Tuesday, April IL,-19?? THE MICHIGAN DAILY 't-Ope Tuesday, April 12,-i 91'7' THE MICHIGAN DAILY .p-~JO~ 3C'V~IU Ni SAVNG THEY'RE ALLINh Fleming: Fall tuition' increase inevitable Hearst returns to childhood area SAN FRANCISCO (A) - Patri- Berkeley apartment in February cia Hearst quietly left her plush 1974 by the SLA and was cap- Nob Hill apartment more than tured by federal agents in a San a week ago to return with her'Francisco apartment Sept. 18, parents to Hillsborough, it was 1975. reported yesterday. She was convicted by a fed- (Continued from Page 6) PERSONAL PERK UP YOUR SPRING. Register for our May classes in weaving, spin- ning, natural dyeing, and basketry. At the Wild Weft Yarn Shop, 415 N, Fifth Ave., Kerrytown, 761-2466. cF412 BUMPER STICKERS. Custom print- ed while-U-wait t MBL PRESS, 1217 Prospect, Ann Arbor, 761-0942. cFtc WEDDING INVITATIONS - Mod or traditiqn. Call 761-0942 anytime. cFtc PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS Through B e h a v 1 o r Modification. Wolverine Institute, 973-1480. cFtc CAROL AND PHYLLIS 'F- I LOVE YOU BOTH, MADLY, THEOPHILUS. epic COPIES-as low as 2%c Still the best price around. IMPRESS, 524 E. William, 665-4321. cFtc DISSERTATION SPECIAL LOWEST PRICE IN TOWN FOR COLLATED COPIES RACK HAM QUALITY GUARANTEED COPYOU ICK 1217 S. University 769-0560 cFtc JAZZ at the University Club with the Root's Trio* Noel Cunningham, piano; Ted Hartley, bass: Stanley Slaughter. drums. Friday and Satur- day evenings 9:30 p.m.-1:30 xa.m. in the club cocktail lounge in the Michigan Union building. Ask hos- tess for a free trial membership card. 763-2236. cFtc FRIENDS LAKE COMMUNITY 80 acre wildlife preserve near Chel- sea. Swimming, sailing, camping, ca- noeing, picnicking. All-year mem- bership $50 per adult, children free. Brochure from Bloods, 2005 Penn- craft, Ann Arbor, MI 48103. 63F419 XEROX AND OFFSET fast, low cost duplicating COPY QUICK 1217 S. University 769-0560 eFte SEE OUR COSMETICIAN for your make-up needs. Village Arnthecary, 1112 S. Univ. Ave. cFtc YPSI-ANN ARBOR LANES and LOUNGE, open bowling available at the following times: Sunday-Monday and Tuesday at 9:30, Friday 6:30- 9:30, and 11:30-2:00 a.m. 98F419 PERK UP YOUR SPRING! Register for our classes in weaving, spinning, material dyeing, and basketry at the Wild Weft Yarn Shop' cF412 PERSONAL PR-(iNAN'I? Need help? Call Problem Ptegnancy Help, 759- 1283. Pregnaney tests available. citc DANCE STUDIO COURSES Ballet, Beg. Ballet, Cont. Modern, Beg. Modern I. p.m. Modern II, p.m. Modern I, a.m. Modern II,.aam. Jazz, Beg. Jazz, Cont . Creative Dance Afro Dance Blues and Jazz Body Shop Beledi I (Belly Dance) Modern Ballroom Disco/Contemp. Appalachian Folk Hawaiian/Tahitian PHYSICAL ART COURSES Yoga, Hatha Tai Chij r Karate Women's Self Dense Fencing Mime and more PHOTOGRAPHY COURSES Photo I Photo I1 Darkroom I Camera/Darkroom I Camera/Darkroom II Direct Color Print Color Slide Devel. I Cibachrome Print Lighting, B & White plus Color Informal Portrait Studio Techniques Figure Photo Modeling I Film making Nature Photo ART STUDIO COURSES Life Drawing, Beg. Life Drawing, Adv. Life Drawing, Practice Creative Draw/Paint. Acrylics Oil Watercolor Art Design for Media Color Concept Calligraphy Pottery, Hand and Wheel Stained Glass, Beg. Stained Glass, Adv.j Stained Glass, Beg/Adv. Glass Blowing, Beg. ' Glass Blowing, Adv. Glass Blowing Workshop Glass Molding Weaving, Primitive Macrame /Basketweaving Patchwork Quilting Batik and Tie Dye Silkscreen Printing Woodcarving Graphic Design REGISTRATION NOW OPEN FOR STUDIO COURSES BEGINNING IN MAY ART WORLDS 213 So. Main Street Ann Arbor, Mich. Phone: 994-8400 66F320 PERSONAL (Continued from Page 1) SUCCESSFUL well endowed young was $1.5 million more than.the businessman-novelist seeks fun-lov- University budgeted for.# ina woman 18-28 for discreet second To fill the hole, Fleming said relationship. Desire and promise complete confidentiality. Photo we]- the University will utilize some come if available. Write to ALAN, of its "flexible monies," gener- P.O. Box 187. Dexter, MI 4$130. ated from interest payments on 99F412 investments. Although these DRARMA STUDY GROUP, a Bud- funds are useful in extricating dhist meditation group under the the University from "non-re- direction of Ven. Chogyam Trungpa, curring budgetary problems," Rirpoche, meets weekly for medi -Fleming said "they cannot sus- tation and study. For information phone 761-3352 or 994-6657. eFt taLin us in the long run." - ----.. --- - - IN ADDITION to tuition hikes DON'T PAY for a store's overhead I DIIOttutior ie via high mark-up. For the area's and soliciting the state for larg- lowest prices and finest qualities er allocations, funneling of possible on an engagement ring, funds from one area within the shop Austin Diamond, 1209 S. Uni- Universit to another is a third versity, 663-7151. cFtc option being considered. SCIENCE AND VALUES. Interested? "We lik to think that the Uni- Try University course 265 next Fall, 'versity never engages in unes- sponsored by the Collegiate Insti- sential things," Fleming com- tiute for Values and Science. Mon- Ithns"Feigcm day, Wednesday, and Friday at 10.00. mented. "One - of the least 48F417 pleasant jobs an administrator STEVE'S LUNCH-Come for home1 has to face is deciding what the cooking. Breakfast all day,.great University can really afford to soups and egg rolls. 3 egg omelets dispose of." with fresh vegetables and fresh Academic programs, it has bean sprouts served all day. Sundays been shown in recent months, 10-8. 1313 South University. cFtc _---are not immune from disposal. VISIT ANN ARBOR'S only gem lab Professor Brymer Williams, before you spend your money need- lessly. Fine quality diamonds and chairman of the Senate Advis- low prices on all engagement and oryCommittee on University wedding rings. Austin Diamond, Affairs (SACUA), termed the 1209 S. University, 663-7151. cFtc proposed guidelines for the MEDIEVAL THEATER at its best, discontinuance of programs a "The Play of Robin and Marion", "significant accomplishment." April 16, 8:00 p.m., Mendelssohn The guidelines proposal was Theatre. Tickets at Jacobson's, Lib- the joint product of the Senate ert y Music, Mendelssohn (week of production), or call 763-2066 (morn- Assembly, the Vice President for ings). Group rates available. 49F417 Academic Affairs and the fac- ulty governance system. Wil- 1BRIGHT, vivacious, sensitive, some- SwhatJewish 21 yr. old undergradu- liams said it represents "what ate woman (5'7") interested in mu- we think is a fair procedure" sic, languages, sports, arts, learn- by which to consider program ing, having fun, people and life closure. The document will be would like to meet intelligent at- resented to the Regents for tractive male. (preferably senior or p grad student) with similar interests. their approval this week. Write Box 15, Michigan Daily. Th'e search for Vice President 86F410 Frank Rhode's successor was OPPORTUNITY TO PUBLISH an another priority on Fleming's make money from your regular re- agenda before the Faculty Sen- ports, bibliographies, studies. arti- ate. Specifically, Fleming dis- Iles, poems, etc., through the Guten- cussed the need to restructure berg Connection. Free information. the office of the vice president. Mail Markets, MD, 1797 Sheffield Dr., Ypsilanti, Michigan 48197. 06F412 "MANY DEANS often say THE SELIGSON PLAYERS Present PLAUTUS' COMEDY PSEU DOLUS' APRIL 14, 15-8:00 p.m. APRIL 16-2:30 p.m.' Angell Hall Foyer , Contributions Welcome that the position has grown be- yond the capacity for. any one individual to handle," Fleming said. He suggested alternativs to the current set-up, among them: the establishment of a second office of the vice presi-i dent; creating a chancellor's, position to the University inj Ann Arbor as is done on the[ Flint and Dearborn campuses; and the advent of an assistant to the vice president for aca- demic affairs.' Regardless of structural changes which may be made,' Fleming said, the University should continue with the present search, and "identify and ap- point the very best person we. can find for that position." Presently, tere are over 40: persons in contention for they post Rhodes' evacuates this1 summer. The deadline for filing applications and submitting nominations is April 30._ According to speech Prof. William Colburn, secretary of SACUA, the procedures for con- ducting the search and screen- ing the candidates "has. not been finalized yet. We're not at all in the advanced stages of this process." Fleming had originally re- quested the search committee to hand him their final recom- mendations for vice president sometime in mid-May. Wichita State sees action in seven night football games this season. The San Francisco Chronicle said the family moved because the 23-year-old newspaper hei- ress, free on $1.25 million bail pending appeal of her banktrob- bery conviction, felt "out of everything" in San Francisco and wanted to return to the area where she grew up. Randolph and C a t h e r i n e Hearst moved to the Nob Hill apartment early in 1975 while their daughter still was on the run with her Symbionese Liber- ation Army companions. After their daughter was freed on bail, she moved in with them. Hearst was kidnaped from her eral court jury last year of par- ticipating in the March 1974 robbery of a Hibernia Bank branch in San Francisco and sentenced to a seven-year prison term. Hearst -a u t D --C-t -~ ~ Grdut Dance Coner 111 1l jr II 'iE ItEI APRIL 14, 15, 16-8:00 P.M. DANCE BUILDING ((behind Central Campus Recreation Building) " Research, Writing, Editing " Professional, Fast " Any Topic, All Fields Send $1 for Mail Order Catalog or Write for free information Our sevices are sold for Researci, and Refterencexurposes o'y THE ACADEMIC RESEARCH GROUP, Inc. 240 Park Avenue Rutherford, Now Jersey 07070 Phone 1201) 939-0189 i STUDIO THEATER '$1.00 DONATION INFORMATION: 763-5460 Original Dance and Music A i by Graduate Students 11 L SOUND MUSICAL. - Before Sound theonly way to yourrcordfm ,asnotto plai Guard, plegnt y them. The villain behind this destruction is friction. (If a diamond cuts through steel, you can imagine what a, diamond stylus does to vinyl records.) Fortunately, from outer space has come a solu- tion to record degradation. It's called Sound Guard* A by-product of re- search into dry lubricants for aerospace applications, Sound Guard record preservative puts a micro- scopically-thin,(less than 0.000003") dry film on records to protect the grooves from damage. Yet, remarkably, it does not degrade fidelity. Independent tests show that Sound Guard pre- servative maintains full time significantly retarding increases in surface noise and harmonic distortion!* In other words, when applied according to in- structions, a new record treated with Sound Guard preservative and played 100 times sounds the same as one-in "mint" condition played the first time! Sound Guard preserva- tive comes in a kit (complete with non-aerosol pump sprayer and velvet buffing pad). It is completely safe and effective for all discs, from precious old 78's to the newest LP's including CD-4's. Recently introduced to audiophiles, Sound Guard preservative is now avail- able in audio and record - If you've played any record often enough, you've heard the inevitable occur. It wore out. While "pops;'"hisses' and other surface noises began making their appear- ance on your favorite records, high frequency sounds-like violins and flutes--began disappearing. sw ..ti.,h i } NiM£t 9 aWwmr& 7 IJI' ' V W UFV'F0: