FACEBOOK
From Page 1A
Feed can now show stories about
the actions that a user's friends
are taking on participating exter-
nal sites."
The launch of Facebook Bea-
con comes a little over a year after
Facebook News Feed angered
some users who thought the fea-
ture infringed on their privacy.
Ultimately, it gained gradual
acceptance.
Facebook advertises Beacon as
a way for brands and businesses
to use word-of-mouth promotion
through their websites. Custom-
ers must be logged into Facebook
while they are making purchases.
When a transaction is complet-
ed, an invisible image and script
are triggered, giving the website
access to the Facebook cookie,
which tracks the users.
A pop-up window appears,
and buyers are given 20 seconds
to choose whether or not to have
this information published on
Facebook. If they don't respond,
the information is automati-
cally shared. Facebook users can
then delete the story from their
account, but only after it has been
put online.
There is no way to permanently
remove the option ofhavingusers'
actions on external sites reported.
Nick Ward, a freshman in the
School of Music, Theatre and
Dance, said he noticed reports on
Facebook of his friends' actions
on other sites and was confused.
He said people's activities on
Facebook are meant to be public
but that people don't expect their
friends to find out what they do on
other websites.
"I don't understand why
everyone needs to know what's
happening within their network
of friends every second," he said.
"Facebook is turning into Big
Brother."
Ward said users shouldn't be
required to ask that their pur-
chases not be tracked.
"It's crossing a line, because if
someone misses that 20 second
window they have no control over
what is published on Facebook,"
Ward said.
Claes Fornell, an expert on cus-
tomer satisfaction measurement
and customer asset management,
said this violates an individual's
privacy rights.
"It's a risky business model
to assume that somebody's giv-
ing permission when they may
not be," he said. "I don't think it's
ethical to assume you have per-
mission because you did not get a
response."
DARFUR
From Page 1A
organization was major monetary
contributor to the AJWS's advo-
cacy work in Darfur.
"It's a great initiative because
it encourages people to learn and
take advocacy positions but also to
donate money through their labor
to help the current refugees and
victims of genocide," Messinger
said. "It keeps our focus where it
needs to be."
Messinger said she plans to give
the audience tips on how it can help
end the genocide through local
activism. She said she has been
impressedby students' commitment
to helping people in Darfur.
"The student response to the
Darfur crisis in the United States
MSA
From Page 1A
would not reveal names other than
his and Yost's. At Tuesday night's
MSA meeting, he said he and Yost
were the only members left in the
group and refused to name any of
the other past group rmernbers. He
said it was their decision whether
to come forward.
Whether Baker names other
members, he is facing issues of his
own.
has been just extraordinary," Mess-
inger said.
She also said Students Taking
Action Now in Darfur chapters at
schools across the country were
major leaders in promoting the
divestment of companies who prof-
it from the situation in Darfur.
This would include places like
the University or the state refusing
to do business with companies that
invest in the violent Sudanese gov-
ernment for raw goods like oil.
But Cohen said WWFF doesn't
wish to become involved with the
issue of divestment.
"Our goal is to remain politi-
cally non-partisan," he said. "Our
program is more of an initiative we
want other students to take on."
STAND and Will Work For Food
have different approaches to how
they present the Darfur issue to
When they debated the trial,
LSA-SG members were concerned
over whether trying Baker was an
appropriate response to his mem-
bership in the Facebook group.
LSA-SG Vice President Han-
nah Madoff, who voted for the
trial, said Baker needed to be tried
because LSA-SG appointed him
and therefore is responsible for his
actions. She said that because stu-
dents clearly disapproved of the
Facebook group, Baker had violat-
ed the LSA-SG constitution.
LSA-SG Rep. Aaron Miller, the
only dissenter, voted against the
students.
"They can turn to us for more
informational and ideological sup-
port," said Emily Lardner, an LSA
sophomore and the public relations
chair of the University's chapter of
STAND. "We can provide the edu-
cational side while they provide a
more activism-based side."
Davidson and Cohen said they
struggle with STAND's politi-
cal ideology and commitment to
divestment but are looking forward
to collaborating with the group in
the future.
They said they hope to help
STAND prepare for a campuswide
fast on Dec. 5 that will coincide
with a national effort. Students will
have the opportunity to donate the
amount of money they would nor-
mally spend on food for the day to
STAND.
trial because he said it was too
soon to decide.
"I'm not against a trial," Miller
said. "I think we rushed into this
and it was an emotional day."
Hull said he supports LSA-SG's
trial and feels that it's important
that a trial be held for the good of
LSA-SG, not just him personally.
"The fact is that he came for-
ward and he said he joined this
group," Hull said. "He said it.
Anyway, I really - to the whole
thing of jeopardizing governmen-
tal affairs, it's not just a personal
issue."
WANT TO HELP US REDESIGN OUR WEBSITE?
E-mail grossman@michigandaily.com.
F i E f 1 I t
the michiganc
W isonWhite
May toM ay
Availability:
EastQuad 1 I )bedroomiblack
daily
EFFICIEP
storage! 1C
ing, and
able now!
734-995-92
www.wilso
NCIES W/ BASEMENT
014 Church; balconies, park-
blocks from campus; Avail-
Wilson White Management;
X200.
onwhitemanagement.con
LARGE FURNISHED 2 or 3 bdrm.
apt. at 1111 S State, Near U-M bus
stop, Avail. Fall '08, Heat & water incl.
Balc., A/C, prkg., ldry., Sl80-S1850,
No smkg/no pets. 734-996-3539 or 734-
678-7250. ehtseng efcomcast.net
WALK TO UM campus, 6 bedrooms, EXCEPTIONAL EGG DONORS
2 bath, washer/dryer, central air, hard- needed $8000-$15000 for qualified, re-
wood floors, newer kitchen & bath, sponsible applicants. All ethnicities
$2400 avail. Aug 2008. 734-476-8077 welcome. Special need for Jewish,
or farmerjordantamac.com Asian, East Indian donors. Close per-
sonal support by experienced donor.
AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY Contact Dawn 951-696-7466.
SPACTACULAR 2 BE apartment in- FertilityAlternative.co/eggdonors
side large Victorian house at 1039 Bald- MOVIE EXTRAS. NEW opportani-
win. Newly refinished hardwood ties for upcoming productions. All
floors, 10' ceilings, Laundry, and Park- looks needed no experience required
ing included. Call 668-1100. for cast calls. Call 877- 218- 6224.
FALL '08 4 BDRMS., furn., wshr./ LARGE STI
dryer, 2 full baths., kitch., $1825. 117 pus at Tower
Hill St. near Brown St., 734-323-2267. full bath. big
FALL '08 5 bdrm. 1145 S. Forest ldry, facilitie
$2900. New kitch, off-street prkg, Avail. 9/1108
2 baths, dry., hardwood floors 248-227-0117
keysmanagement.net or 734-651-1593. N(
FALL '08 6 bdrm. 502 Catherine; Prime
5 bdrm. 524 S. Fourth Ave.
Call 734-674-2258. ww
FALL '08 RENTAL. 5 Bdrm, 2 bath. Call today
at 811 Sylvan. 10 min walk to campus.
5 mm to baseball field and track.
Major appliances. $2500/mo.E
734-834-1680 or 313-690-9388.
FOR SEPT. 2008 lease. 8 bdrm. ltse. 3
@f 930 S. Forest and 335 E. Jefferson. I Bedrooms:
And 6, 5, 4 bdrm. houses in great loca- 72E
tions. www.jmsprop.com or 222-9033.
51
GREAT 7 BDRM. 7-8 person house
near campus. 2.5 bath. Large rooms, 3:
free prkg., laundry. $3800/mo. Avail. 5
Sept. 2008. Call 734-761-9210. 2 Bedrooms:
1330
GREAT CENTRAL CAMPUS 102
APTS.! OPEN HOUSES 5
THIS WEEKEND1
608 Monroe -Behind S. Quad 3
Eff., Bi-Lev. 1, 2 Bdrm.
Call Tom at 248.790.0502 or email
608MonroeManagers(cumich.edu 3 Bedrooms:
Dec. 1st & 2nd Open Houses 5-8 PM 1330
815 S. State - Between Arbor & Hill1
Cg. 2 Bdrm. (over 1100 sq. ft. each)
Call Nicole at 248.345.5762 or email *Fully Furnish
815SouthStateManagers t umich.edu *Parking I
Dec. 1st & 2nd Open Houses 6-8PM *FreeI
*F
711 Arch - Between State & Packard
1 Bdrm. Studio, 2 & 3 Bdrms.
Call Phil at 734.662.5270
Dec. /st 5-8pm & Dec. 2nd2-4pm PEPPER'S1
Open Houses apartments on
wood firs., pr
Call above numbers or email for included. S16
open house showings or please stop by! Also avail. ef
UDIO- CENTRAL cam-
Plaza, furn. full kitch. I
closets, 24 hr. security &
s, $950-1000/mo. + elec.
. sale avail. Call Ely at
or etamaItbrepa.com
OW LEASING
Student Housing
761-8000
:w.primesh.corn
to see your new homae!
726 S. State
610 S. Forest
44 S. Division
6 S. State Street
520 Packard
5 E. Lawrence
1000 Oakland
26 E. Madison
11 E. Hoover
N. University Ct.
21 Vaughn Street
11 E. Hoover
1333 Wilmot
520 Packard
26 E. Madison
411 High
819 Brown
N. University Ct.
525 Walnut
1000 Oakland
hed apartments
Included
Ethernet
Free heat and water
(* At most locations)
PROPERTIES 3 bdrm.
East U. Furnished, hard-
rkg. avail., heat and water
25-$1700. 810-231-0229.
. $625.
Now Leasing
for Fall 2008!
734.995.9200
AVAILABLE 2008 RENTALS;
8 bdrm.; 540 Packard/May/$4150
503 E. Ann/Fall/$4200
7 bdrm.; 549 Packard/May/$4375
6 bdrm.; 1143 S. Forest/May/$3400
200 Packard/Fall/$3500
314 E. William/Fall/$3500
507 Linden/Fall/$3400
510 S. Fourth/Fall/$3400
935 Greenwood/Fall/$3750
1213 Prospect/Fall/$3400
411 Washtenaw/May/$4200
545 Packard No. l/Fall/$3900
1018 Church/Fall/$3900
1110 Church Judson/May/$3600
1361 Wilmont/May/$3600
410 Benjamin/Fall/$3400
5 bdrm.; 1101 E. University/Fall/$3400
524 Walnut/Fall/$3500
Please check www.michiganrental.com
for more listings or call 734-260-7215.
PETS WELCOME SPACIOUS
2 & 3 bdrms. in historic west side
available! 741-9300.
annarborapartments.net
AVAILABLE NOW! GREAT 6
bdrm., 2 bath. house. Free laundry,
A.C., lots of parking. $2999/mo.
734-665-8825.
AVAILABLE NOW! PRIVATE lock-
ing rm. in six bdrm., hse. $599 a mo.
(734) 665-8825.
CAMPUS REALTY. NOW taking
reservations for '08-'09. Stop by our
office for a full housing brochure.
1335 S. University
734-665-8825
campusrealty.com
CHELSEA NEW CONDO. 2 Bed 2
Bath. Furn./Unfurn. Move in before
2008 and get first month free. $900/mo.
734-385-6367.
CORNER HOUSE APTS. 2 & 3
* bdrms. beautifully furnished, high ceil-
ings, great views & garage parking.
741-9300. annarborapartments.net
EARLY MOVE-IN. 1115 S.Forest 5
rms./sleeps 6. 2 showers, dishwshr, prk-
ing, Idry, $3250/mo. 734-260-4003.
AVAILABLE JANUARY 2008- 2 BR
apartment located in quiet west side
neighborhood at 801 West Madison.
Parking and Heat included. Furnished
or unfurnished. Call 668-1100.
070
APTS., SUBLETS, & Rmmte(s). List
and Browse FREE! All Cities & Areas.
1-877-367-7368 or www.sble~com
080 A
PERSONAL TRAINING/PILATES.
734-678-3422. Maryheth2@ssjuno.com
PRIVATE TUTORING FOR LSAT,
LAW SCHOOL, BAR EXAM
My credentials:
- perfect 180 on LSAT
- Michigan law graduate (3.85 GPA)
- licensed attorney
- 15 years of teaching experience
- hudreds of delighted stdents
734.996.2861 www.TESTGURU.com
THESIS EDITING- LANGUAGE,
organization, format. 25 yrs. U-M exp.
996-0566 or writeon9/iserv.net
he l p wnted
090
!!!BARTENDING!!! $300 /day poten-
tial, Age 18+ ok. No exp. necessary,
training provided. 800-965-6520 x 125.
$10.00HR. MICHIGAN TELEFUND
now hiring. Great Resume Builder! Ap-
ply @ teleftnd.umich.edu or 763-8180.
ACCOUNT & PAYMENT
Representative Needed
As part of our expansion program, a
small company is looking for an
Account & Payment representative. It
pays $3,000 a month plus benefits and
takes only a little of your time. Please
contact us for more details. Require-
ments: Should be computer literate, 2-3
hours access to the interet weekly.
Must be over 19 yrs. of age. Must be
Efficient and Dedicated. If you are in-
terested and need more information,
Contact (PRO) Stanley via e-mail at
sberb77@ifyahoo.com
CAFE HABANA IS now hiring expe-
rienced servers. We are looking for full
or part-time servers that must have
some a.m. availability. Apply in person
after 2 p.m. M-F 211 E Washington.
No phone calls please.-
EARN $6,000 COMPENSATION for
helping to create a family. Egg Donors
requested for Local program, no travel
required, anonymity provided. Must be
healthy, btwn. ages of 21-28, height /
weight proportionate & a non-smkr. to
qualify. Call ARR: (248)723-9979 for
snore information. www.arrl.com
EARN $800-$3200 A month to drive
brand new cars with ads placed on
them. www.AdCarClub.com
LOCAL INSURANCE AGENT is
looking for p/ student help. 973-1700.
OFFICE ASSISTANT: AT least a 3.8
high school GPA, age 18 or older, job
experience(s) extra-curricular activi-
ties, computer skills. Very flexible
hours. $12/hour. Part-time position.
Send resume to flexskills@yahoo.com
PROFESSOR SEEKS DRIVER to
take daughter horseback riding. Thurs-
day afternoons. $12/hr. plus gas.
sunstein(ecusmich.edu
RESEARCH STUDY ON nutrition
and athleticism in girls 14-20 yrs. In-
volves blood drawing, body composi-
tion & fitness testing. No medications
or birth control. Financial compensa-
tion up to $300. Tel: 734-615-5526 or
kkirkyfumich.edu. IRB#: 1997-0563
SPRING BREAK REPS Wanted:
Free Travel & Cash. 1-800-426-7710
or visit www.sunsplashtours.com
UNDERCOVER SHOPPERS
Earn up to $150 per day. Under cover
shoppers needed to judge retail and
dining establishments. Exp. Not req.
Call 800-722-4791.
WOLVERINESNEEDJOBS.COM
Paid survey takers needed in A2.
100% FR EE to im. Click on Surveys.
Chil Care
095
3 GIRLS & puppy need energetic after
school helper w/ car. Tues. & Thurs.
start Jan. Light housekeeping, meal
prep., driving, homework help. Send in-
tro letter to moscowcohen@comcast.net
I ickets & tavel
100 A
**#I SPRING BREAK Website! 4 &
7 night trips. Low prices guaranteed.
Group discounts for 8+. Book 20 peo-
ple, get 3 free trips! Campus reps
needed. www.StudentCity.com or 800-
293-1445.
SPRING BREAK '08 Lowest Prices!!!
www.sunsplashtours.com 800-426-7710
SPRING BREAK 2008. Sell Trips,
Earn Cash, Go Free! Best Prices Guar-
anteed! Call for group discounts. 1-800-
648-4849 or www.ststravel.com
Daily Classifieds
serving the UotM
/ yOU'Ve community for
been hundreds upon
served hundreds or so
years.
i
GREAT HOUSE, 7 Bedrooms, 3
Baths, deck, free parking, new rennova-
tion, Close to Campus and Kerrytown
$500/mo. each. 734-747-6372.
GREAT LOCATION AT South U.
and Washtenaw. 7+ rms. 3 bath. 2
kitchens, laundry, and prkg. $4750/mo.
+ water. 734-260-4003.
HOUSES FOR RENT Fall 2008-
2009. Please visit the gazette page on
ourwebsite
www.cappomanagement.com for a list
of possible houses. Not all units may
be avail. Please call Cappo/Deinco at
734-996-1991 with any questions.
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. 6 bed-
room house located near U-M Campus.
Great location for Med and Engineer-
ing students. Call Michigan Realty 734-
662-5500 or www.michcomrealty.com
for details.
KERRYTOWN 6-BR House- Perfect
for 6-8 people, Available Fall 2008.
This house features 2 full baths, 2
kitchens with dishwashers, washer and
dryer, 6 parking spaces. Call 734-668-
1100 or 313-300-4455.
KERRYTOWN AREA 3 BDRM., 3/4
people on Kerrytown/Catherine. Ldry.,
prkg., $1400/1500 +util. 449-4797.
PEPPERS PROPERTIES, GREAT
Houses, 5-8 people great location, leas-
ing now for fall '08, fir. free onsite
ldry. and prkg. 810-231-0229.
RM. IN KERRYTOWN area,
free prkg/ldry. $425 plus util.
734-449-4797.
TREE CITY PROPERTIES
6 Bdrm: 1104 Prospect $3800 May 08
6 Bdnn: 340 S. Division $3800 Fall '08
6 Bdrm: 1019 Packard $3400 Fall '08
6 Bdrm: 1016 S. Forest $3850 Fall '08
6 Bdrm: 1108 Prospect $4100 Fall '08
5 Bdrm: 407 Hamilton $3000 Fall '08
4 Bdrm: 812 Packard $2600 May '08
Check website for more houses & apts!
www.treecityproperties.com
734-994-8733.
TWO BEDROOM SPECIALS for
May to May Leases!
441 S. First D Amazingly large apart-
ments 2 blocks from town w/ free park-
ing!
715 W. Madison D Updated kitchen
and free parking; dogs are welcome too!
911 Oakland DExcellent location - less
than a block from campus! Covered
parking available.
915 Oakland D Historical home steps
from campus w/remodeled kitchen and
bath!
Wilson White Management
734-995-9200
www.wilsonwhitmanagement.com
For Thursday, Nov. 29, 2007
ARIES
(March 21 to April 19)
Romance can be disappointing today.
Similarly, parents might be concerned
about children. Don't get carried away;
this disappointment is brief, plus there is
some confusion here.
TAURUS
(April 20 to May 20)
You have to be patient with parents,
bosses and family members today.
Whatever you're doing, it's as if you
have Vaseline on your lens. You're not
seeing things clearly.
GEMINI
(May 21 to June 20)
Sit back and listen objectively when
others are speaking to you today.
Someone could be stringing you along or
trying to sell you a bill of goods.
Caution!
CANCER
(June 21 to July 22)
This is a poor day for major financial
expenditures or transactions. For some
reason, you don't have all the facts.
You're not seeing things clearly.
LEO
(July 23 to Aug. 22)
In discussions with partners, you're
inclinedto beavictimof your own wish-
ful thinking. Instead of seeing reality,
you see things as you want them to be.
VIRGO
(Aug. 23 to Sept. 22)
Go slowly with everything you're
doing today. Make no assumptions.
Don't be quick to take offense if others
disappoint you. Misunderstandings are
rampant. (however, deception is possi-
ble.)
LIBRA
(Sept. 23 to Oct. 22)
You might feel disappointed by a
friend or group today. Don't get carried
away with this, and don't overreact.
Misunderstandings are likely every-
where today. Be cool.
SCORPIO
(Oct. 23 to Nov. 21)
If your boss, teacher or parent asks
you to do something today, make very
sure you understand what this person
expects from you. Discussions are con-
fusing today.
SAGlTTARIUS
(Nov. 22 to Dec. 21)
Don't worry if you .become disillu-
sioned about politics or religion today.
Wait a few days to see how you look at
things then. It will likely change.
CAPRICORN
(Dec. 22to Jan. 19)
Double-check your dealings with
banks and your debtors. Make sure you
know what's going on. Make sure you
know what is expected of you.
AQtUAEItUS
(Jan. 20to Feb. 18)
Because you might want to avoid a
confrontation with someone, you could
be tempted to lie. Don't do this. This will
only make things worse. Just wait two
days.
PISCES
(Feb. 19 to March 20)
Be tolerant about confusion that
occurs today at work. These could be
honest mistakes; however, someone
could be toying with the truth. If you
think something fishy is going on, it is!
YOU BORN TODAY You're very
active and dynamic in life. You don't sit
on the sidelines. In fact, once you're
involved in anything, you can provoke
others to action. You make shrewd
observations with acerbic wit. Many of
you have the power to influence others
through your work or your social activi-
ties. The year ahead could involve some
major changes, perhaps as significant as
around 1999.
Birthdate of: C.S. Lewis, author; Joel
Coen, director/producer; Garry
Shandling, comedian.
LARGE 5 BR + Finished Den Near
IM Building - Sports enthusiasts will
love this spacious house and ideal loca-
tion. Features include 2 bathrooms,
dishwasher, full basement with wash-
er/dryer, hardwood floors, and lots ofi
off street parking. Available Fall 2008,
Call 668-1100.
-2007Kind; FeatuIes syndicate. Inc