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June 03, 1969 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1969-06-03

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Daiy Classufieds
Call 764-0557-Monday thru Friday, 10 A.M.-1 P.M.

second front pagec

B

Siligan

Datit

NEWS PHONE: 764-0552
BUSINESS PRONE: 764-0554

Tuesday, June 3, 1969

Arn Arbor, Michigan

Page Three

II

- -

_4R RENT
SUMM4ER SUBLET in -NYC. lg. apt.
low rent, convenient, safe location
Writes Susan Hecker, 140 E, 17 St.,
N.Y., N.'Y. 10003. C25
FAMILY WANTED for 3 bdrm. com-
pletely furn. house. June 25-Sept, 1
$300 total including utilities. 769-
2463. 622
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed for fall
8 month lease. Own bedroom. Call
769-4584 nights. C22
BEDROOM, kitchen privileges. $15/wk
Near campus. 769-2406 after 5. 9021
COUPLE - Furnished entire 1st floor.
609 Hill. June 1st. $150. Call NO 2-0368
or NO 3-6522. 4Ctc
AVAILABLE FOR FALL Occupancy-4
man a.pt.. 2 blocks from' business,
school, 3 blocks from law school. Call
769-2608. 280tc

FOR RENT

I

i .

DON'T BE

the
news todiye
by The Associated Press and College Press Service

521 WALNUT ST,
Large. 2 Bedrooms
Fal Rentals-668-6906

Cttel

r
0*

410 OBSERVATORY
Fall Occupancy
Modern four-man
Furnished
Air-conditioned
Wall-to-wall carpeting
Covered parking
$240 per mo. includes heat
and water

LEFT OUT!
Get in one of the
few remaining,
1-2-3 Bedroom units'
available at ..'.
Arbor
Manor
townhouses
For as little as
$103.100
per month
Ypsilanti-Ann Arbor area
Phone 484-1210
5 MAN,
AvailableFa' l
761-_7600
26(

ii

AN AUSTRALIAN AIRCRAFT CARRIER cut an American
destroyer in two during SEATO sea maneuvers yesterday;
More than 70 of the 350 crewmen of the USS Frank E. Evans
were listed as unaccounted for. No casualties vwere reported aboard the
carrier, Melbourne,
The collision occurred in the South China Sea, 650 miles south-
west of Manila. Shipq of SEATO were participating in the exercise
"sea sprint."
* * *
JAPAN'S FOREIGN MINISTER KIICHI AICHI yesterday
launched another effort to regain control over Okinawa, site of
the largest U.S. military base in the Western Pacific.
He reminded President rNixon thatnuclear weapons would be a
major obstacle to agreement on Okinawa.
In bringing up the nuclear question, Aichi said the government of
' Prime Minister Sato is anxious to solve th. question of setting a date
for Okinawa's return to Japanese rule by the time Sato arrives in
mid-November for meetings with Nixon.
The reminder came during a 30-minute White House meeting
between Nixon and the Japanese diplomat. Secretary of State Rogers
is scheduled to meet with Aichi during the next three days.
Besides Okinawa, there was discussion of U.S.-Japan trade and
Investment problems, and the question of security in the Pacific area.
Japan is seeking the return of the island by 1972.
C1 , PRESIDENT NGUYEN VAN THIEU of South Vietnam de-
nounced antiwar critics last night.
Thieu said that antiwar critics are presenting the Vietnam al-
lies with more difficulties than the war on the battlefield.
These critics are inadequately informed, Thieu said, and con-
trasted them with the unity displayed by the Communist camp in
backing the National Liberation Front and the North Vietnamese.
Although Thieu did not say, so, it seemed apparent that one of
Ctc the critics he had in mind was Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.)
- who has been increasingly critical" of the war recently.
* * *

Council
createss
(Continued from Page 1)
The resolution maintains that
the ultimate goal in the city "must
be fair and just enforcement of
the law. We have no time to lose."
Harris said that last year "the
city had no incidents of conflict
between members of the commun-
ity and its police force. This year
we've already had two and I think
it should be looked into."
One of the incidentsbinvolved
the arrest and alleged beating of
H u m a n Relations Commission
staff member R a y Chauncey.
Chaunchey was released, and the
officer involved, Wade Wagner,
resigned f r o m the Ann Arbor
police department. Washtenaw
County Sheriff Douglas Harvey
subsequently hired him as a dep-
uty.

French
plan el

section

Communists

Campus Management, Inc.
335 E. Huron 662-7787,
Ctc
BRAND NEW
SHORE VIEW APTS.
Features large 1 and 2 Bedroom
furnished and unfurnished apart-
mnents.
Unfurnished apts. start at $147.50.
Apartment includes Hotpoint color-
ed appliances plus dishwasher, dis-
posal and air, conditioning. Fully
carpeted and draped. Storage area,
washing facilities, parking and
swimming pool. All utilities includ,-
ed except electricity. Immediate
occupancy Phone 761-3998 or 665-
0057. Offices 426 or 414 Kellogg,
corner of Broadway and Pontiac
Trail, to the end of Kellogg,. C11=
CAMPUS-1 BLOCK
418"E. Washington
Modern-Furnished-Large 1 Bedroom
apts. for 2 and 3 students
Fall Rentals NO ยง-6906
15Ctc

The other incident involved the
arrest of two black residents who
were charged with hindering, ob-
structing and resisting police, a
high misdemeanor. Both men
were released after a special ses-
sion 'of Ann Arbor District Court.
The committee includes Robert
Banks, former recreational adviser
at W. J. Maxey Training School
for boys; law prof. Luke Cooper-
rider, former chairman of the Alain P
student publications board and
former chairman of the Ann Ar-
bor Citizens Council; John Feld- FACES CONTROVERSY:
kamp, director of University
housing and former third ward
councilman; Rev. Russell Fuller,
minister of the Memorial Christ- JaL/ 111 i
ian Church and past chairman of4
the Human Relations Commis- (Continued from Page 1) . C
sion; Fred MacDonald, a local sion of the issue was a waste of D
black attorney and member of the time because SGC will never ac-
board of the NAACP; Sally Vinter, cepthany part of the provision. c
supervisor of the Washtenaw The ad hoc committee begaii a B
County Community Mental Health year ago to rewrite sections of the P
Center; and Dr. Albert Wheeler Regental bylaws in order to im- r
of the Medical School, state chair- plement the recommendations of r
man of the NAACP. the Hatcher Commission Report r

boycott
PARIS - - The Central
Committee of the powerful
French Communist party call-
ed on Its followers yesterday
to abstain in the June 15 run-
o f f between Georges Pompi-
dou and Alain Poher to suc-
ceed Charles de Gaulle as
president of France.
The party's decision made elect
tion of former Premier Pompidou
virtually certain.
Communist leader Jacques Duc-
los finished a strong third in the
f.irst round of -the presidential race
Sunday.
In the run-off between the two
top-placed candidates, Po he r
would have needed the full-heart-
ed backing of the Communist vote
to have a serious chance of vic-
tory.
Following a meeting of the Cen-
tral Committee, Duclos denounced
both Pompidou and Poher as "re-
actionaries" and said the Com-
munist party called on all its fol-
lowers to refuse to vote in the run
off.
"No improvement is possible
with either of them," Duclos de-
clared. "Either of these two candi-
dates will mean the deterioration
of social conditions and the con-
Stinuation of policies which have
been rejected."
The Communist decision is cer-
tain Isto increase the pressure on
Poher to withdraw.
Poher defiantly declared early
yesterday he was determined to
fight "to the bitter end," but tie
Communist decision and pressure
from, some of his'own supporters
may make him change his mind.
Despite Poher's defiant posture,
the first hint that he might con-
sider withdrawal came from Bert-
rand Motte, vice president of
Poher's own Centrist party. In ef-
fect, he indicated that Poher
might withdraw if Pompidou pub-
licly endorsed some of the Cen-
trists' election platform.
Poher 'met yesterday with his
staff to consider the consequences
of the Communist decision and
announced that he would hold a
news conference today "to outline
his themes for the second-round
election campaign."
He has until Thursday to make
a final decision on whether to stay.
in the race.

Phler

FAL
19
96 I
We are now accepting appli-
cations for our choice fur-
nished campus apartments
for 1, 2, 3, or 4 single stu-
dents. Inquiries may be
made at
545 Church
Call 761 -7600
DAHLMANN APARTMENTS
031

FALL
, l1

RENTALS
1 S. State

2,3, & 4 MAN
Modern, well kept, furnished, air con-
ditinned, privately owned-References
....Ask our "tenants.
One & Two Bedrooms Available
Call 1.-864-3852
or 1 -353-7389{

NORTH VIETNAM said yesterday that the Vietnam policies
advocated by the Nixon administration would lead to maximum,
casualties to U.S. troops.
The North Vietnam military daily, Quan 'Doi Nhan Dan, said a
survey of a few "U.S. pressure operations" recently suffices to show
the disasterous results' such a policy has brought to the U.S.
The prime objective of the U.S. now is to avoid bigger losses to
their forces the newspaper said, and this is not only a military re-
quirement, but also a very urgent political requirement.
* * *
GOV. NELSON ROCKEFELLER headed for New York yes-
terday saying he .would continue his fact-finding mission to Latin
America despite rioting.'
"I have every intention of, seeing this -thing through to the end,"
Rockefeller said as he finished up the second leg of 'his mission with
Venezuela dropped from his itinerary.
He said that a militant, anti-American minority was behind the{
violent reactions to his tour.
Fearful of massive disorders, Venezuela asked Rockefeller to post-
pone his visit indefinitely.
Violence has marred seven of the nine stops Rockefeller and a
team of experts have made on this trip for President Nixon.
kEW JERSEY VOTERS will pick candidates for governor in
a primary today,
Six Democrats and five Republicans are vying for their party's
nominations in the primary.
In the Democratic primary, the front runner is former Gov. Rob-
ert Meyner. He is a lawyer and is considered a conservative.
His main challenge is from Rep. Henry Helstoski, who has the,
endorsement from the New Democratic Coalition, a group that backed
Sen. Eugene McCarthy last year.1
The present governor, Richard Hughes, a Democrat is barred by
law from seeking a thirde consecutive term.
Representatives William Cahill and Charles Sandman Jr. are the
favorites in the Republican race. Cahill is a moderate while Sandman

-t released
on the Role of the Student in
Decision-Making.
The student-faculty study was
commissioned by then President
Harlan Hatcher after the student
power movement of 1966, and it
recommended student involve-
ment in all levels of decision-
making.

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN
. : -:.^ :^." : o: o~ :::::r .o ;......... .......:o: :"~ :: o:....: ,. --....:-:. :.....o.;::o -...:-..:: i:o .

Doctoral Exams
David George Falconer, Physics, Dis-
sertation: "Large-Angle Antiproton-
Proton Elastic Scattering," on Tuesday,.
June 3 at 10:00 a.m. in 618 Physics-
Astronomy Building, Chairman: Daniel
Sinclair.
Robert Willis Butman, Education
Dissertation: "The Effect of Different
Stategies for Use of the Demonstration
Project on the Diffusion of Sqcial Prac-
(Continued on Page 4)

FALL RENTALS

C39J 2

Albert Terrace
1700 Geddes
Now renting for Fall
Extra large 2 bedroom bi-levels
Fully carpeted and~turnished
3-5 man. Featuring:
0 dishwasher
f 1 % baths
* balcony
sound conditioning
* storage and laundry facilities
* off steet parking .
Stop by and see resident manager in
S Apt. A-7 1-5:30 'p.m. Mon.,-Sat. or
phone; 761-1 '17, Charter Realty.
29Ctc
MAN TO SHARE 2nd floor of house. 2
man, 2 bdrm. No lease. $67.50. 409 W.
Madison. 665-96Q5. 7018
NOW RENTING
FOR FALL
Cloice Apartments
* Foxcroft, 815 S. State
* Packard Plaza, 917 Packard
* University Plaza, 608 Monroe
* Bel-Air, 815 S. Main
0 Oak Terrace, 908 Oakland
Athena;'508 S. Division
Ann Arbor Trust Co.
Property Management Division
106 S. Main 769-2800
C28
FALL RENlTALS
721 S. Forest
101 N, Ingalls
905 Oakland
Modern 2 bedroom apartments--rent in-
cludes heat, water, and parking.
Office at 347 Maynard
Call days 663-6052 or 769-1258
49Ctc
736 Pickard
731 Packard
316 E. Madison
Choice 1, 2, 3, and 4 Man
Large, modern, furnished, free parking,
sundeck, air conditioned, laundry.
storage, central antenna, vacuums,
garbage disposal, balconies. Interest
on security deposit, TV and dish-
washer rental available.

& 3 Bdrm Luxury
121 E. Hoover
511 E. Hoover'
711 Arch
914 S. State
915 S. Division

Furnished Apts.
665-8330
665-9627
663-5284
769-4759
761-5471

Many of these units tinclude iir cond.,
balconies, dishwashers, laundry fa-
cilities and parking.
Call now to reserve your apt, for fall
27Ctc

* I

TV RENTALS
$8.50 per month
761-1945

The Daily Official Bulletin is an
official publication of the Univer-
sity of Michigan. Notices should be
sent in TYPEWRITTEN f o r m to
Room 3528 L.S.A. Bldg., before
2 p.m. of the day preceding publi-
cation and by 2 p.m. Friday for
Saturday and Sunday. General
Notices may be published a maxi-
mum of two times on request; Day
Calendar items appear once only.
Student organization notices a r e
not accepted for publication. For
more information, phone 764-9270.
TUESDAY, JUNE 3
Day Calendar.
Mental Health Research Institute
Symposium in association with a meet-
,1
{gyp. _ser

ing of the American Society of Neuro-
chemistry-Tuesday, June 3, 9 a.m. - 3
p.m., Room 1057 MHRI.
GENERAL NOTICES,
Registration Assistants needed. Apply
Room 119 L.S.&A. Building 8 - 11:30
a.m. and 1 - 4:30 p.m. daily.
Summer Piano Concert Series: Per-
sons who are interested in signing to
become ushers for this series of piano
concerts, which is to be presented in
Rackham' Auditorium during the
month of July, may do so at the Box
Office at Hill Auditorium on Thursday,
June 5th from 7 p.m. to 8 pm. A list
of the artists and dates of the con-
certs will be available when you sign
up. See Mr. Warner and if you have
any questions call 668-8597.

GEYDA
RECORDING LIVE
THAX
CHAIN
8 P.M.-MIDNIGHT $1.50
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4o h , 1969ps
ease Au. on te EM Campus
A JOINT PRODUCTION'

Free same day delivery and service
New 19" portables
018
Apartments
1, 2, 3 Bedroom
Furnished Apts.
Include carpeting and drapes, air con-
ditioning, balcony, garbage disposal,
dishwasher, parking, laundry facili-
ties. Come to our rental office at 737
Packard.'
761-8055.
6Ctc
ATTENTION
FACULTY & STAFF.
presenting
CLIFFS ON THE POINT
Lakeshore Apartments
12 minutes from campus
See these Award-Winning Apartments
which are truly a carefree year around
vacation 'home located on a 5 mile
long lake.
Featuring:'
* Fireplaces
* Large balconies with storage
*Fully carpeted and drapeds
SCentral heat and cooling
* Reserved Carport
*Swimming Pool
* 2 and 3 Bedroom units,
up to 1650 sq. ft.
0 Boat Docking
* Rentals from $225 to $465
Model Open Daily
483-4454
1000 Grove Rd., Ypsilanti
C30
(Continued on Page 4)

is considered a conservative.
The Michigan Daily, edited and man-
aged by students of the University of
Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second
Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi-
gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor.
Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues-
day through Sunday morning Univer-
sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by
carrier, $10 by mall,
Summer Session published Tuesday
through Saturday morning. Subscrip-
tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by
mail.
Program Information 662-6264

STARTS TOMORROW
2IJTHCEWIrY-FOXPraES TS- ..-
JLE ANDREWS
COLRY DaL4-7
W EYSI DE Dial 434-1782

- w - w w -W W W ~ W W W W ,

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Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M.
TOMORROW-LADES'
DAY

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mammas

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FORGOT TEN
OF

MASTERPIECES
1968

I

2Oth Century-Fox presents
A MARVIN SCHWARTZ Production
JIM BROWN RAQUEL WECH
BURT REYNOLDS .FERNANDO LAMAS DAN 'GDHEI
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Ambassador Company
736 Packard 761-7982
39Ctc

"BEST SCREENPLAY"
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20TH CENTRY F9X PRESENTS
A LAWRENCE TURMAN
From the Producer of "THE GRADUATE"
rLOR BY DELuXE SUresFR ltae UO EC

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Gh'&rode's
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