11 * 1~ w - AL AW Ak -IV A I /r r 1 f Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 10, 1970 Wednesday, June 10, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 ___ Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 Black skin, cop's badget Multiplyin (Additional Classifieds on Page 9) FOR RENT The Ann Arbor Fair Housing Ordi- nance and the University of Mich- igan Regents' bylaws prohibit dis- crimination in housing. Questions should be directed to Off-Campus Housing, 764-7400. AVAIL. NOW -3-bdrm. ranch, unfurn, garage, basement, $285. 663-3842. 12028 SPACIOUS SUITE for 1 or 2 men, pri- vate entr., refrig. 662-3481. C32 DOUBLE SIZE TOWNHOUSE, walk downtown from lovely two bdrm. for family. Many extra rms. . . photo- graphic dkrm., family rm. w/fireplace, Ig. study. All appliances and dish- washer. $275 pays-central ac, heat, water. 761-4008, 725 W. Huron. Avail. now. 37Ctc STRATFORD 629 S. FOREST 2-Bdrm. 4-Man On Campus Air Cond. Parking 761 -8055 50Ctc FOR RENT AVAIL. FOR SUMMEtt & FALLI ALBERT TERRACE 1700 Geddes Beautifully decorated, large 2 bedroom. bi-level apartments. Stop in daily noon to 5:30 (Mon.-Fri.). 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat. or phone 761-1717 or 665- 8825. 11Ctc PARKLANEr 511 E. HOOVER -Lg. 1 Bdrm. -2-4 People -Bilevel -Air Cond. -Dishwashers -Parking -Laundry 761 -8055 or 663-3809 2Ctc THOMAS PLAZA 914 S. STATE 1 Bdrm. 3-Man Study Nook Air Cond. Laundry Parking 761 -8055-769-4759 1Ctc FOR RENT FOR RENT 71 I ARCH near State and Packard Modern 2-bdrm. apts. for Fall features include: 0 dishwasher * balcony 0 air-cofnd. 0 and much more Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867 S260tc NEED ONE GIRL to complete lovely4- man apartment on Thayer across the street from Frieze Bldg. $65/month. Call Carla at 769-0937, 764-0553. DC27 1 GIRL over 21 for luxurious apt. 761- 1584 eves. 10C27 Campus-Hospital Fall Occupancy Furnished Apartments Campus Management, Inc. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 47Ctc FOR RENT-Bedroom in large house. male or female, June 20-Aug. 30. Neg. Roz. 662-4049. DC26 CAMPUS NEW FURNiSHEP APARTMENTS FOR SUMMER AND FALL at 543 CHURCH ST. DAHLMANN APARTMENTS 545 CHURCH ST. 781-7600 38tc TRADEW I NDS 121 E. HOOVER -1 Bdrm. 3-Man -2 $drm. 4-Man -Bilevel -Garbage Disposal -Central Air/cond. -Laundry -Parking 761-8055 or 761-9178 3Ctc PRELIMINARY SPONSORS LIST Ann Arbor Community Coalition John E. Mitchell, International Rep., Amalgamated Meat Cutters & Butch- erworkmen of North America, Boston Valentino Venny Munoz, United Farm Workers Organizing Committee, Calif . Fr. Don Nolan, Human Relations Divi- sion, Archdiocese of Detroit David Neifeld, President, Retail Clerks Union, Local 415 (AFL-CIO), Phila- delphia New Jersev New Mobe New York Moratorium Committee Northern California Chicano Moratorium Oakland County WILPF, Michigan Oberlin Strike Committee Pacific Northwest New Mobe Sam Pollock, President, District Union 427. Amalgamated MeatCutters & Butcherworkmen of North America (A FL- ClO) Andrew Pulley, Ft. Jackson 8 Mork Rosenick, President, Student Body, Case Western Reserve University John T. Williams. Vice-president, Team- sters Local 208, Los Angeles Audo Rormaine, Sec'y-Treas., Local 500, Amaloamated Meat Cutters & Butch- erworkmen of North America (AFL- CIO) Son Francisco Peace and Freedom Party Gus Scholle, President, Michigan AFL- CIO Dan Siegel, President, Assoc. Students, University of Cal. at Berkeley Independent Campus Women, San Fran- cisco State Michel Judkins, Vice-president, Chicago Independent Union of Public Aid Em- ployees James Lafferty, Co-chairman, Detroit Coalition Ben Leeds, Treasurer, Concerned Demo- cratic Council, Los Angeles Jerry Lennon, rep. AFSCME Council 42, Los Angeles Carol Lipman, National Executive Secre- tary, SMC Herb Magidson, Individuals Against the Crime of Silence John McCann, Co-ordinator, Massachu- setts Referendum '70 Pvt. Joe Miles, Ft. Richardson, Alaska Joe Miller, Field Organizer, United Elec- trical, Radio & Machine Workers of America (UE), Minneapolis Lawrence Adler, UE District 7, Cleveland Atlanta Mobilization Committee Beacon Hill Support Group, Boston Berkeley Faculty-Student Ad Hoc Peace Committee Berkeley Strike Coordinating Committee Fred Brode, Chairman, Houston CEWV Cambridge Veterans for Peace Ei A' a call to an MFERE c FOR RENT 2-BEDROOM furnished, quiet, close to campus, parking. Mgr. 101-202. July Aug. $150/mo.-Fall 4-man, $290. 927 S. Forest, after 5 p.m. 662-6156. 035 THE ABBEY THE LODGE CARRIAGE HOUSE THE FORUM VISCOUNT still the local favorites! Several select apartments available for summer and fall semesters in each of these modern 'buildings Charter Realty Fine Campus Apartments 1335 S. University 665-8825 loCtc Summit Associates 1 AND 2 BEDROOMS FOR FALL -GARBAGE DISPOSALS -AIR CONDITIONERS + -SOME DISHWASHERS -LAUNDRY FACILITIES -PARKING 761-8055 4Ctc SUMMER AND FALL. off and on cam- pus. 761-7764. C28 Fall RentaIs 663-0511 761-5440 Featuring Forest Terrace. 1001 S. Forest. Mgr. in Apt. No. 211. Park Terrace 848 Tappan, Mgr. in Apt. No. 10. Many other 1, 2 and 3 bdrm. apts. available on campus. 38082 TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED 6/12 or 6/13 to Windsor or Leamington, Ontario. Call David. 769-0227. DG27 SAN FRANCISCO---Intern leaving June 27, share expenses. 761-9407 or 761- 7640, 25G28 CHICK looking for another Chick to share experiences and driving on long camping trip to California. Mary H. 1-871-4728 or 1-875-7259. 24G29 INDIA Overland. $204, regular trips. 39 Landsdowne Gardens, London, S.W. 8, U.K. 5G NEED RIDE to Traverse City June 12 or 19. Call 769-5412 for Jackie.J 27 HELP WANTED NAT'L. CORP opening an AA branch needs neat and aggressive college students with cars for full and part time employment. No exp. nec. Call 662-7020 between 12 and 5 for inter- view appointment. 35127 AMERICAN MALE U.M. students need- ed for 1a-2 hr Psych. exp., pay $4.00 plus winnings. 764-3276 or 764-3278 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Mon.-Fri H27 LOOKING for a job in any field-call Detroit: 1-255-5075 and ask for Bud Meadows. 33H28 NEED BABYSITTER-Full time, room and board, or pay. Cali 461-1008. 34H26 STATION ATTENDANTS, preferably fe- male. Super-Test, S. Main and E. Madison, contact Jack Toth, super- visor, in person. Summer or perma- nent. 26H28 BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEV IS? VISIT By The Associated Press His uniform is the same shade of blue, the metal of his badge the same quality. But when a policeman's skin is black, his problems tend to multiply. Of- ten, he is the man most in the middle - either because of his color or his badge. "The department reflects the same social conditions that are presently common," says Capt. W. Lawson, one of 21 black of- ficers on Seattle's 1,000-man police force. He is a 20 - year veteran. "When black officers join the force," he continued, "they know they will be singled out by black militants. The vast ma- jority of black officers take it in stride. The militants are do- ing their thing and I'm doing my thing and we both under- stand each other." Bob Ingram, 33, a sergeant was named last January as Mi- ami's "Policeman of the Year." His godfather w a s the city's first black officer and was shot to death while on duty. A bearded father of two, Ingram responded to an Associated Press sampling of the status of the black policeman: "I have it easier than he did, but it's still no Sunday school picnic." "In white neighborhoods, they call 'nigger' at me. Around the ghetto it's worse - unprintable stuff. Anyone who yells those things needs help, baby, not a punch in the mouth . .." "I'm the first to admit that black persons gripe about treat- ment f r o m black officers at least as much as they complain about white policemen," In- gram says. "The black man out there in the ghetto has a poor image of police. It stems from the old days when officers would slap anybody on his tail that got cute with them. They were hir- ed for brawn, not brains. They sometimes had muscles between their ears, too." Some black cops tend to hold their uniform or badge, rather than the color of their skin, re- sponsible for attitudes they en- counter among fellow blacks. An Atlanta vice squad detec- tive, Lt. J. H. Amos, who began as a patrolman in 1957, said of racial disturbances: "Those peo- ple don't give a damn what col- or you are. If you're a police- man, they're going to rock you." Milwaukee has 2,000 police- men, 53 of them black. One of them, who asked that his name not be used, is a plain-clothes- man. Speaking of the slums he said: "T h e uniform is taboo, no matter what color you are. Any animosity is aimed at 'whitey,' and whitey's uniform, for what it represents . . . But I stay up with the times. And I s t a y clean. The brothers know I'm a policeman, but they respect me because of the way I look and the way I act towards them. They know I'm also fair." "There's a portion of the kids, though, that no matter what you look like, as long as you're 'the man' you ain't w o r t h a damn. I'd say about 75 per cent of the blacks are pro-police and about 25 per cent are against. With the 25 per cent, there has been some reason for them to adopt this attitude," he says. "Years ago, it was the grown- ups who hated you, but not it's the kids, the little kids, 5 and 10 years old," said Arthur Jackson, 48, a Chicago police- man. "You've got to be flexible, like a whip or a tree. You've got to bend. So, they call y o u a name, so what?" What lures blacks into uni- forms then? And what keeps them there? James Robensop, 28, is one .of five black officers among 197 men on the Pasadena, Calif., force. A lean and amiable man. who wears an Afro haircut and often appears in t h e station house in a loose-fitting African shirt known as a dashiki, he is interested in improving the image of the black cop among members of his race. As he puts it: "You can help y o u r fellow black more than you ever could as a street corner militant . .. Before we've always been just good mercenaries - niggers de- fending the white power struc- ture. Now we're saying we're black men first and cops sec- ond." Fred Williams, a 6-foot, 280- pound patrolman has been with the Detroit Police Department for 16 years. "The black ghetto's salvation is for aware black men to get into law enforcement . . . Most black people are not opposed to law, but are opposed to the way it is being applied," Williams says. "I find the work challenging and enjoyable," said Levy Mc- Quietor. 26, of the Dallas police force. "You get people who are drunk who curse you. But they are cursing this blue uniform and what it represents. I never felt they were cursing me per- sonally." Some black policemen find a racial gap between black and white cops, plus what they re- gard as discrimination in pro- motion. Said o n e after three . years on the police force of a Southern city: "There is no communication between white officers a n d black officers. You come to the watch room in t h e morning. some speak, some don't speak . . . They have this oral exam, that they use to eliminate who- ever they w a n t to. One guy made 100 in the written exam. but didn't pass the oral exam." "There's no question about it," says a black policeman in a small California city in discus- _ sing discrimination. "There's little jokes like, 'Hey, you gonna tear off your patch and join the Panthers if they riot?' Plain - clothesman Cornelius Johnson, 40, of Chicago, doesn't like being called black. "There are some policemen who just don't like that," he says. "I mean, the idea is be- ing a policeman, period. But the word 'black,' you're segre- gating yourself with certain in- dividuals." The upper West Side is the beat of a disgruntled New York City patrolman, who asked that he not be identified by name. He is 35, a nine-year veteran, tall, well-proportioned, with a mustache and long but impec- cably trimmed hair. "The job of the police de- partment is to maintain t h e status quo," he declares. "The police force is the arm of the establishment." Like others, he senses what he regards as discrimination within police ranks: "You have to understand that policemen, whoever they a r e, come from their communities AL w i tu< fac th soi thf bl est wh ins wr rec leg er cal ree p cl SHOP JACOBSON'S MONDAY TIL 9:00 P.M. TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. co One hour free parking in the Maynard ramp with any purchase ' K" AGAINST THE WAR IN S.E. ASIA FRIDAY EVENING THRU SUNDAY AFTERNOON JUNE 19-20-21 CUYAHOGA COMMUNITY COLLEGE, CLEVELAND, OHIO "The purpose of the emergency conference is simple and to the point: to plan anti-war demonstrations and other anti-war activities of the most massive kind cen- tering on the crucial issue of withdrawal from the war and conducted in a peaceful and orderly fashion. This is the way to involve immense masses of ordinary people, trade unionists, GIs and their families, students, moderates, liberals and radicals, young and old, and all those who oppose the war regardless of their differences on various other matters." (Excerpted from the Conference Call.) SMC MEETING TONIGHT-7:30-1532 SAB to build AA participation in conference r--------------------------------- --------------- I clip and mail to SMC-1532 SAB-U. of M. I 1 Enclosed is Registration Fee ($5 adults/$2 students) 1 need transportation or I can take people in my car I cannot come. Enclosed is my donation of $ - .. Please keep me informed of conference decisions. t Name Address City State Zip Phone__ - - - I-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - it takes you to shape our clingy little underthings by Formfit Rogers. these strap-free stretchables 4 are part of the plot for .young, very natural shaping. They're slip-on stay-ups of nylon/Lycra * powernet in champagne beige. B p Gon: Cen mat "wh sen mr "I 62-y Icone sha] age sere roa care pan, che whil ly t tral haul Hari was In: ing trail hear befo Con than of w propd "I seng profs we, busi gave In licar sylvF able resu tong on a road termr $750 Se days sibil woul am aver empi, road VI h / 4 A. Bra-slip with Crepeset" skirt. 32-36 sizes. $7. B. Bra, 32-36 sizes. $4. '* Hip-rider I Leo Fenster, Sec'y., Cleveland District Auto Council (UAW AFL-CIO) Carl Finamore, Chicago Strike Council Grady Glen, President, Frame Unit Local 600, Dearborn, Mich. Jerry Gordon, Chairman, CAPAC Shirley Grant, United Poor People's Un- ion, Los Angeles Dick Gregory Don Gurewitz, National Co-ordinator, SMC Conn Hallinon, President, AFT Local 570, Berkeley Prof. Noam Chomsky, MIT Cleveland Area Peace Action Council Joe Cole, Ft. Jackson 8 Committee at Kent State Massacre Wit- nesses Stephanie Coontz, Seattle Laura Dertz, H.S. SMC leader, San Fran- cisco Detroit Coalition to End the War Now Malcolm C. Dobbs, President, Los An- geles chapter, Social Workers Union Sid Feinhersh, U. of Mass. Mobilization Committee Harold Feldman, Veterans for Peace, Philadelphia us F BLUE DENIM: Super Slims .... Button-Fly ..... Traditional .... Bells ......... BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS ....... OR .. 6.50 .. 6.50 .. 6.98 .. 7.50 I 2.49 brief. S-M-L. $3. T-a( Kay Camp, Nat'l Chairman, Philadelphia Chicago Strike Council Chicago Veterans for Peace WILPF, MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's . .. 5.50 (4 Colors) Sta-Prest "White" Levi's .........6.98 Nuvo's...........8.50 Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sam's Store } 1ltI~I COME TO MEETING OR CALL 764-2301 for Info. STREET FLOOR 122 E. Washington