CNN Interactive www.cnn.com Summer Camp Jobs in the U.S.A. Visas Arranged Lakeside Residential Girls Camp in Maine Counselors. Combined child care/teaching. Gymnastics, tennis, swim, sail, cance, water aki, arta (including stained glass, sewing, jewelry, wood, photo:, dance, music, theater, archery, wilderness trips, field sports, equest-rian. Visas available to all qualified applicants. Service workers. Maintenance, driver. office, kitchen tincluding assirt. chef). Visas restricted to students enrolled in university for fall ‘99. Non-smokere. June 19 to Aug 26. Send resume (C.V.»;-Kippewa, Box 340, Westwood, Massa chusetts 02090-0340 U.S.A.; kippewaGtiac.net; vaice (781) 762- $291; fax (781)255-7167. Colombia declares ‘economic emergency for quake relief The government of President Andres Patrana has given him emergency economic powers and earmarked 500 billion pesos ($315 million) in initial aid for Colombia’s earthquake- ravaged coffee belt, following another day of looting and street violence. Meanwhile, a 4.3-magnitude aftershock rattled west- ern Colombia early Saturday, causing alarm but no reports of damage or injuries. The aftershock was the latest in a series of 46 strong tremors that have heightened panic among the survi- vors. Clock is ticking for Clinton lawyers’ questioning of Lewinsky Monica Lewinsky and two of President Bill Clinton’s advisers will spend the weekend bracing themselves to give videotaped testimony Monday in the next phase of the president’ s impeach- ment trial. Subpoenas were delivered to the trio Friday in a step that will determine whether any of them will be called before the Senate, whether additional witnesses may be necessary and, ultimately, whether the trial can be finished by February 12, the date cited by both political parties. U.S. pushes Japan to take bolder economic steps U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin was preparing Saturday to reinforce a tough economic wake-up call delivered to Japan by Vice President Al Gore. Speaking at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in the Swiss Alps, Gore on Friday used strong diplomatic language in urging Japan to lift itself out of recession. Man robs people at gunpoint, flees in wheeichair Preying on pedestrians in Chinatown, he brandishes a semi- automatic handgun, demands money, then zooms away in his motorized wheelchair. Police haven’t caught up with him yet. Authorities say the culprit first struck Jan. 20 about 10 p.m. when he approached a man returning home. The victim handed over $17 and the suspect wheeled away, police spokesman Sherman Ackerson said. Michael Jordan announces $5 million grant for teachers Two weeks after retiring from basketball, Michael Jordan scored big inamiddle school gym, announcing a $5 million grant to help teachers in low-income areas. Jordan launched the Jordan Fundamentals program Friday at John Philip Sousa Middle School. Under the plan, $1 milliona year for the next five years in proceeds from the Nike sporting goods’ Jordan brand will be used for creative projects by teachers in poor commu- nities. Anchorwoman wins $8.4 million in discrimination suit Janet Peckinpaugh, former anchorwoman for WSFB, has been $8.4 million by a jury. Peckinpaugh had accused her former employer of age and sexual discrimination after she was fired at the age of 44, just days after her newscast pulled in its best ratings ever. At the time, she was making $250,000 a year. The jury ruled-gender, not age, was the reason she was let go. The Cadre - 2 February 1999 From the Bookshelf FASHION 1. Aself-destructing paradox. In order to be fashion-. able you must avoid everything in fashion. 2. Arelatively harmless use of the herd instinct. 3. Always right. Female models have continued into the 1990s swallowing cotton balls soaked in olive oil to reduce their hunger, although in the late eighties their lives were complicated by the return of breasts to fashion. Many of the girls felt obliged to have implant operations. The result has been a striking contrast between melon-like protrubances which stick out unnaturally from whippetlike ribcages. Ever sensitive to the larger meaning of conflict- ing social trends, designers have, in effect invented . motherly anorexia. Camera images are kinder to geometry than they are to the natural line and so this fashion has been a great success (see: TASTE.) 4. As demonstrated by the young boy who called out in the street when the emperor passed, FREE SPEECH is anathema to fashion of any kind. Excerpt from The Doubter’s Companion: A Diction- ary of Aggressive Common Sense by John Ralston Saul (Penguin). TheCadre 550 University Avenue Charlottetown, PEI C1A 4P3 phone 902.566.0629 fax 902.566.0979 <newspaper@upei.ca> http://www.upei.ca/~cadre The Cadre is the official newspaper of the students of UPEL. It is published 10 times per semester. 2500 copies are distributed on and off campus on Tuesdays. Deadlines for advertisements and submissions are Friday at 12:00 noon, without exception. The Cadre is a member of the Canadian University Press (CUP), a cooperative of 50 university and college newspapers. The opinions expressed within the Cadre do not neces- sarily represent the views of UPEI or UPEI Student Union inc. Editor-in-Chief Karen Rawlines ManagingEditor Brody Morrison ProductionManager Sarah Murphy NewsEditor Melissa Doucette Reporter Randy McDonald Photography Richard Haines Advertising Manager vacant Circulation Brian Herrell CoverArt BillMatthews Office Assistant Madonna MacDonald O'Neill, Aaron Koleszar Contributors: ae ee