Daily Classifieds Call 764-0557-Monday thru Friday, 10 A.M.-1 P.M. second front page im4c Sf' r~igtan Dai NEWS PHONE: 7640552 BUSINESS PHONE: 764-0551 Thursday, June 5, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three FOR RENT LARGE ROOM with half-bath for single female. Cooking facilities, garage, good location, extras, no lease! Cheap!I Call 761-2914 at 6 p.m. C22' 3RD FLOOR private bedroom and bath. 8 minutes~ from campus. University employee or older female student. NO 2-2936. No smoking. C22 CAMPUS. For the summer or for the yeat. 4-5 bdrm, house, 2 baths, fully furn., dishwasher, washer and dryer, avail. immed. 665-5225 or 449-5084. C24 HOUSE on Prospect needs roommates, male or female, single. or married. 662-6831. f'C21 AVAIL. JUNE 15. furn, carpeted, wood panels. 3 rms. in old house. Fenced in yard, barbecue, close to campus.. $150, 761-0411 7-9 p.m.. C23' FRESHMAN male law student seeks roommate for fall' to have own bed- room in luxury apt. 2 blks from Law Quad. $112.50/mo. or find another to share bedroom. Call Laurel at 668- 6171 and leave message. C21 SUMMER SUBLET in NYC. 1g. apt., low rent, convenient, safe location. Write 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- 3463. 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 Occupanoy-4 man apt., 2 blocks from business, school, 3 blocks from law school. Call 769-2608. 280tc ROOMMATE WANTED-Girl to share apt. 320 S. Division. Call 663-0398. 22021 TV RENTALS $8.50 per month 761-1945 Free same day delivery and service, New 19"' portables 018 521 WALNUT ST. Large, 2 Bedrooms Fall Rentals--668-6906 Ctllc FOR RENT Albert Terrace 1700 Geddes Now renting for Fall Extra large 2 bedroom bi-levels Fully carpeted and furnished 3-5 man. Featuring: " dishwasher " 1, baths " balcony " sound conditioning * storage and laundry facilities " off street parking Stop.by and see resident manager in Apt. A-7 1-5:30 p.m. Man.-Sat. or phone 761-1717, Charter Realty. 29Ctc MAN TO SHARE 2nd floor of house. 2 man, 2 bdrm. No lease. $67.504 409 W. Madison. 665-9605. 7018 the. news today by The Associated Pr ess and College Press Service NOW RENTING FOR FALL Choice Apartments "0 11 0, 0 Foxcroft, 815 S. State Packard 'Plaza 917 Packard University Plaza, 608 Monroe- Bel-Air, 815 S. Main Oak Terrace, 908 Oakland Athena, 508 S: Division Ann Arbor Trust Co. Property Management Division 106 S. Main 7692800 C281 736 Packard 731 Pack~ard 316 E. Madison Choice 1, 2, 3, and 4 Man Large,;rnodqgrn, furnished, free parking, sundeck, air°conditioned, laundry, storage, central antenna, vacuums, garbage disposal, balconies. Interest on security deposit. TV and dish. washer rental available. Ambassador Company 736 Packard 761-7982 410 OBSERVATORY Fall Occupancy ' ; r ' " . 0 Modern four-m'an Furnished Air-conditioned Wall-to-wall carpeting, Covered parking $240 per mo. includes heat and water Campus Management, Inc., 335 E. Huron 662-7787 Cte BLAND NEW SHORE VI EW APTS. Features large 1 and 2 Bedroom furnished and unfurnished apart- ments. 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. 011 FALL RENTALS 1111 S. State 2, 3, & 4 MAN Modern, well kept, furnished, air con- ditioned, privately owned--References ,,,,Ask our tenants. One & Two Bedrooms Available Call 1-864-3852 or 1-353-7389! C39 FALL RENTALS 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 t 49Ctc BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store LEVI'S Galore For Gais and Guys! LEVI DENIMS: Button Fly.:.....$5.98 (Guaranteed to Shrink) Super Slims. . . .$6.00 Pre-Shrunk Dungarees ......$6.50 Now Levi Denims for Gals.. . . . .$6.00 390tc FALL 1, 2, 3 bedroom apartments with air conditioningk and dishwasher. Some are bi-level with 1% baths. Excellent campus locations. Charter Realty 1335 South University 6685-8825 23Ctc 'CAMPUS-1 BLOCK 418 E. Washington Modern-Furnished-Large 1 Bedroom apts. for 2 and 3 students. Fall Rentals NO 8-6906 DON'T BE LEFT OUTI Get in one of the few remaining, 1-2-3 Bedroom units available at.., Arbor Manor town houses For as little as $103.00 per montht Ypsilanti-Ann Arbor area Phone 484-1210 5MAN Available Fall 761-7600 260o I ' SEVERAL INCENDIARY BOMBS were dropped by an n- identified airecaft into the courtyard of Haitian President Francois Duvalier's palace in Port-au-Prince yesterday. The fires set by the bombs were quickly put out and the plane was driven off by the Haitian defense force. The population seemed to remain calm during the brief attack and later a crowd formed at Duvalier's palace in what was described by gove'nment offilcals as a show of support for him. The attack came about 48 hours after the Central Committee of the Haitian Communist party was broken up. A plane dropped several bombs over Port-au-Prince in May 1968 in what proved to be the prelude to an abortive invasion of Haiti. Two days later the government said it had smashed a 35-man force that had been landed by plane near Cape Haitian. UNION LEADERS are fighting an attempt of the Nixon ad- ministration to launch an investigation of Mafia manipulation of vast private pension funds. The $100 billion controlled by the funds has become "a prime target for takeover . . . infiltration and maniulation by organized criminals," Atty. Gen. John Mitchell charged. The administration has requested $2 million to hire a 130-man investigative staff. The AFL-CIO is lobbying against the proposal. Organized labor is "concerned about the implications of the pension investigation proposal," AFL-CIO Legislative Director Andrew Biemiller said. He didn't elaborate, but the possibility was raised that the planned in- quiry might extend beyond pension funds to other union activities. SURVIVORS of the USS Frank E. Evans said yesterday they had no warning before the Australian carrier Melbourne cut their ship in two in the South China Sea. Navy investigators talked for the first time to some of the 199 survivors. They were told of acts of heroism among sailors and a lack of panic aboard the crippled stern section in the terrifying mo- ments after the collision. The bow section, containing the 74 lost crewmen, sank. MEANWHILE, ecretary of Defense Melvin Laird yesterday urged an urgent review of assignment policies of the armed forces after learning of the loss of three brothers in the disaster. Laird instructed Asst. Secretary of Defense Roger Kelley to report by June 15 concerning revision of the assignment policy and how the assignment of members of a single family to the same ship or unit can be prevented., SIGNS OF DISUNITY within Communist ranks multiplied; yesterday as party leaders gathered in Moscow for a summit meeting. While the Russians hope the east-west meeting will give new unity to the world movement, rumblings from some Western Com- munist delegations including Italy and Great Britain indicate things might not go as smoothly as the Kremlin would like. The world conference, which opens today, will consider a basic document drawn up over the past year by a special preparatory com- mission. Keyed to a call for Communist unity against imperialism, the document sidesteps such issues as the Soviet-Chinese split and last August's Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia, Communist sources report. The document has never been made public. Communist-ruled nations boycotting the conference include communist China, North Vietnam, North Korea, Albania and Yugo- slavia. * * * * ARGENTINA PRESIDENT JUAN CARLO ONGANIA asked his cabinet to resign yesterday, a government source said. The source said that besides the five cabinet ministers, 20 govern- ment officials were also asked for resignations. It was the second such request in Ongania's three-year administration, apparently designed to free him to cope with student-worker violene. At least 20 have been killed and hundreds arrested in rioting that began May 15. Rioting in industrial Cordoba left 14 dead last week. BYO Mother Music presents ' THAX Friday June 6 9 P.m. and THE GEYDA Sat. June 7 9 p.m. two far out mother bands Pres idio FT. ORD, Calif. R) - The two-month long court-martial of 14 Army privates, ac- cused of mutiny for their sit-down at the San Francisco Presidio stockade, goes to the five-man trial board today with the defense suggesting the Army also is on trial. A final argument rebuttal by the prose- cution was scheduled to start at this morn- ing. The trial board deliberates verdicts in a court-martial. "Please don't over-react for the sake of our Army and for the sake of our nation," Capt. Emmitt Yeary told the five-man panel during his defense sum-up. "We have a very strong system and we dec ision don't have to be afraid of men such as these who are immature and sick." Terence Hallinan, the civilian defense attorney, compared the two-montsold trial here to the Dreyfus case in France in 1895. He said the French army in sentencing Capt. Alfred Dreyfus to life on Devil's Island for treason "over-reacted and cre- ated a national scandal." Hallinan said the defendants' act in sit- ting on the grass and singing last Oct. 14, instead of going on stockade work details "was a cry for help, not an attempt to overried awful military authority. "There was no intent to mutiny . They were trying in an insane sort of way to restore lawful military authority." Hallinan said the defendants and 13 other prisoners who took part in the sit- down were trying to bring to the attention Black ca ndidate -Associated Press WAYNE COUNTY AUDITOR Richard H. Austin announces yes- terday that he will seek the Democratic nomination in Detroit's mayoral primary. nears KILLS THREE: ,. ; Explosion damages, secondduPont plan t CARNEYS POINT, N.J. (PA)-A those four were anywhere near the thunderous blast that "looked like center of the blast. an atomic explosion" rocked the The blast that sent dense black sprawling E. I. duPont de Ne- clouds of smoke hundreds of feet mours and Co. explosives works in the air destroyed the blending yesterday, killing at least three plant, wrecked numerous s m a 11 persons and injuring dozens of frame structures scattered, over others. the site, and knocked out power enters- Detroit maorlcontest, From Wire Service Reports Richard H. Austin, Wayne county auditor announced yesterday he will enter the mayoral primary and try to become Detroit's first black mayor. Austin, offering the city "a new era of understanding, a climate of conciliation, and cooperation," outlined a 10 point program that would hopefully bring black and white citizens together. The Wayne .county auditor is the first major black candidate for mayor in Detroit's history. Austin promised to improve relations between the black com- munity and the police, encourage more low cost housing, end bick- ering between the city administra- tion and town council, and work to help the ,money-starved public schools. \IIFB ras Austin emphasized the imme iate importance of leading "city government out of its deepening financial crisis" and finding the C h icago "resources to improve life for the poor, the hungry, the ill-housed, and the jobless." Referring to the recent mayor- alty race in Los Angeles between incumbent aSm Yorty and de- CHICAGO (P)-Federal agents feated black Councilman Thomas raided the headquarters of the Bradley, Austin said the will not Black Panthers. early yesterday "engage in a racial campaign or morning, arrested eight people, engage in character assassination, and sized weapons and ammuni- and I challenge my opponents to tion. make the same pledge." About 35 FBI agents raided the Austin will face at least three two-story headquarters on the major white candidates including West Side, at 2350 W. Madison Major J. Cavanaugh, who has not St. said whether he "will run again Marlin W. Johnson, special after eight years in office,.Com- agent in charge of the Chicago mon Council President Edward FBI office, said the agents were Carey, and possibly Councilman seeking George Sams Jr., a fugitive Mel Ravitz, who has not filed yet. from New Haven, Conn., who is Austin's ,announcement came charged with murder and kid- yesterday at a press conference haping. after another potential candidate Sams was not among those ar- for mayor, state Senator Coleman rested. A. Young announced he is asking The FBI agents cordoned off the for a Wayne County circuit court area around the headquarters and ruling to make him eligible to run then, using a bullhorn, called on for the office. those inside to come out. The Young has filed a suit chal- agents were armed with machine lenging the state law that has been guns, shotguns, rifles, and pistols. interpreted as barring a legislator Several took up positions on the from running for another job dur- roof of the headquarters. ing his term in office. Johnson said seven people, in- cluding two women, emerged from the headquarters and surrendered without resistance. ARES *"^'' 'LONGEST DAY' All were charged with harboring ilia M. thru F. 6 & 9 a federal fugitive and illegal pos- Sat. & Sun. session of weapons. SRD..76941300 1:30-4:45-8:00 Sams, the person .they were charged with' harboring, was sought on a federal warrant charging him with unlawful flight to avoid prosecution for murder. Johnson said Sams Is under in- inin dictment in New Haven on charges of murder, conspiracy to commit murder, kidnaping arid conspiracy to commit kidnaping. of higher authorities unsanitary and over- crowded conditions at the stockade. In his statement for the prosecution. Capt. Dean Flippo argued that nonviolent acts of the 14 were "just as serious as the violent kind." "Any flouting of lawful military author- ity is mutiny," Flippo said, adding that evidence showed intent to mutiny over al- leged grievances. The sit-down demonstration, when the 27 prisoners huddled in a circle on the grass and sang "We Shall Overcome" and "America the Beautiful" came three days after a guard shot a fleeing prisoner to death. The defense argued that the shooting of Pvt. Richard Bunch of Dayton, Ohio, was a major factor in the mental stress of the other prisoners. i i r k A company spokesman in Wil- mington, Del., just across the Delaware River from the 400-acre facility, said the explosion oc- curred in an automated blending tower containing 10,000 to 20,000 pounds of smokeless gunpowder. A duPont spokesman said all but four of the approximately 700 employes had been accounted for, and that there was no indication and water lines. There was no fire. The Carneys Point plant dates from World War I, and is one of the oldest facilities of America's biggest chemical manufacturer. It was the second explosion in two days at a duPont plant. Tues- day a series of explosions rock- ed the company's chemical plant in Louisville, Ky., persons. injuring four I - wm --- "'Hard Contract' is not only an exciting adven- ture, it's also a meaningful contemporary com- ment on violence. A stunning film which should appeal to the thrill seekers and content seekers alike. Says a great deal about sex and society with tautness and taste!" -Joyce Haber, N.Y. Post LEVi'S STA PREST: "White" Levis (5 Colors) Nuvo Hopsack . "Stitches"...... .$6.98 .$8.00 .$6.98 .$6.98 .$4.98 FALL * ~1969 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 C33 Fall I S-T-R-E-T-C-H "White" Levis (5 Colors) 1 .; "Something remarkable and special! One of those infrequent movies which succeed at the level of sizzling good story. but. also and more I I BE,LL BOTTOM LEVI'S NOW IN STOCK I