Wednesday, June 28, 1995- The Michigan Daily --7 i Achieve the LSAT score You need with EXCEL Our Classes Im- prove Your Skills at making the A Ke Anal tical Distinctions that are required for Top Performance. Summer Classes for the LSAT start: Thur., July 13th E~rE96 1500 Test Preparation 1100 South University TYPING & WRITING Resumes, cover letters, applications & essays. Ann Arbor Typing 994-5515. WANTED: 100 students. Lose 8-100 lbs. New metabolism breakthrough. Guaranteed esuts. I lost 15 lbs. in 3 weeks. RN assisted. 5 cost. 1-800/579-1634. RITE ON...Editing of theses, books, journals, manuscripts, proposals, coursepacks. 996-0566. help wanted $1750 WEEKLY possible mailing our circulars. For info. call 3011306-1207. 5,000/YR. INCOME potential. Reading ks. Toll Free 1-800/898-9778 Ext. R- 1864 for details. 8.40 HOURS available per week with flexible schedules. No cars required. On the job paid training is provided. 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through riday. State Security Services, Inc. 525 Church St., Ann Arbor. 668-0444. EOE. EARLY BIRD SPECIAL Are you an early riser? Is your best time to work a part-time job from 8 a.m. to 10 am.? If so, the Daily has a position this Fall and Winter just for you (May be work-study eligible). Please call 764-0431 for more information, or stop by the Student Publications Building at 420 Maynard and ask for Nancy or Susan. FEMALE MODELS wanted for nationally known photographer and artist Kent Steine. Coming to A.A. Eves. 663-0561, days 517/ 522-8715. FEMALE STUDENT wanted for housekeeping, light cooking, errands, 4-7 days, 8-15+ hrs. Own car. $6.50/hr. 665- 3226. FREE FINANCIAL AID! Over $6 billion in private sector grants & scholarships is now available. All students are eligible regardless of grades, income, or parent's income. Let us help. Call Student Financial Services: 1-800/ 263-6495 ext. F55988. GIFT SHOP, U Hospital: Cashier experien- ce needed 8-18 hrs., evenings, weekends, holidays. $5.75 - Call 936-5971 after 12 noon. GODAIKO JAPANESE Restaurant grand opening. Practice your Japanese language skills. Needed: servers, hosts, cooks. Inquire in person at 3115 Oak Valley Dr., Ann Arbor 313/995-0422. LOOKING FOR AN INTERESTING ex- perience this summer? Native English speakers neded to volster for Michigan Language Center's Conversation Partner Program. Spend as little as 1 hour a week speaking English with an international student. For more information, Call Lisa at 663-9415 or stop by the Michigan Language Center at 309 S. State St. MARKETING POSITION- Part-time. Brokerage firm in Livonia looking for dependable, self-motivated indiv. w/ good communication skills. Flex. hrs., Bonus potential. Good for resume. Call Tom Grossman at 313/953-5592. MERCHANDISER Guess? is seeking a Merchandiser for the Ann Arbor, Michigan area. The qualified ap- plicant will have 2 years minimum experien- ce in retail merchandising and 1 year retail management eerience. Position requires own car and wlingness to travel. Excellent opportunity for the right individual. Please mail or fax resume to: GUESS? Inc., Dept. AM, 1444 S. 4lameda Street, Los Angeles, CA 90021. FA: 213744-7838. MODELS-PRINT, trade, T.V., Associated Models 810788-8760. NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY! Gain Valuable Advertising Experience Earn Commission-Based Pay The Michigan Daily is now hiring account executives for fall term. Pick up an apliat. in the Senior Staff Office, 420 Mynard, second floor. Applications due July 28. Job starts 8/21/95. For more information, call 764-0662. POSTAL AND GOV'T, jobs: $21/hour + benefits. No exp., will train. To apply, call 1- 800/875-7608. PROGRAMMER/HACKER: Visual Basic 3.0 SQL required. Minimum 1 yr. exp. De- gree not necessary. 994-9321, fax 761-4952. RESORT JOBS - Eam to $12/hr. + tips. Theme parks, hotels, spas, + more. Tropical & mountain destinations. Call 1-206/632- 0150 ext. R55982. SCOREKEEPERS is currently hiring cooks and waitstaff. Apply within. 995-0581 SECRETARY WANTED for research lab. 10-15 hrs./wk. Prefer work study. Contact Dr. D. Gumucio 763-2144. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED, Rh negative. For this blood type, $120 is paid per accept- able donation. Write APRI., P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. SEMEN DONORS NEEDED for an es- tablished infertility clinic. Male students or graduates 20-40 yrs. old are sought. Donors are paid $60 per acceptable donation. Write, APRL, P.O. Box 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. STUDENTS NEEDED to help in the dis- tribution of a large mailing. Job will begin the first week of July and will be full-time for a duration of approximately 3 days at $6.50 per hour. If interested please contact Samantha or ILsie at 998-6133. SUBJECTS NEEDED for cognitive psychology, reaction time experiment, right- handed, native English speaker, normal vision and hearing. Pay $5.50/hr. or by experiment. Call 936-2056. TEACHER NEEDED for pre-school. Full- time or part-time in the a.m. or p.m. Starting Sept. 1. $6-$8/hr. 996-4847. TEACHERS The U-M Hospital Child Care Center has immed. openings for substitute teachers. Choose from 1-5 days/wk. w/ very flex. hrs. Training in early childhood education or e- quivalent exp. is req. Students of education major are encouraged to apply. Please call 998-6195 for more info or pick up an ap- plication at 2601 Glazier Way, Ann Arbor, MI. UMHCCC is an equal opportunity LOVELY SUMMER HIDEAWAY. Cozy log cabins on lake, $425-$525 weekly. Log rooms $54-$64 nightly includes boats, canoes, hot tub, more. Traverse City, 616 276-9502. LOW AIRFARES WORLDWIDE and Euro-passes. Regency Travel 209 S. State. 665-3406. STUDENTS ANYWHERE in the U.S. on Continental $159 or $239. Bring your Con- tinental voucher & AMEX card. Kelly at Regency Travel, 209 S. State, 665-6122. REMOVE UNWANTED TATTOOS or liver spots with latest laser in physician's office. Free consulton. Cll Boomefeld Laser 810/332-8391. MC/VISA accepted. PROPERTY DISPOSITION WILL BE CLOSED JULY 3rd roommates ROOMMATE NEEDED for Fall '95. Con- tern 2 bdrm. bi-level with all the extras. 741-9.0 ROOMMATE(S): needed Fall '95. Private, locking rooms in loaded, upscale aps. Newly renovated, excellent location. Call 665-8825. ADOPTION. HAPPILY MARRIED U-M alum & husband wish to adop-baby. We will provide loving & secure home, Chritian values & a full-time mom. Completely legal. Expenses paid. Please call Kathy collect @ 310/541-8222. Thank You CLIMB THE WALLS! The Ann Arbor Climbing Gym 761-4669. Student discounts. HAPPILY MARRIED COUPLE wishes to adopt an infant. We will give your baby a safe and loving home, a good education, and vacations to remember. We are working wit a licensed Michigan adoption agency.Please call Liz and Scott 1-800/69-1800. U-M BOXING CLUB meets Coliseum (5th & Hill). Summer hours: Mon. & Thur. 7-9 p.m., Wed. 4-6 .m. Good coaching, safe sparring in friendly student club. Try a new sportl Boxing's a fun way to fitness. We wel- come beginners. Call NCRB or Coach at 930- 3246 or drop in. Don't flush your fish, Sell them in Dally Classifieds.0 0°0 00 FUNDING Continued from page 1 of Michigan by having a ratio in the range of what it is now." Despite this interest, Harrison says it still was important for the Legislature to remove the 30-percent enrollment re- quest. "It's a recognition that the regents are responsible for maintaining the poli- cies and procedures of the University and not the Legislature," he said. Associate Vice President for Univer- sity Relations Cynthia Wilbanks, who lobbies for the University in Lansing, said the compromise ended up being less restrictive for the University. "There is still strong sentiment that in-state students be given every prefer- ence for admission," Wilbanks said. State Sen. Alma Wheeler Smith (D- South Lyon), whose district includes Ann Arbor, said she wants the Univer- sity to provide a specific target number for resident enrollment. "A priority may mean that it is more than 50 percent. Personally, I would be looking for more of a commitment than that," Smith said. "I wouldn't have a problem with them saying 30 percent, plus or minus 5 percent." Despite the increased appropriations, Provost Gilbert R. Whitaker Jr. said the University will not be able to tie this year's tuition increase to inflation. "(The tuition increase) will be sig- nificant (this year), but it certainly won't be what it was two years ago," he said. The University raised in-state tuition in 1993 by 9.5 percent when the state froze its appropriations. Last year, the Univer- sity raised tuition 6.9 percent for resi- dents and 5 percent for non-residents. He said the additional $8 millon can- not be included in the next year's budget, which will be presented to the Board of Regents at its July meeting. If the University receives additional support from the lapsed state funding, it would be a one-time increase and would not be added to the base. "The entire issue of the lapsed funds was conceived to look at ways to provide additional funds," Wilbanks said. "It has been the case over the past recent budget history that there have been funds that don't get spent, and they become lapsed." The legislation calls forthe funds to be used fortechnology and maintenance at the universities receiving the lapsed funds. "It's risky business, but over the last years we've had significant lapses of millions of dollars," Smith said. "I sus- pect everyone's going to move heaven and Earth to make sure that there is $18.5 million that lapes." Wilbanks said the University will probably have an early indication of what the lapsed funds will be in December, with a final determination at the end of March. Nearly $19 million has been allocated in lapsed funding to higher education. Wilbanks saidin previous years the surplus has been as high as $75 million, and this year the forecastsis around $30 million. Despite this outcome, Harrison pre- dicted that next year the University will have a greater struggle for funds. He partly blamed Michigan State University for the difficulties this year. "Peter McPherson, the president of Michigan State, has made a conscious effort to lobby his university at the ex- pense of other universities," Harrison said. "That sort of set a tone that we will all have to follow." Work for Building a Sane, Humane, Ecological World Canvassing Jobs Call Chuck at (313) 761-1996 SPECIAL GIFT- We're looking for heal- thy women between the ages 21-35 for egg donation. All ethnic backgrounds encouraged. Fee paid. Send inquiries to AARMA, P.O. 2674, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. COMPUTER CONSULTANT Student needed summer and fall/winter to assist with maintaining hardware and software for Macintosh network at Student Publications. Good pay, flexible hours. Work Study and others call for information and interview: 764-0550. CRUISE SHIPS now hiring - Earm up to ,000+/month working on cruise ships or d-tour companies. World travel. Seasonal & full-time employment available. No ex- perience necessary. For more information call 1-206/634-0486 ext. C55988. DRIVER NEEDED-Free ride from Ann Ar- bor to Philadelphia. De rting Sept. 13 or 14. Call Margaret at 769- . 1:30 am, mrandune 29 TRAVEL ABROAD and work. Make up to $2,000-$4,000+/mo. teaching basic conver- sational English in Japan, Taiwan, or S. Korea. No teaching background or Asian lan- guagesxreq e. onrmation call: 206/ 632-1146 ext. 355989. UNIVERSITY TOWERS Leasing Agents Ann Arbor, MI University Towers is hiring two more full and part-time leasing people. We are looking for bright, aggressive, mature individuals to work on our team. For experienced professionals, we offer an excellent base and incentive compensation program. Please send or FAX resumes to: Director of Leasing University Towers 936 S. Forest Ave. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 FAX: 313/761-2027 WORK AT HOME: Make great money! Do something you can believe in. Sell state-of- the-art drinking water filters. No quotas, no inventory. Established opportunity. For free info., write P.J.'s Services, P.O. Box 66235, Roseville, MI 48066. WRITER/PRODUCER of newsletter. Pagemaker skills a must. Part-time 761-7204.