Page 4- The Michigcn Doily - Thursday, June 9,1983 New restaurants in Union to provide jobs .By MICHAEL WESTON. The Michigan Union is accepting ap- plications for jobs in its new fast food restaurants, which are scheduled to open during the summer. "We're looking for a minimum of 100 part-time employees for the summer, and more for the fall," said John Cristodoulou, Union food service manager. CRISTODOULOU SAID the first students hired will be supervisors for the ice cream parlor and ham- burger shop, which are scheduled to open in time for the Ann Arbor Art Fair July 20. The Union will also hire cooks, ice cream counter attendants, grill per- sons, and more supervisors as the other shops open. The other four restaurants will in- clude a salad bar. vizzeria, delicatessen and a shop featuring ethnic foods. CRISTODOULOU SAID it is difficult to predict when the other shops will open, but added that the Union hopes to have all six restaurants operating by fall. "The finishing touches are very time conauming," he said. "there are too many variables to predict the opening date." Experience is helpful but not necessary, Cristodoulou said, adding that applicants must be able to work a minimum of 20 hours per week. Students can pick up applications at the Union's Ground Floor Ad- ministration offices. Caterer barred from 'U' hospital construction site (Coninued from Page 1) Kelso catered to the site until early last month, when a worker operating his truck received a note asking the company to call Doug Hanna, the Replacement Hospital Project Manager, who told him he would have to pay a fee to continue operating at the site, Kelso said. "(It) was said on the phone that the job was worth $50 a day," Kelso said. "All I said was that I would get back (with Hanna's office). I did not get back, and three days later my truck was kicked out." But according to Hanna, Kelso's charge is "absolutely untrue," because he never spoke to the caterer and doesn't know who in his office told Kelso to pay a fee. After Kelso was forced off the groun- ds, he was issued a permit by the City of Ann Arbor to operate outside the con- struction site entrance, 100 yards from where his truck was previously stationed. But hospital security officials asked Kelso to leave after operating for half an hour under the city permit May 27 - Kelso was still on University property, so his permit was invalid. CITY TRAFFIC engineer Ken Feldt, who issued the permit, says he wasn't aware the location Kelso requested the permit for was on University property. Kelso has been going back to the en- trance site each day anyway, and is still trying to get official permission to cater the project. He has lost money during the two- and-a-half years, but said he hung on because he believed he could make a profit when the site employed more workers. "I hate to take the loss that I have taken over the years and then finally have enough people there that I could make some money, and then be out," he said. THE REAL losers in the battle may be the construction workers, who say they need the service to bring food to the site. If there is no caterer, workers say they will have to bring their own lunches. Going into town to eat takes too much time, they say, and workers are not allowed to eat in the hospital cafeteria. "The catering service is good for the workers," said one construction site employee who asked not to be iden- tified. "I can see (the University's) policy as far as the hospital goes, but not as far as the construction site. Con- struction workers need somewhere to eat," he said. Bill Smith, who started on the job yesterday, said he was surprised there were no caterers at the site. "It's the first time I've ever heard of a caterer getting kicked off a site," he said. IN BRIEF Compiled from Associated Press and United Press International reports Reagan unveils arms control plan WASHINGTON - President Reagan unveiled a new arms control porposal yesterday, offering the Kremlin a choie of measuring nuclear ar- senals by the number of missiles and warheads or by the overall destructive power of each nation's long-range missiles. Reagan said his proposal would give American negotiator Edward Rowny "flexibility to explore all appropriate avenues for meeting our goals." "I sincerely hope that the Soviet Union will respond with corresponding flexibility," the president added. He said the changes "offer the prospect of new progress" toward a treaty curbing strategic nuclear weapons. After meeting with House and Senate leaders from both parties, Reagan said his proposal reflected "a bipartisan consensus on arms control, and new flexibility in the negotiations - steps to be viewed seriously by the Soviets and all others who have a stake in world peace." Expelled diplomat seeks asylum NEW ORLEANS - Nicaragua's consul general in New Orleans, one of 21 Nicaraguan diplomats ordered expelled from the United States, applied for political asylum yesterday. "It has been a very difficult day for me," said Augustin Alfaro as he emerged from the Office of Naturalization and Immigration. Asked when he decided not to go home, he replied, "Last night after talking to my family." The expulsion of the Nicaraguans was ordered yesterday by the State Department in retaliation for the expulsion earlier this week from Nicaragua of three American diplomats. They returned to the United States on Tuesday, denying Nicaraguan accusations that they plotted to kill leaders of the left-leaning Sandanista government. Alfaro declined comment on the Nicaraguan government's expulsion of the American diplomats. Religious leaders push for ban on human geneties engineering NEW YORK - A broad group of religious leaders, including Roman Catholic bishops and conservative Protestants, urged Congress yesterday to ban attempts at human genetic engineering,.which one minister called "the ultimate presumption." By building specific traits into human cells, "we assume the prerogative of the creator ... and we're not good enough to do this," said the Rev. Avery Post, president of the United Church of Christ. "We will abuse this power," About 40 religious leaders signed a resolution urging that engineering specific traits into human sperm or egg "not be attempted" because it "raises the possibility of altering the human species." Such work would require man to decide "which genetic traits should be programmed into the human gene pool and which should be eliminated," said the resolution presented at a news conference. y links pollution to aeid rain WASHINGTON - Reagan administration researchers acknowledged for the first time yesterday that pollution is the most likely cause of acid rain, and that it threatens much more of the nation than iust New England. In a wide-ranging report which is certain to become a rallying point in the congressional debate over acid rain, the scientists said large areas of the Southeast and portions of the West are susceptible to the lake damage which already has plagued the Northeast. Both environmentalists and the coal industry found reasons to praise the study, by the Interagency Task Force on Acid Precipitation. The report covered the first year of research in a 10-year congressionally mandated acid rain study program. Liz Barratt-Brown, an acid rain expert for the Natural Resources Defense Council, called the study a "step in the right direction. The administration is acknowledging what their own scientists have been saying in the last few years." Car bomb kills Israeli soldiers BEIRUT, Lebanon - A car bomb set off by remote control exploded as an Israeli army convoy rolled through southern Beirut yesterday, killing two Israeli soldiers and wounding two others. Five Lebanese pedestrians and a policeman directing traffic were also in- jured by the blast, at the intersection of the northernmost roads traveled by Israeli troops in Lebanon, Lebanese soldiers at the scene reported. Witnesses said the explosion severely damaged the right front side or an armored personnel carrier, killing two Israeli soldiers and seriously injuring a third in the vehicle. The Israeli military command in Tel Aviv said two soldiers were wounded. Only blackened bits of the bomb car remained after the explosion. The bombing was the latest in a series of almost daily attacks on the Israeli occupation army blamed on leftist Lebanese Moslems and Palestinian guerillas. Israeli Brig. Gen. Amnon Lifkin, whose vehicle was leading the convoy, was 600 yards from the bomb-laden Mercedes when it blew up, according to a Lebanese policeman on the scene. MEDICAL SCHOOL OPENINGS Immediate Openings Available in Foreign Medical School Fully Accredited ALSO AVAILABLE FOR DENTAL AND VET SCHOOL LOANS AVAILABLE INTERVIEWS BEGIN IMMEDIATELY For further details and/or appointment call Dr. Manley (716) 832-0763 / 882-2803