The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Tuesday, January 8, 2008 - 7 BUSINESSES From Page 1 the first floor and will also add 380 parking spaces and about 300 bicycle parking spaces to the area. LSA junior Kevin Kinney said he would be inconvenienced by the changes. "It's generally the first place I shop. I live on North Campus, and it's close to the bus stop," Kinney said. "They have most of what I need." REZONING From Page 1 "I find it very unfair," he said. "This is my investment for my retirement and immediately I would lose a large portion of my retirement income." Fisher said that while he sees "strong arguments for both sides," the grandfathering plan is unstable to landlords renting to more than four tenants. "If you rent a home to six unre- lated people, and the next year have four unrelated people, the grand- fathering is eliminated," he said. "That's a 33 percent loss of profits." City Council member Joan Lowenstein (D-Ward 2) said the rezoning proposal is a move by residents who fear the neighbor- hood will be overdeveloped. "What some of the residents were really afraid of was that someone would buy two adjacent NORTH KOREA From Page 1 professor said. Many of the nation's problems derive from the rule of Kim Jong II, Hyun-Sik Kim argued. Despite his criticisms of the former lead- er, he described Kim Il Sung, the Communist leader who led North Korea from 1948 until his death in 1994, as a man with "a warm heart." Kim Jong Il's nuclear program has made North Korea an object of concern on the world stage. The country conducted its first nuclear test in 2006, and claims to have CANCER From Page 1 Some have argued that some scientists are too blinded by the potential of stem cell research, but Wicha said an innovative route is necessary to combat cancer. "There is so much research using traditional chemotherapy," Wicha said. "Billions of dollars Robert Kesto, the owner of Champions Party Store and Laundromat, located at 609 S. Forest Avenue, said his store will move during construction and then return to the same location. Kesto said many cus- tomers are not yet aware of the city's plans. "It inconveniences customers," Kesto said. "Now, if a customer wants to buy a pack of cigarettes, he's got to walk four blocks," he said, pointing his thumb out the window. "I think it sucks. It's a houses, tear it down and build a big apartment building," Lowen- stein said. "Many of the houses are quite old, nice, interesting older homes, and people just kind of look and think 'Gosh, some- body could come in here and take a perfectly nice home and change it just to get the maximum profit out of the land.' " Mayor John Hieftje has also expressed concern that an influx of students will bring unwanted traffic to the neighborhood. Lowenstein said Golden Ave- nue is a "historical anomaly" because streets of single-fam- ily homes surround it, and that it was probably meant to be a sin- gle-family housing zone. "I don't think there will be much or any opposition to it on council," Lowenstein said of the proposal. "It is ideal to make it compatible with the surrounding areas and to make the existing homes conforming." made several more nuclear weap- ons Hyun-Sik Kim said he didn't expect the North Korean nucle- ar threat to disappear in the near future. With North Korea's disastrous economic situation, a nuclear arsenal might be the only way Kim Jong Il could withstand political pressure from abroad. "That's the last card he has," Hyun-Sik Kim said. Hyun-SikKimsaid he was espe- cially concerned about the Pyong- yang University of Science and Technologybecause ithas actively recruited nuclear engineering and physics professors. He said he sus- pects that the university's profes- are spent on tfeatments, many of which just don't work. There will always be skeptics." Wicha said stem cell research is still yet to definitively prove its worth on human patients. "In order to convince them this is better, we have to prove it," Wicha said. "Patients have to really benefit." Jim Shayman, associate vice presidentcof research for the health sciences in the University Health loss of income. We've been here18 years." Kesto said he would carry on business as usual wherever he goes. He said he plans to make use of the increased space upon the store's return by expanding the store's grocery section. He said he would eliminate the laun- dromat because all the apart- ments upstairs will have laundry units. "I think it sucks," Kesto said. "This is not our choice, but we have to go with the flow." Susan Johnson-Jaworski, who lives on Golden Avenue with her husband and their three chil- dren under the age of seven, said she doesn't want the neighbor- hood to be overdeveloped. When asked if she supported the zoning changes, she asked, "What do you think?" and gestured to her chil- dren scampering behind her. "It's never been an issue," she said. "We love the way itris. But if we multiplied the number of peo- ple in the neighborhood, it would change the atmosphere." Berggren said she likes the stu- dents who live on Golden Avenue, adding that the street has a coop- erative list that shares tools and supplies like lawnmowers among the neighbors. "But the area already has about as much density as it can stand," she said. - Daily News Editor Kelly Fraser contributed to this report. sors are working nuclear bomb technology. Although the country is func- tionally closed to the United States, Hyun-Sik Kim said he hopes University students will visit North Korea to teach and rebuild the country's infrastruc- ture once the country is reunified with South Korea or overthrows its government. He wouldn't say how safe he thought it would be to try teaching there now. Hyun-Sik Kim said his great- est hope is to become a teacher in North Korea again. He is currently working to compile a North Korean-English diction- ary. System, praised the research as innovative. "Dr. Wicha and his group have been leaders inctestingthis hypoth- esis and the initiation of a clinical trial represents an exciting step in this process," he said. Researchers are awaiting FDA approval, which they expect to arrive within one or two months. The study itself will take about six months. Students upset with state primary choices PRIMARY From Page 1 "That's where all the momen- tum is going," Stobby said. According to a Reuters/C- SPAN/Zogby poll released yester- day, Obama is leading in the New Hampshire primary, which takes place today. Thirty-nine percent of voters supported Obama in the poll. Clinton placed second in the poll with 29 percent of the vote. John Edwards, who finished sec- ond in the Iowa caucuses, polled at 19 percent. LSA junior Laura Wasserman said she'll vote for a Democrat in November's general election, but hasn't made a decision about who to vote for in the Michigan prima- ry next week. "I think any of the Democratic candidates would be great and cre- ate the change this country needs," Wasserman said. But Engineering freshman Evan Bates didn't agree. Bates said he doesn't think Obama will change things for the better. "I'm all for change, just not in his direction," Bates said. "Barack Obama is a likeable person, more so than Clinton, and he's less abrasive than Edwards. But I don't like him as a candidate based on the issues." Bates said he isn't sure who he'll vote for in Michigan's Republi- can primary, but that he's leaning toward John McCain (R-Ariz.). "McCain is more realistic on the issues, especially immigration," Bates said. LSA senior Lauren Lefebvre, a member of the College Republicans and Students for Romney, said she wants to see more fiscal respon- sibility in her next president. She thinks Romney would bring that mindset to the office. "He is a Michigan man," Lefeb- vre said. "On social issues, he's in my frame of mind." Lefebvre said Romney's faith might affect whether people vote for him. "People are scared about elect- ing a Mormon," Lefebvre said. "I would hope our generation would CLIF REEDER/Da LSA senior Lauren Lefebvre is a member of the University's chapter of the College Republicans. She supports Mitt Romney in the race for the White House. be past religious discrimination." Bates said he thinks race and gender are a major factor for unsure voters. "I think minorities will be drawn to Obama and women will be drawn to Hillary," he said. LSA junior Audrina Manciel said she supports Clinton because she's a woman. "Honestly, I'm vot- ing for her just because we haven't had a woman president," Manciel said. "That's the feminist in me." Manciel said that Clinton's experience as first lady and poli- cies as a senator make her a strong candidate. LSA freshman Brittany Flory also plans to vote for Clinton because of the senator's plan for education. "I agree with her stance on most of the issues, especially socially," Flory said. Wasserman said she thinks the candidates differ very little within each party. She was confi- dent that the Democratic nominee would win in the general election. Numerous students echoed her sentiments, including more con- servative voters. Clarkson, who identified as a Republican, said she's not as con- cerned with the primary as she is with the election in November. "I'd like to see a Republican as president, but I don't think that's going to happen," she said. Lefebvre said she thinks that any of the Democratic candidates will provide the Republican nomi- nee with a challenge. "Bush has screwed over the Republicans," Lefebvre said. "The Democrats will be difficult to beat." the michigan daily Bush concedes economy faces new challenges Stops short of recession warnings By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG and DAVID M. HERSZENHORN The New York Times CHICAGO - President Bush, in a marked shift from his usual upbeat economic assessments, conceded here yesterday that the nation faces "economic chal- lenges" due to rising oil prices, the home mortgage crisis and a weak- ening job market. "We cannot take growth for granted," Bush said in a speech to a group of business leaders in which he acknowledged that many Americans share a rising anxiety over the economy. But even after a government report on Friday that showed unemployment jumped to 5 per- cent last month from 4.7 percent in November, Bush stopped short of warning that the nation may be about to enter a recession. Democrats in Congress and on the campaign trail echoed the president's sobering view. With a number of analysts now predict- ing that an economic downturn could be imminent, both Bush and congressional Democratic leaders say they are consider- ing whether a rescue package is necessary to counter the threat of a recession, in which economic activity declines and joblessness increases over an extended peri- od of time. But the two sides would undoubtedly take vastly different approaches, setting up a clash that could dominate the 2008 election campaign and the remainder of the Bush presidency. If the past is any guide, Bush is likely to favor broad-based tax cuts of the sort he pushed through early in his presidency. Democrats are discussing more targeted relief - tax cuts, spend- ing programs or a combination of the two - to help lower- and middle-income Americans who would be hurt the most if the economy falters. "This is going to be a battle over doing more of what George Bush has done for the past six years, or doing more for the mid- dle class," Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, the chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, said in a telephone interview after spending the day in Chicago with Bush. "That's where the fissure is going to be." The clash comes as the latest negative signs on the economy, coupled with uncertainty in the housing and credit markets, have forced Bush to abandon his usual sunny rhetoric and paint a darker picture of the economy's condi- tion. After months of insisting that the economy's fundamentals are strong - a theme he reiterated yesterday - Bush did not mince words. He acknowledged that "many Americans are anxious about the economy," and noted that "jobs are growing at a slower pace." He said core inflation is low - "except when you're going to the gas pump, it doesn't seem that low." Still, the White House is not convinced it must act. The delib- erations are tightly held, and aides to Bush say he will not make a decision about whether to offer a stimulus package, or what it should contain, until later this month, in time for his State of the Union address scheduled for Jan. 28. Appearing in New York yes- terday, Bush's Treasury secretary, Henry M. Paulson Jr., echoed that plan, and cautioned against any rush to action. "Working through the current situation and getting the policy right," Paulson said, "is more important than getting the policy announced quickly." On Capitol Hill, Democrats were positioning themselves to get ahead of any proposal the White House might present. Aides to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said that she had yet to conclude decisively that a stimu- lus package was needed, but that she had met with a group of eco- nomic advisers last month who unanimously urged her to take swift action aimed at stabilizing the jittery economy and lifting consumer confidence. The group included Lawrence H. Summers, the former Treasury secretary under President Clinton; Felix G. Rohatyn, the financier and former ambassador to France; and Laurence D. Fink, the chairman and chief executive of BlackRock, the global investment firm. An aide to Pelosi said the three were "unanimous in saying that we should move out ahead." In an interview over the weekend, Sum- mers - who has been public in his warnings of a possible downturn - said he believed there was now a greater than 50 percent chance of a recession this year. "My view is that now is the time to be thinking about policies that would provide recession insur- ance," Summers said, "and if we wait until it's entirely clear that there is a recession, it will be too late." Child Care 095 EARN $$ DURING SPRING BREAK. Child care for 2 girls (5 & 2). 8am - 4pm. $80/day. 734-998-0443. TUTOR NEEDED FOR nice 8th gr. boy, math, some read/write, car needed to p/u at school 3-5pm 2-3 days/week 734-355-2005. LOOKING FOR BABYSITTER for our 4 yr old son and one yr old daugh- ter. Non smkr and great references a must. Mondays and Tuesdays from 7 to 5. We live off campus and have a dog. E-mail docew )umich.edu 1090 !!!BARTENDING!!! $300 /day poten- tial, Age 18+ oh. No exp. necessary, training provided. 8B(-965-6520 a 125. $10.00/HR. MICHIGAN TELEFUND now hiring. Great Resume Builder! Ap- ply @& telefundaumich.edu or 763-4400. ACCOUNT & PAYMENT REPRE- SENTATIVE NEEDED: As part of our expansion program a small com- pany is looking for Account & Pay- ment representative, it pays $3000 a month plus benefits and takes only lit- tle of your time. Please contact us for more details. Requirements - Should be a computer Literate. 2-3 hours access to the internet weekly. Must be over 19yrs of age. Must be Efficient and Dedicated. If you are interested and need more information, Contact (P R O) Smith, Email: dsmithuk0ll@yahoo.com ACCOUNT & PAYMENT Representative Needed As part of our expansion program a small company is looking for Account & Payment representative, it pays $3000 a month plus benefits and takes only little of your time. 'lease contact us for more details. Requirements - Should be a computer Literate. 2-3 hours access to the internet weekly. Must be over 19yrs of age. Must be Ef- ficient and Dedicated.If you are inter- ested and need more information, Contact (P R O)Stanley Email: sberb77cyahoo.com 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 toyahoo.com CARETAKER HELP Want to support medical research? The University pof Michigan is looking for part-time help to assist animal caretak- ers. Must be willing to work 15-30 hours per week, between the hours of 6:00 am and 2:30 pm. To set up inter- view please contact: Veronica at vrieberg@umich.edu ORGANIC CHEMISTRY 2 Tutor WOLVERINESNEEDJOBS.COM needed. 734-904-4212. Best if Paid survey takers needed in A2. available after 5 PM. 100% FREE to join. Click on Surveys. APTS., SUBLETS, & Rmmte(s). List and Browse FREE! All Cities & Areas. 1-877-367-7368 or www.sublet.com For Tuesday, Jan. 8, 2000 ARIES (March 21 to April 19) hisi good day to think about your relationship to authority in your life, including parents, bosses the police or anyoneelse. How canyouimprove these relatinshirs? (April 20 to May 20) Ask yourself if you need more training or education in some area. Travel and exposure to other cultures can enrich your life. GEMINI (May 21 to June 20) Sit down today and do a rough take on what you owe other people, including credit-card debt, personal debt, taxes or possessions that you have on loan. Get a clearer picture of this. CANCER (June 21 to July 22) Today the New Moon is opposite your sign, urgig you to observe your style of relating to partners and those who are closest to you. Are you thoughtful, kind and caring? LEG (Jly 23 to Aug. 22) What can you do to improve the organization your life? Start by reducing to amount of clutter around you at work VIRGO (Aug. 23 to Sept. 22) sow co 50 iotmprove your relation- ships oitho children? AntIbows can you get more in touch with your creative abilities? Today's New Moon poses these questions. L tBRA (Sept. 230to Oct. 22) This is the best day all year to think aout how you can improve your home and family relationships. Do an honest assessment withyourselt. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 torNov. 21) Relations with siblings and relatives are important. When times are tough, these are the people you might turn to. What can you do to improve these rela- tioonhips? SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Make friends withyourbank account. Figure out how much money you have and what your assets are. You might find that you're wealthier than you think. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 19) Today is the only New Moon in your sign all year. Thatfs why it's the perfect time to take a look in the mirror to see how yoo can improve your appearance. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20 to Feb. 18) Today you might seeold patterns and habits that are self-defeating. If you can spot these, that's great. You can't get rid of somethingountil you first identify it. PISCES (Feb. 19 to March 20) How con5000 improve frendships wi othe soonethig thougotfol for a friend. Youl be pleased with the result. YOU BORN TODAY Rogardless of how you fel, you oaways oppearunoosu- ally confident to others. You have style! Because of this, you naturally have nfluence,oandofeonmkeasignfiat imopcton thoseaooood yoo.Yooodrivo yourself with such intensity you can overcome any obstacle or handicap. You have amazing, concentratedoenergy! The year ahead is full of new, exciting begin- nings! (It's a new cycle.) Birthdate of: David Bowie, rock star; Elvis Presley, king of rock 'n' roll; Stephen Hawking, physicist.