The Michigan Daily -Tuesday, January 29, 1991 - Page 7 CLASSIFIED ADS Ousted Somal1 illlilTlININ~iKlillill S eSO +AIRLINE TICKETS! 1 or 2 non-stop to NYC. Go 1/31/91 & return 2/05/91 or any combination of the two. CHEAP! 769-2255 ROUND-TRIP TKT: Det. Metro-San Diego CA. 2/25-3/3. $350/neg. Dionne 764-7032 or 763-3246. OUND TRIP: Det. to Sacramento. 2/22 to ' /4. $175/neg. Call Fred 930-9735. ONE WAY DETROIT-MIAMI, evening of 2/21. $125. Call 747-8948. TWO ROUNDTRIP TKTS. on Southwest anywhere they fly. Perfect for Spring Break! Use by March 9. Call 769-4829 or 662-7439. Best offer. VISIT WASH. DC THIS WEEKEND! Very cheap md. trip tkt. Call by Wed. 994- 5507. ARNOUNCEMENTS STUDENTS NEEDED for Central Student Judiciary and Court of Common Pleas. Call Mike for more information 764-9048 GREAT GIFT IDEAS New U of M Songbook Available at Borders, Moes, MDen $29.95. MODELS WANTED no exp. necessary. BLUE WOMEN, a calendar featuring women of the U. of M., now recruiting models for 1992 16 month calendar to be in bookstores next August. Call 487-2995 . leader missing NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - The whereabouts of longtime Somali leader Mohamed Siad Barre re- mained a mystery yesterday, more than day after he fled the presiden- tial palace in a tank. Rebels ap- pealed for calm in the war-ravaged capital of Mogadishu and promised a return to democracy. According to a radio broadcast of the Somali National Movement, the oldest of the three major guer- rilla groups fighting to oust Siad Barre, loyalist troops and officials from the old regime were giving up through much of the Horn of Africa nation. "Reports reaching Radio SNM say that in various parts of our country, remnants of Siad Barre's soldiers and officials are surrender- ing en masse to the bases of the liberation movements," the broad- cast said yesterday. The Somali National Move- ment, which drawsaits support mainly from the Isaaq clan in northern Somalia and controls most of the interior, has operated the radio clandestinely for years. The surrenders were not re- ported by the new state station Radio Mogadishu. For the first time since the rebel offensive began Dec. 30 against Siad Barre, a spokesperson of the humanitarian medical team Doctors Without Borders said his colleagues in Mogadishu reported no fighting overnight. Rebels asked for foreign medi- cal aid and issued an appeal for utility and other workers to come back to their jobs so the city can resume a semblance of normalcy. The guerrillas issued a statement saying new leadership is being formed to take over rule of this California-sized nation of 8 mil- lion. Whether the workers would re- turn quickly was uncertain. An es- timated 50 people have been slain daily in guerrilla fighting against troops loyal to Siad.Barre, ruler of Somalia since 1969 and accused of rights abuses and corruption. In a statement broadcast by the new Radio Mogadishu - Voice of Somali People, the United Somali Congress (USC) said the country's future will be decided by an oppo- sition "spearheaded by the rebel armed groups." "The USC calls for the forma- tion of a new republic based on justice, equality, unity and democ- racy," the broadcast said. It said an interim government "drawn from many sections of the Somali people" will be formed pending "free elections." No date was announced. Brett Direst WDar $' k andys -or more informaon L dial 763-1107 Too busy-to give Valentines? Send a message to someone special through Leave your message at the second floor of the tudent Publication Building by 11:00am Feb. 11, and it will appear in the Valentines Day -Issue! The University Activities Center/ SOUNDSTAGE presents The Difference Thursday, January 31 Performance begins at 10:00 $3.00/18 and over TTH ETe Univenriy Cub i a private club for audot , UNTVERTS faculty, aff,"ani"ad their accnmpmnied gut'. CLUBpur Ar F W War damage Photo taken of damage done to downtown Baghdad by air warfare between the allied forces and Iraqi troops. Date of picture is unknown. Gov. selects transportation head PONTIAC (AP) - Gov. Engler yesterday named Oakland County Deputy Executive Patrick Nowak state transportation director. Nowak, 52, also is chair of southeastern Michigan's regional public transportation agency, the Suburban Mobility Authority for Regional Transportation, better known as SMART. He has been deputy county executive since 1977 and before that served as a county commissioner. He replaces James Pitz, who held the state transit post under Gov. James Blanchard. "He's a man with a lot of expe- rience in government," Engler said at a news conference at the Oak- land County Building. "Pat's a good manager. He's very innova- tive. That's what I like about Pat." Nowak, a former insurance agent, graduated from the Univer- sity of Detroit High School and Marquette University. He and his wife, Sandy, a teacher in the Pon- tiac Public Schools, live in Bloomfield Township. F'- 0- bI f/ y': , /:. f {. SIGNca U TUNIO I For More rnfo: 763-1107 .e.l-.I".. ROOMNMATES |$ LOOKING FOR 4TH ROOMMATE. Own reasonably priced room in Ige., charming home. Walking distance to campus & shopping. Call today MM at 668-6906. LOOKING FOR ROOMMATE to share large, comfortable apt. on Walnut Street. Call MM 668-6906. LOOKING FOR ROOMMATE to share apt. Reasonably priced. Packard near central campus. Call MM at 668-6906. Get the AT Calling Card and your first call is free. There's no better time to speak your mind. Because now when you get your free AT&T Calling Card, you'll get your first 15-minute call free* With your AT&T Calling Card, you can call AW from almost anywhere to anywhere. And you can keep your card, even if you move and get a new phone number. Our Calling Card is part of the AT&T Student Saver Plus program, a whole package of products and services designed to make a student's budget go farther. So look for AT&T Calling Card applications on campus. Or call us at 1800 525-7955, Ext. 655. And let freedom ring. A&. Helping make college life a little easier. i