Page Three Friday, June 20, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAL r Friday, June 20, 1969THE MICHIGAN DAIL'i' Paaehre i Daily Classifieds t uI4 II r1 IrrW I i + r r u.. I r l FOR RENT MODERN FURNISHED Lakefront cot- tage, adults only. $70 per week. 9752 Galatian. Buck Lake near Lakelands. M36. 15 miles from Ann Arbor. 58 C31 [,G. CHARMING HSE, to share, fem., grad, parking. own bdrm., balcony, pvt. yard. 668-9851. 59 034 TV RENTALS $8.50 per month FOR RENT ALBERT TERRACE 1700 GEDDES / Now renting for Fall Extra large 2 bedroom bi-levels Fully carpeted and furnished 3-5 man. Featuring: . dishwasher . 1$ baths * balcony 0 sound conditioning " storage and laundry facilities 761-1945 . off street parking Free same day delivery and service See resident manager in Apt. A-7 1- New 19" portables 5 *30 p.m. Mon.-Sat. or phone 761- C18, 1717, C-- ,- I ,CHARTER REALTY AVAILABLE FOR FALL Occupancy-4 29Ctc man apt., 2 blocks from business "_______ _ .school, 3blocks from law school. Call 6920.28Ctc 3 Bedrooms _____________________and FIREPLACE Yes, that's righ~t. Live in the Si~m- AUGUST OCCUPANCY miteuse this fall. Call 761-8055 or 761-54111. 39 Ctc THE PROOF ROCK FRIDAY & SATURDAY 9:00-1:00 1.00 AT MARK'S coffee house 605 E. William DIAL 8-6416 "He didn't know he had courage .. until cour- age was all he had left! .+ M G M presents the John Frankenheimer- Edward Lewis Production of the fixer based on the Pulitzer .Prize-winning novel by Bernard Malamud. Metroco'or with Alan Bates Dick Bogarde f 2ND FEATURE J "G RAZIA { ZIA" Ii I r w I I 'I i 1 1 1 I I 761.0001 $1.00 OFF One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizzo. Pick Up Only 211 E. Ann St.-Next to the Armory Expires Aug. 1 rrmrrmrmrrrmrrrrrr r mm mm m m ------OUPON--mm- THOMPSON'S PIZZA r- I ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS 7218. FOREST STREET NEAR CAMPUS AND HOSPITALS Spacious, quiet, 2 bedroom fur- nished apartments, security inter-, con and door system, colored appli- ances, disposal, hishwashers avail- able, carpeted, draped, individually heated and cooled; huge closets and storage, new G.E. laundry facilities, Cuigan water conditioning, am- pie parking, all utilities except electricity and phone, included. Business Office at 347 Maynard St. 9 to 5 call 769-3131 or 663-6052 7-10 p.m. call 761-3995 r C30 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 031 FALL RENTALS ;721 S. Forest 101 N. Ingalls 905 Oakland Modern 2 bedroom apartments-rent in- c4j ludes heat, water, and parking. Office at 347 Magnard Call days 663-6052 or 769-1258 49Ctc Bilevels for Fall Large 4 man, 2 bdrms, formal din- ing room or separate study. 727 ,Packard. 761-6916. 40 032 736 Packard 731 Packard 316 E. Madison Choice 1, 2, 3, and 4 Manl Large, modern, furnished, free parking, sundeck. air conditioned, laundry, storage, central antenna, vacuums, garbage disposal, balconies. Interest ontsecurity deposit. TV and dish- washe rental available. S AmbassadorCompany 736 Packard 761-7982 39Ctc a Sler-ludir- I 5EUY-AI CO19 A C T*E OP.. J Fa"i. To"acs Ann Arbor's FRIENDLY NEIGHBORHOOD IIUNE 1326 liar- ia II It t he 1I news today by The Associated Press and Coll'ge Press Service II PRESIDENT NIXON voiced a hope last night his adminis- tration can beat a timetable for pulling 100,000 troops out of Vietnam by year's end and all ground combat troops by the close of 1970. * The timetable was proposed by Clark Clifford, former secretary of defense, in an article in Foreign Affairs Quarterly. The President said, too, thetarget date for talks with Russia on l limitation of strategic arms is sometime between July 31 and Aug. 15. E NIXON said last night the nomination of conservative mayoral carididates in New Yqrk, plus similar results in Los Angeles and Min- neapolis, indicate American voters are disgusted "with violence and lawlessness." Nixon said he does not think the great majority of people in the major cities is anti-black or anti-poor. "The American people in our cities, in our small towns and in our country are fed up . . . with violence and lawlessness and they want candidates who take a strong stand against it," Nixon said, The president added he would endorse all Republican nominees. DUBLIN'S PRIME MINISTER JACK LYNCH won a slim, but apparently decisive lead today in the Irish Republic's election and declared he would form the next government. With only 211 of the 144 Daillower house seats to be decided, opposition spokesmen-conceded that the 52-year-old prime minister was back in power, though on a knife-edge. Lynch proved wrong almost unanimous forecasts that his sup- porters would be forced into a parlimentary minority. GOV. RICHARD B. OOILIVIE ordered 70 state troopers to Cairo, Ill., yesterday to take over patrol of the racially tense city. Four fires - three of which fire officials termed "definitely ar- son" - erupted in Cairo Wednesday. Elsewhere in the city, sporadic sniper fire was reported Wednesday. Cairo has been under a 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew since Monday as a result of a fresh outbreak of fires and fire bombings and sniper fire. DAILY TIMES I NOW FXESERNTHATE 1:00-3:40 1 Ulrjch to analyze books tore proposal (Continued from Page 1r Goebel said he walnted to study However, the proposal itself did the report of the National Book- not stipulate funding methods, store Association and the reports which caused some concern among of other universities with student- the Regents. run bookstores, and compare these Regent Robert Brown question- figures with those provided in ed the feasibility of SGC's plan al- SGC's proposal before he would lowing for 7.5 per cent discount on be willing to come to a vote.' the sale of textbooks in the first Fleming backed Goebel's posi- year. tion and said, "If this is to be Webster, who gave the actual a University venture. then it is presentation of the proposal, said within the legitimate rights of the the University bookstore would be Regents to study reports of book- able to do this since it would not stores to determine if we are tak- have the regular expenditures fac-I ng on a liability so that we may ed by Ann Arbor bookstore own- determnine if we are prepared to ers, assume this responsibility in view Webster cited a Michigan state of the University's overall priori- law which stipulates that abook- ties." store operated in part by the Fleming cited cases at a few University does not have to charge other universities where student the four per cent sales tax. This bookstores had failed. "Student way, Webster said, students would bookstores are known to come and be saved "as much as $15 to $20 go," he said. a year." McLaughlin countered that the He added that SGC was aiming SGC proposal was carefully re- for $750,000 in sales for the first searched on the basis of studies of year, and that after all expected nine student bookstores in the expenditures were accounted for.( Big Ten. | REGENTS MEETING: I I the store would have an $11,500 gross profit. Webster said t h i s money could be used as either a' buffer to meet unexpected ex- penses, or could be used for t h e next year's inventory. Webster added the bookstore would encomjpass the SOC' dis-3 dount store, and the profits from the discount store could be used to underwrite any debts from t h e bookstore. The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students of the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552.Secon d Class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich i- gan, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity Year. Subscription rates: $9 by .carrier, Q10 by mail Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 by mail, FALL RENTALS 2 & 3 Bdrm Luxury 121 E. Hoover 511 E. Hoover 711 Arch 914 S. State 915 S. Division Furnished Apts. 665-8330 663-3809 663-5284 769-4759 761-5471 ATTENTION FACULTY &, STAFFI 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. Many of these units include air cond., balconies, diAhwashers, laundry fa- cilities and parking. Call now to reserve-Vour apt. for fal 663-3809 270tc Fall Ap"artments 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 6Cte 1 BDRN. MOD. APT. furn.) air cond., dishwasher. Avail. July-Aug. 769-2666 or 761-6966. 51 031 (Continued on Page 4) F 4 BIG SHOWS DAiLYtCONT Id'OUS "GaLeZig " The Fixer" a.Sos tr tI oon and 2 P.M. On how Only TonightEv.hosSatt80 and t0o0 P.M. pt:0 ',at 9 P.M. I Friday ani Saturday CAMI LLE dir. GEORGE CUKOR ( 1936)4 GRETA GARBO ' "A divinity trying to succeed as a whore. It's a sub- lime, ironic performance. "-Pau Ii ne Kael Hock your-mother to see~this one! 7,& 9 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 ' ~AUDITORIUM Monday, June 23; ARK (1421 Hill) 9:00 75C Douglas Sirk's ALL I DESIREi i E E I i i I I SHOWING FURVILebE 375 No. MAPLE PD.-769-1300 NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES... REGULAR PRICES : g for the whole family! TONIGT od SAURDA 142 Hil St 6:30-9:10 THUR. ONLY 3:40-6:30-9:10 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN FRIDAY, JUNE 20 Day Calendar Bureau of Industrial Relations Sem- Inar: "Management of Managers, Pro- gram No. 92": North Campus Commons 8:15 a.m. College and !University Administra- tion Institute: Rackham Assembly Hall, Fourth Floor, 8:30 a.m. School of Social Work Continuing Education Institute: Paul Glasser 4 n d; Norma Radin, University of Michigan School of Social Work, "Preventive In- tervention in Work with Parents: A New Dimension in Social Work": Lob- by, Physics Bldg., 9:00 a.m.' Cinema Guild: Greta Garbo, Robert Taylor and Lionel Barrymore iru Ca- TONIG HT acid SATURDAY 1421 Hill S#.- 8:30 P.M. ..P.AM Mille, directed by George Cukor: Archi- tecture Auditorium, 7:00 and 9:05 p.m. Placement Service GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Current Position Openings received by General Division, inquire about these positions and- application pro- "cedures bycalling 764-7460, or stop in it 3200 S.A.B3.1 Educational and Cultural Center ser- ving Onondaga andq. Oswega Counties, Syracuse. N.Y.: Personnel Dev. Lab. serving school districts seeks coordina- tor, background in ed or other bus. ad/ personnel areas . International Business Machines, Inc. of Gaithersbrug, Md. and Endicott, N.Y. - Programmers, any degree. Personnel Consultants, ' nationwide positions with pharmaceutical compan- Lies -in design and analysis of ,data in human trial of drugs. Local Corporation near Saline: Office position charting graphs from s a l e personnel, gen. office work also, good math ability only requirement, (Continued on Page 4) DIAL 5-6290 "A New York version of 'The Graduate'! I rre- sistable !" Judith Crist, New York Magazine Featuring: *Fireplaces 0 Large balconie4 with storage 'O-Fully carpeted and draped; " Central heat and cooling, 0 Reserver! 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 MILES, and DAVE' JOHNS playing city folk & blues LATE SHOW-FRI. and SAT C30 :,h <: m a ; s ;:x : < <: ACADEMY AWARD WINNER "BEST FO EIGN FILM" v2/ "2> ?i 'i "' iri;, :t' } i 2 I I MV.1 TME IFDPKDAD U UYUAL PLEASE "GOODBYE, COLUMBUS' IS " BOUND TO BE A GREAT 'Goodbye Columbus' is one of those films which tickle us in our cultural belly. We have no defense against it except laughter." -Jay Cassidy, Michigan Doily The ALTERNATIVE and __i CO-OP COFFEE HOUSE PRESENT Ist FLOOR SAB the first FREE 1969 SUMMER DANCE CONCERT Friday June 20 5:00 P.M. STARRING The TATE BLUES BAND from AA AND The POPCORN BLIZZARD from LA in the new Administration Building courtyard, Jefferson at Thompson AN UNFORGETTABLE EVENT IN SCREEN ENTERTAINMENT World Theatrical Premiere with synchronized sound. Charles S. Chaplin's famous 1925 classic of the hardships of life on the Alaskan frontier. Chaplin in his beloved role as the tramp who goes -North to the gold rush in search of wealth. He meets a grizzly old prospector and a beautiful PRU NEWMARN { RORERT A G iREE hELD OVER' 2ND ' °l r) W EEK ,t 4i r st' " i E I I