DNE: HEIISr second front page T4r, 1Mftririin Batty NEWS; PRO 764-055 Wednesday, June 11, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan Page Three /T W d1N 'I"N m~4F' " * I FOR RENT FOR RENT FOR RENT i 815 PACICARD--single rm for male4 grad student w/kitchen. Avail. now. 665-0146.432 Ctc! ROOMMATE WANTED. Girl to share apartment. 320 S. Division. Call 663- 0398. 33 C28 ONE OR TWO MEN to share living ex- penses In 3 bedroom house. Grads preferred. Should have car. House 10-; cated in West end of town. 761-5437 after June 13. 769-5143. 34 C28 FEMALE ROOMMATE. needed for 4- man apt. in fall. Near campus. Call: Holly betw. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 697-0279. 28027: ROOMMATES (3B) 2-3 girls to fill 4 ryan on S. Forest. 761-4442. 29026 I OR 2 GIRLS wanted to share 3 bed- room house. Call 662-5990. 30027 2 MEDICAL .STUDENTS need third for 3 bdrm. apt. for fall. Call Fritz, 663- 9178. . 31025 NOW RENTING FOR FALL Choice Apartments SUMMER SUBLET in NYCig. apt ALGI ERS NTRIAL: low rent, convenient, safe location' Write Susan Hecker, 140 E. 17 St., N.Y., N.Y. 10003. C25 BEDROOM, kitchen privileges. $l5/wk. Near campus. 769-2406 after 5. 9021 e quitted te ier sAAEA' it U -1 " i 0 "' " 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 769-2800 736 Packard 731 Packard 316 E. Madison Choice 1. 2, 3.and 4 Man SUMMER SUBLET 1 GIRL NEEDED for large 2-man apt. Private bedroom. Air cond. 769-2822, 60U26 --- - -(Continued from Page 1) 2 MEN need 1 now-summer, ownjLipittsd the blicit bdrm. modern bi-level. Parking, 2 L t -sai e pub ty sur- air-cond. near campus. 769-2049. rounding t h e deaths of Pollard 61U27 and the two other black teen-ag- C28 COMFY architect's studio apt. with full ers killed at the Algiers Motel July kitchen for second half, fall option, 2, 1967, at the peak of the Detroit cheap. Call 761-9814. 57U25 riot, made it difficult for August 3-BEDROOM APT., furnished, $95/mo. to get a fair trial. Please call after 6 p.m. 663-0685. Still facing August is a federal 58U271 indictment charging him and 'SINGLE AP.Es-nnfrsme three others Iwith conspiracy to NGEAPT. East Ann fo72r summer :. term June 27. $75. 665-2672., 1U17 violate the civil rights of 10,, per- ing, sons in the motel. dng. LOVELY 2-3 man apartment summer dry, term. Close to campus. Call 769-25211 urns,117UW U rest UK ish- TWO BEDROOMS in great old house 1 enot 524" S.Forst.ey no .t for 1 or 2 persons. Kitchen facilities. 52411a S. Forest. 663-6272, 764-0410. U31 WANTED: 3rd girl for large3man, 2 i erve e 9 Itc bdrm. apt. Must share room. Call' 769-2139 right after noon weekdays or: ;0 - --after 6. _-U25 striK e suit 1 OR 2 FEMALE ROOMMATES wanted. Grads preferred. 769-2822 5 p.m.-2. (Continued from Page 1) i (Coninuedfrom 13e21 L ! AUGUST OCCUPANCY ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS 721 S. FOREST STREET NEAR CAMPUS AND HOSPITALS Spacious, quiet, 2 bedroom fur- nishgd apartments, security inter- com and door system, colored appli- ances,, disposal, dishwashers avail- .,. able, 'carpeted, draped,nindividually heated and cooled, huge closets and storage, new G.E. laundry facilities, Culligan water conditioning, am- ple parking, all utilities ,except' electricity and phone, included. Business Office at 347 Maynard St. 9 to 5 call 769-3137 or 663-6052 7-10 p.m. call 761-3995 program The others are two white fellow Large, modern, furnished, free park sundeck, sir conditioned, laun storage, central antenna, vacuu garbage disposal, balconies. trite on security deposit. TV and d washer rental available. Ambassador 736 Packard Company 761-7982 39 030 AVAILABLE FOR FALL Occupancy-4 man apt.. 2 blocks from business school, 3 blocks from law school. Call 769-2608. -28Ctc ROOMS AVAILABLE immediately $20- $35/mo. Call 761-4361 evenings. 026 4TH GIRL to share pleasant house near, campus-room of your own, private' bath. Avail.. June 15. Call Karen. 761-9049. C25 CAMPUS HOSPITAL' AREA--Large two bedroom-4 man's. One old-one new. NO 8-6906. CTC CAMPUS-HOSP. AREA. Avail Jun 27 thru Aug. 20. 1 bdrm, air-cond., xod. apt. parking avail, $100. 761-4691. C24 418 E. WASHINGTON needs a resident mgr. limited but varied duties. Couple preferred. Call NO 8-6906 for inter- view. CTC CAMPUS-Large and modern one bed- rooms, 3 men, a"T 2 men. NO 8-6906. OTC DON'T BE LEFT OUT! Get in one of the few remaining, 1 -2-3 Bedroom units available at. Arbor Manor townhouses For as little as $103.00 per month Ypsilanti-Ann Arbor area Phone 484-1210 it 1 MAN NEEDED for 2-man sublet for remainder of summer. You'll have the place to yourself while I'm in. Europe for 5 weeks. Rent negotiable 665-8767. UTC LARGE, FURN. 1 bdrm. apt. June 15- Sept. '1. Very near campus. 769-4931 or 763-2225. ,U20 JUNE-AUG. SUBLET-1 or 2 girls for modern air conditioned bi-level. Call 761-5531 after 6 p.m. 27U17 SUMMER SUBLET Furnished and unfurnished, air condi- tioned, 2 bedroom apartments, park- ing. Call 663-6052 or 769-1258. 28Utc [3 RM. APT 4 blocks from central campus. Sublet to Aug. 25. Reduced rent, cheap. Call 665-8316. U24 SUMMER SUBLET for 1 girl, avail. June 15. Close ,to N.C. bus, Women's pool; air-cond. 769-0577. U25 2 MEN to share Albert Terrace(5 man apt, with 1 person. $45/m each. Call Frank or Bob, 769-4814. U25 NOW-Aug. Need 1 or 2 men to share large 2-bdrm air-conditioned apt with one other. Sublet prices. Will negotiate. Call 662-9172. 62 U25 LUXURY LIVING for summer. Walk to campus. Air-cond., furn., carport, en- closed patio, 2 bdrm. 761-1523 eve- nings. 63 Utc 1-MAN APT. (June), July, Aug. Cheap. 764-1473 days, 769-3824 nights. U 25 SUMMER SUBLETS Come in and check our listings at: 737 Packard 1-5 p.m. 761-8063 fendants in connection with the landlord's suit. In the depositions, leaders of the Tenants Union were unable to give a defihite figure for the amount of money now contained in the escrow account. Barense asked Circuit Judge William Ager to order an account- ing of the Tenants Union's finan- cial records. The landlords suit also asks for an injunction to halt -the rent strike, the turning over of the escrow account to the court and damages. In the letter, Barense cited the Tenants Union for violating a state law (PA 286), the tenants rights act, which provides that any rent that is withheld should be paid to the court.K Barense asked that Kelley inter- vene under his power to supervise Trust funds "not only on the land- lords behalf, but also on behalf of all persons who have made pay- ments in lieu of rent to the Ten, ants Union or its members." Barense's letter also questioned the legality of the rent strike on grounds that state law allows withholding of rent only where conditions constitute a health and saf'ety hazard not caused by the occupants. The Tenants Union has main- tained that existing housing code violations do create a health and safety hazard. . Detroit police officers-David Se-' nak and Robert Paille-and a Negro private guard, Melvin Dis- m kes. Dismukes already has been' acquitted of a felonious assault charge in connection with alleged beatings inflicted on one of the motel occupants. Pollardiwas one of three black teen-agers killed at the Algiers Motel on July 26, 196. Pollard, Carl Cooper, 17,' and Fred Tem- ple, 18, were slain by shotgun blasts. Their bodies were left behind by police and National Guards- men who had entered the motel in a search for snipers. August, on the witness stand, admitted killing Pollard, but said: it was in self-defense in a strug-: gle over a shotgun. The defendant testified that he took Pollard into a room to ques- tion him about the alleged snipers and because a fellow policeman had told him the youth had asked to talk to an officer. August said he also wanted to save Pollard from further beat- ings, such as-she had suffered while standing up against the wall in a first-floor hallway with! other occupants of the motel. But after they went into the room, August testified, Pollard pleaded that he and his friends be released. When August told the youth that everyone would be' taken to police headquarters, Aug- ust claimed Pollard grabbed the barrel of the shotgun. In the ensuing struggle for the: weapon, August added, he pulled the trigger. During closing arguments, the prosecutor accused August of lying. He pointed out that the de-! fendant waited five days before! finally admitting that he had killed one of the three victims, and then only after having filed. two false reports. A v e r y Weswasser, assistant Wayne County prosecutor, brand- ed the killing as "cold-blooded murder" and "lynch law." He said, that although the defense denied presenting any racist argument,: there nevertheless had been ap- peals to prejudice and bias. (Continued from Page 1)' using this issue to gain more "lev- erage" with the Board of Educa- tion, although Harrell denies this as any motivation. And the AAEA claims the edu- cation school is trying to use the public sThools in "a much more experimental w a y," a charge which is not taken seriously by the school. O n e education professor says, "Our lab is not Ann Arbor but Michigan and beyond. We would never flood a school with student teachers." The program which Harlell says has already been drawn up and is ready to be agreed on by the school and the Board of Educa- tion has not been funded and in fact does not exist, says Lehmann. At the present the status of the. Ann Arbor student teacher prep- aration program is unclear. As- sistant Dean Malcolm Lowther, who is also chairman of the edu- c a t i o n school's Undergraduate Committee, says the school is "more than happy to talk" but there must be some sort of "mec- hanism" provided. The education school does not recognize the AAEA officially be- cause the union's formal contract is with the school board. However, Lowther claims the school and un- ion have always had a "collabor- ative relationship." Asst. S c h o o 1 Superintendent Samuel Sniderman says commit- tees are being formed by the school board and the AAEA to study the situation and "review traditional relationships.", Harrell says the AAEA will re- evaluate, the situation in Novem- ber and decide whether to discon- tinue the program. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Seeond Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michi- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor; Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday, morning Ulniver- sity year. Subscription rates: $9 by carrier, 10 by mail. Summer -Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by Imail. the news oda by The Associated Press and Colhge Press Service PRESIDENT NIXON said yesterday that by ordering the withdrawal of 25,000 American soldiers from Vietnam he had "opened wide the door to peace." If the Communists do not reciprocate, he said, "They must bear the responsibility for blocking the, road." Nixon says Thieu "completely approves and supports the eight- point peace program in my May 14 speech to the nation." The meeting with Thieu Sunday "brought home the message that troops of South Vietnam have now been trained and equipped to the point where they can take over a substantial portion of the combat activity presently being borne by Americans," Nixon said. * * * THE NATIONAL LIBERATION FRONT, apparently seek- ing to consolidate its Paris bargaining position, announced yes- terday it' has set up a "revolutionary government to rule" South Vietnam. Mrs. Nugyen Thi Binh will be Foreign minister and chief dele- gate to the Paris talks, an announcement in Paris said. She headed the NLF delegation last year and now is its deputy leader. Tran Buu Kiem, present chief negotiator, was to be recalled to Vietnam for important functions in the new "government." There was no immediate indication how the move would effect the talks, which resume tomorrow in their 21st full-scale session. PENTAGON AND DEFENSE CONTRACTORS "play games" together to deliberately underestimate the cost of weapons sys- tems the taxpayer is asked to buy, according to a Navy pro- curement specialist. Gordon W. Rule testified before a House-Senate Economic sub- committee on military spending that the "disingenuous" Tprocess he described is used to nail- Congress into long-term procurement of weapons whose true costs will only be disclosed in later years. Rule is director of procurement control and clearance in the Navy Material Division. He pioneered a discarded contract process that determines what the government should pay for weapons rather than what contractors want to charge. THE PENTAGON cancelled the nation's only military man- in-space project, the $3-billion Manned Orbiting Laboratory, yesterday. The reason was reportedly the "continuing urgency" to cut spending. The cancellation was announced by Deputy Secretary of Defense David Packard, who said "We're giving up for the time being" the idea of a military mission for men in space. The action is expected to save close to $300 mililon in the ,new fiscal year which begins July 1 and about $1.5 billion over the next five years. Some $1.3 billion already has been spent since 1963. * * * SUPREME COURT JUSTICE WILLIAM BRENNAN JR. has quit his teaching post at the Appellate Judges' Seminar. The seminar has been held annually at New York University since 1956. Prof. Robert Leflar, director of the seminar, explained yesterday Brennan is severing all off-the-bench activities "except his member- ship in his church." Brennan resigned 10 days to two weeks ago. Chief Justice-designate Warren E. Burger is scheduled to con- tinue on the faculty this summer. However, Leflar said, he under-I stood Burger will drop out also if the U.S. Judicial Conference calls for restrictions' on such activities. CAMPUS. For the summer or for the ,year. 4-5 bdrmn. house, '2 baths, fully furn., dishwasher, washer and dryer, avail. immed. 665-5225 or 449-5084. C24 BRAND NEW SHORE VIEW APTS. Features large 1 and 2 Bedroom furnished and unfurnishedapart- ments. ' Unfurnished' apts. start at $155.00.. 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. ili FALL RENTALS 2 & 3 Bdrm Luxiry Furnished Apts. 121 511 711 914 915 E. Hoover E. Hoover Arch S. State S. Division 665-8330< 665-9627 663-5284 769-4759 761-5471 (Continued on Page 41 _.__.- i --- '"0 . 0 0 410'OBSERVATORY Fall Occupancy Modern four-man Furnished Air-conditioned Wall-to-wall carpeting Covered parking $240 per mo. includes heat and water Campus Management, Inc. 335 E. Huron 662-7787 Ctc TV RENTALS $8.50 per month 761-1945 Free same day delivery and service New 19" portables 018 ROOMMATE WANTED-Girl to share apt. 320 S. Division. Call 663-0398. 22C21 FALL RENTALS I ii 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 Many of these units include air cond, balconies, dishwasher, laundry fa- cilities and parking. Call now to reserve your apt. for fall 27Ctc FALL 1, 2, 3 bedroom apartments with air. conditioning and dishwasher. Some are bi-level with 1% baths. Excellent. campus locations. Charter Realty 1335 South University 665-8825 23Ctc FALL 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 ' Calf 761-7600 DAHLMANN APARTMENTS C31 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. LI M 4WEEKS ONLY! ACADEMY SWARINNER! DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11 Day Calendar Conference on the Aging: The Aging Consumer, Breakfast: Michigan Union, 7:45 a.m. Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- roar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram aIo. 91": North Campus Com- mons, 8:15 a.m. Astronomical Collolulum. Wednes- day, June 11, 4:00 p.m. Room 807 Phy- sics-Astronomy BIdg. Roberta H u m -_ phreys, Departemnt of Astronomy, will ( speak on "The Space Distribution and Kinematics of Supergiant Stars." General Notices Graduate - Record 'Examination: Ap- plication blanks are available in Room 3014. Rackham Building for the Grad- uate Record Examination. The n e x t administration of the test will be on Saturday, July 12, and applications are. due in Princeton, New Jersey before June 17. Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business: Application blanks are avail- able in Room 3014, Rackham Building for the Admission Test for Graduate Study in Business. The next adminis- '"BEST FOREIGN F{LM' eFF TATS - I 10 Shows at 1 :00, 3:00 5:00 7:00 9:00 LAST TIMES TODAY "HOUSE OFa CARDS, tration of the test will be on Satur- ,day, July 12, and applications are due in Princeton, New Jersey before June 28. 1 Doctoral Exams, + 5 William Charles Dunkelberg, Econ- omics, Dissertation: "Forecasting Con- sumer Expenditures with Measures of Attitudes and Expectations," on Wed- nesday, June 11, at 9:00 a.m. in Room 19, Economics Building, Chairman: D. B. Suits. Linda Lee Gilman Taylor, Psychology, Dissertation: "The Relationship of Per- sonality Variables to' Second Language Pronunciation," on Wednesday, June 11 at 12:00 pm. in 3201 Ni Outpatient Building, University Hospital, Chair- man: A. Z. Gulora. "TODAY IS LADIES' DAY 75c Until 6 P.M. Jack Graham Crouch, Aerospace En- gineering, Dissertation: "Galerkin Ei- genvalue Error," on Wednesday, June 11, at 1:30 p.m. in 1072 East Engineer- ing, Co-Chairmen: D. T. Greenwood and W. J. Anderson. Paul Scott Muhly, Mathematics, Dis- sertation: "Comutants Containing a' Compact Operator," on Wednesday, June 11 at 4:00 p.m.. in 338 West En- gineering, Chairman:' R. G. Douglas. .Placement "Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Position Openings received by General Division, inquire a b o u t these positions and application proced- ures by calling 764-7460, or stop in at 3200 S.A.B. State of Arkansas: Management Ana- lyst Intern in Dept. of Labor, degree in Indust. Mgmt., Public or Bus. Admin., IE, and some knowl. of -practice appli- cation in industry. National/ YWCA, nationwide openings -Executive Directors, Assoc. and Asst. Executives, Branch Directors and Cen- ter directors, Teenage Program Direc- tors, Adult pofiram Dir., Young Adult (Continued on Page 4) .:----COUPON ---s.mm THOMPSON'S *PIZZA . . 761-0001 I III Ir $1.00,OF One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. Pick Up Only 211 E. Ann St.--Next to the Armory * Expires Aug. 1 5 Friday & Saturday THE LADY EVE 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 490tc Albert Terrace 1700 Geddes Now renting for Fall Extra lare 2 bedroom bi-levels Fully carpeted and furnished 3-5 map. Featuring: Featuring, 0 Fireplaces * Large balconies with storage 0 Fully carpe.ted and draped # Central heat and cooling * Reserved Carport SSwimming Pool *r2 and 3 Bedroom units, up to 1650 sq. pft. Boat Docking Rentals from $225 to $465 Modell Open Daily 483-4454 1000 Grove Rd., Ypsilanti THE TWO PARTPRODUCTION OF LEO TOLSTOY'S PART I WAR 2:00,8:00 PEACE PRESENTED BY THE WALTER READE ORGANIZATION AND SATRA IN COLOR * RELEASED BY CONTINENTAL PART I AND ANDREIM NOW SHOWING C30 M dishwasher vvv -. , i ....-., .___.. a _ - ._ _ . _