Thursday, May 22, 1969 Ann Arbor, Michigan 1111111w Page Three Flint report asps growth Burger nominated U.S. chief justice Call 764-0557-Monday thru Friday, 10 A.M.-1 P.M. HELP WANTED MALE, 19-25, PART-TIME afternoons. L~e weekends, TRAINED interviewer, to interview teenagers in rural, 8,E.1 Michigan. Call 764-8382. 21H12 .GRAD. STUDENT in Am. Hist./studies for res./writing. Call 769/3644. 27H14 2 SINGLE disorganized males need housekeeper for I work % days each week. Pay $2.00/hi. Contact Alan, 761-2916 and leave message. 32H16 YARD WORK. Call 663-2256. 26H15 Young Ladies Travel Need five young ladies under 25. Must be neat and single, free to travel im- mediately to New York, Calif., Chi- cago and other major cities in. U.S. No educational requirement or exper- ience necessary. Average earning $115 wk. plus $300 drawing acct. during training. Transportation furnished. Apply: Mr. Sanders. 769-3010, Ext. 301; 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. an equal opportunity employer 29H12 AVIATION LINEMAN Two positions. One 5 p.m.-8 p.m. six days weekly. Other all lay Saturday and Sunday. Long term employment. Aviation background or rinterest, Phone Bill Warwin Twining Aviation, NO 3- 9321. 23H1 HISTO-TECHNOLOGISTS CYTO-TECHNOLOGISTS Needed for immediate employment. ASCP registered or eligible. excellent salary and benefits. Apply Sparrow Hospital Personnel, Lansing, or call collect 1-517-487-6111, ext. 333,. 251116 COORDINATOR for University of Mich- igan Fraternity Buyers' Association;: 15 hours per week; August-April; pub- lic relations, supervisors, expansion; $200 per month. 662-0257 or 2nd floor, Student , Activities Bldg., U of M' 281114 HELP WANTED Young Men Travel Need five young men under 25. Must be neat, and single, free to travel immediately to New York, Calif., Chi- cago, and other major cities in the U.S. No educational requirement or experience necessary. Average earnings $115/week plus $300 drawing acct. dur- ing training, new car transportation furnished. Apply: Mr. Sanders, 769-3010, ext. 301, 11 A.M.-7 P.M. an equal opportunity employer 30H12 LIKE TO SING? Temple Beth Emeth (reform) is looking for additional choir members, men and women needed. Not necessary to read music or Hebrew. Call 971-5321 for further information. 14H14 AVAILABLE for SUMMER occupancy. 4 man apt., 2 blocks from business school, 3 blocks from law school. (Available immediately). Please call 769-2608. l7Utc EXPENSE PAID VACATION. Couple or two men. Help run small lakeuresort. Mid-June-late Aug. 761-7577. 31116 USED CARS' '57 DODGE Station Wagon, V8, auto- matic, power steering, radio, snow tires. 761-7831. 18N16 FORD,, '61 Conv. (good top). $175. Cal] 665-6844 after 6. 19N21 '64 CORVAIR MONZA. Beautiful cond. $550 or best offer. Call Bill, 769-1147 after 5 p.m. 20N16 '59 FORD Station Wagon. Clean, reli- able. $75. Call 663-9885. 15N12 '64 VW, EX. mech. cond., body rough. $500. Call 761.-0782. 14N12 PHOTO SUPPLIES (Continued from Page 1) BAUER SUPER-8 movie camera. Excel- The committee recommended in lent condition. $85. Call 761-6167. 2D13 this area that the University: -"Explore with potential pri- AT CENTURY vate developers the terms under which they would undertake the The Best in building of such accommodations Good Used Cameras in the vicinity of Flint campus," and that Pentrax H3V F2.0, Case......... $95 -"In view of the anticipated Pentrax H3V F1.8, Meter .... $125 enrollment increases over the next Pentrax Spotomatic with Case $175 ten years, considerations may have Nikon "F" F2.0, Auto. only .... $175 to be given to University owned Canon 7S F1.8 (Leica type) .... $150 housing only after other methods 400mm Takumar FS.6, case .... $165 of private apartments have been Visoflex LL1 Prism latest .... $110 fully utilized." CENTURY CAMERA The apartment shortage has (At our new location) been a major grievance of Flint 4254 N. Woodward, Royal Oak College's handful of black stu- Between 13 and 14 Mile Rd. dents, who claim the lack of stu- LI $-6356 dent housing prevents recruitment of blacks from the Detroit area. Take 94 to Southfield Expr. North to Members of the committee were 13 Mile Road-then East to Judith Davis, a Flint College stu- Woodward and North dent; Dean David French of Flint (Michigan Bank, Security and Diner College; William Haber, former Charges acqepted) dean of the literary college; D17_George Hall, a manager of the LOST AND FOUND Sears Roebuck Co. in Flint and a member of the Flint Citizens Ad- FOUND on Walnut St. Sat. night-1 visory Committee; Prof. Joseph man's watch: Call P. R. Muck, 761 Payne, chairman of SACUA; Prof. Alfred G. Raphelson, chairman of FOUND-Gold Bulova girl's watch in Flint College's psychology depart- front of LSA Bldg. Either call or ment; Everett Soop, director of come in at The Daily.A14 the University Extension Service; HELP! LOST in E. Packard area - and Stephen Spurr, dean of the Brownish-grey tom cat; long-haired; graduate school. wearing collar -and tag; named Kosh- A similar report on the future ka. Please call 761-0151, 761-2746. Re- ward. 3A16 of the University's Dearborn Cam- FOUND--B wk. old black male kitten in pus is expected to be completed Law Quad. Call 662-0050. A9 sometime this month. LOST-Yellowmutt, smale male, short ears, pink nose, chain collar, rabiesD tag, very friendly. Reward. Phone 662- .OA L 7992 or 764-8377. Al DTTT TT 'rXT% (Continued from Page 1) man with a reputation as a hard- liner on criminals." Sen. Robert C. Byrd, (D-W. Va.) said, "I knew him as a law and order judge . His record d i d not associate him with the acti- vists on the court." "He has demonstrated m a n y fine attainments," said Sen. Ro- man L. Hruska, (R-Neb.) "one of which will have especially w i d e appeal and that is his consistent support of law and order." Burger, whose first and middle names coincidentally are the re- verse of the present chief justice's name, was on most lists of those who speculated in recent months about what Nixon called last night "the most important nomination the President of the United States makes during his term of office." But Nixon's choice remained a secret throughout Wednesday aft- ernoon after the White House an-I nounced the President had reach- ed a decision and would take to nationwide radio and television at 7 p.m. to make known his selection of a jurist who has won a reputa- tion as a "law and order" judge on the appellate court. Only when Nixon marched into the East Room of the White House with Burger at his side did the verdict become known-at least, to those able to recognzie the tall, white-haired judge. "The chief justice is the guard-' M. Ed. and certification. Two y e a r teaching commitment with Corps. University of Maryand NASA Sum- mer Institute in Public Administration, June 30-Aug. 8. Open to undergraduates (Jr. next year or Sr.) Full tuition, trips, part-time employment responsibilities assumed by the Program. Apply before June 2. Interest in Public Ad., and min, i course in Amer. Govn't. National Rehabilitation Counseling Employment Exchange booklet offers' contacts for employment in all areas of rehab. Spring 69 issue now available. Areas of employment: Admin., Supv., Research, College and Univ. positions, Couns. Psychologists, Fellowships and Traineeships, Placement Specialists, Rehab. and Vocational Couns., Rehab. Therapists, Social Workers, Work Eval- uators and Work Adjustment Special- ian of the constitution of the United States," said Nixon. "Re- spect for law in a nation is the most priceless asset a free people can have. The chief justice and his associates are the ultimate custodians and guardians of that priceless asset." "I have known him through .21 years," the President said of the former assistant attorney general in the Eisenhower administration. "I would evaluate him as being qualified intellectually, qualified from the standpoint of judicial temperament, of judicial philoso- phy . Then, in a phrase appeared di- rected at the court's recent dis- comfiture, the President added: ". . and qualified because of his unquestioned integrity throughout his private and public ,life." Burger was born in St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 17, 1907. He was grad- uated from the University of Min- nesota and received his law degree from St. Paul College of Law - now Mitchell College of Law. For 22 years, he remained in private law practice in Minnesota until, in 1953, he was appointed by. President Dwight D. Eisenhower to be assistant attorney general in charge of the Justice Department's Civil Division. In March 1956, the Senate con- firmed Burger's nomination to be a judge on the Circuit Court of Appeals for the District of Colum- 1bia, ists, Agency Mgmt. and Operation Specialists, and4 other personnel. Interagency Board of U.S. Civil Ser- vice Examiners announces careers with Immigration a n d Naturalization Ser- vice, U.S. Border Patrol officers and related jobs. 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 mail. Summer Session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tion rates: $2.50 by carrier, $3.00 -by mail. the news today by The Associated Press and College Press Service SIRHAN SIRHAN was sentenced to death yesterday by Judge Herbert Walker despite a letter from Sen. Edward Kennedy pleading that the life of his brother's assassin be saved. Walker denied Sirhan a new trial, but the death penalty places the case on automatic appeal to the California Supreme Court. This and other legal maneuvering make it unlikely that Sirhan would be executed in San Quentin's gas chamber for at least a year. In a letter to Evelle Younger, Los Angeles County district attorney, Kennedy said, "My brother was a man of love and sentiment and com- passion. He would not have wanted his death to be a cause for the taking of another life." THE RHODESIAN GOVERNMENT published a proposed constitution yesterday which would give the country's overwhelm- ing black majority more representation only if they pay more taxes. Referendum on the proposal, set for June 20, is almost sure to pass along with a companion proposal making Rhodesia a republic free of ties with Britain. Most of Rhodesia's 89,000 voters are white. The new constitution would give the igovernment the power of preventive detention and restriction without trial. It will also give police additional powers to research people and property without warrant, allow for compulsory deprivation of property and permit laws "for the regulation of newspapers and other publications." The constitution specifies that over 44 million acres of land will be reserved for the 250,000 whites while 45 million will be allotted the country's 4 million blacks. THE HOUSE passed and sent to the Senate yesterday an emergency $3.78 billion appropriations bill after refusing to elimi- nate funds for the war in Vietnam. The bill provides miscellaneous agencies with funds for the re- maining weeks of the fiscal year ending June 30. A large portion, $1.18 billion, is for government pay raises that went into effect last July. * A standing vote of 140 to 25 defeated an amend1ment by William F. Ryan (D-NY) to eliminate the $1.23 billion earmarked for Vietnam. Ryan and those who supported pim want an immediate end to U.S. military activities in Southeast Asia. B r MARRIED COUPLES-Mature counsel- or for summer youth canoeing and hiking trips. Must be athletic, YM-YWCA 350 South Fifth.Avenue Phone: 663-0536 24H14 WANTED Responsible man to substitute as se- curity doorman during most of June. Call 761-5437 for details. 22H13 ATTENTION STUDENT WIVES We have immediate openings for stu- dent wives who. have had some tele-, phone operating experience or those who wish to be Tirained in this field. If you are one of these girls, drop in to see our employment representative. The office is located only 2% blocks fromn campu . New starting Wage. Wage credit for ex-employees Must be available to work variety of hours. Apply M-F, 8-12, 1-5 p.m., 20 E. Huron, City Center Bldg, 1st /floor. MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE an equal opportunity employer 181112 COLLEGE MEN - Looking for summer work? Call 662-9726. IOHtc Russ Gibb revives Rock "n.Rl *May 30th-31 st 12 NOON 212 MIDNIGHT Michigan State Fairgrounds Adm. $3.50 The Frost, SRC, MC5, Chock Berry, Johnny Winters, many, many others 8 Mile at Woodward DETROIT 7 t '33 PLYMOUTH coupe, very good cond., Chevy powered with rumble seat. Must sell. $600. Call 434-1320. 16N16 1968 VW-Dark blue, AM-FM radio. Call 663-5585 after 7 p.m. 17N12 TRIUMPH TR3, 1961. New engine, steer- ing, tires.. Beautiful. $450. 663-0256. 11N12 1964 PONTIAC ,GTO. $895. Good cond. Call 761-2916 betw. 11 a.m.-l1 p.m. 13N14 OPEN 24 HOURS! Whistle Stop, 611 S. Forest. Good Food. 14F17 BIKES AND SCOOTERS I 650 MATCHLESS-$400 or best offer. Honda 50-$90 or best offer. Call 761- 7906 after 4. 13Z16 1967 HONDA 90 step-through. Ex. cond., stored 1 year, low mileage. $190. Chris- tine, 665-4252 10Z13 '68 HONDA CL-90, excellent. $250. Call Kaz, 761-6683 11Z13 HONDA 50, 1965. 3200 miles, good con- dition. 663-3522 mornings. 12Z14 HONDA 50. Reasonable. Good cond. 764- 2560. 8Z12 D U L L 1 hllrI Placement GENERAL DIVISION 3200 S.A.B. Department of State, Agenc'y for In- ternational Development, Internships for leadership in a r e a s of internat'l. dev. Backgrounds in econ., bus. ad., law, govn't., internat'l. rel., acctg. and oth- ers are most appropriate. Postcard for convenience of applicants avail at P. S. Teacher Corps at O h i o University, Athens, Ohio, program of 2 years plus summer beginning Sept. 69, leading to I L* I i. Cj= DIAL 5-6290 FOR SALE CHEAP WINDOW FANS, couch, dress- er, bookcase, ironing, extra long bed, kitchen table and chairs. 665-0867. 13B14 RUMMAGE SALE ,- Sweaters, books, records, old china, sound equipment? and other good stuff cheap. Thurs. and Fri., May 22-23, after 6 p.m. Garage of 916 Church. NO 3-4086. B13 EASY CHAIR, bookcase, .b&w TV, mis- cellaneous. Best offers. 663-3787 p.m. 15B13 OSCILLOSCOPE. Signal generators and power supplies. $150 for lot. Call 971- 1335. 9817 TRANSPORTATION I NEED A RIDE to the Washington, D.C.; area. Call Fred, 662-2282. 6G12 WANTED TO RENT IF YOU NEED a roommate for a 2 man- 2 bedroom apt. for fall, call Don Wood collect at 1-517-382-5514. 2L12 ANN ARBOR CIVIC XHEATREU presents C O"She Stoops to Conquer"Ql or The Mistakes of a Night by OLIVER GOLDSMITH MAY21I,22, 23& 24 v 8:00 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre0c Box Office Hours . o 10:00 A.M.-Curtain c Phone 668-6300 Honda of Ann Arbor 3000 Packard at Platt-971-4500 serving U of .M since 1963 (Continued on Page 4) 9Ztc Ever see a billion dollars in solid gold stolen'before your very eyes? TRHOTS! (next week). I FRIDAY and SATURDAY WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE dir. Robert Aldrich (1962) Bette Davis Joan Crawford TONIGHT, FRI. & SAT. MICHAEL 1,421 Hi I St. 8:30 P.M. 761-1451 BOB.SUIUIIEIIIEpaiRIIloom in RAY BRADBURY'S Masterpiece of the supernatural! THe IIIUSTETEA MEEN TECHNICLOR* PANAVISION" From WARNER BIO$.-SEVEN ARTS . ' SNEAK PREVIEW-SAT. 9 P.M. I Ul~ .-----COUPON'-- On I I * THOMPSON'S ; PIZZA I U $1.00 OFF 1 i One a large one item (or more) pizza. One coupon per pizza. Pick Up Only 211 E. Ann St.-Next to E the Armory t Expires Aug. 1 - -- "M.C. has presented a consistently brilliant series of performances." -LOS ANGELES NIGHT LIFE COONKEY II "Year's scoriest most sophistica t, funniest and ted thriller." -Time ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM I 7 & 9 662-8871 OdNOWdOOMA SUNRA and his fifteen piece ASTRO INFINITY ARKESTRA at 7TUi FRIDAY and SATURDAY $2.00 May 23, 24 fall on by "the view of the living future of the living tomnorrow" i