.w 4s I Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, June 18, 1970 Thursday, June 18, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY For Direct Classified Ad Service. Phone- 764-0557 12 Noon Deadline Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 12 Noon Deadline WANTED TO BUY FOR SALE BIKES AND SCOOTERS REAL ESTATE PERSONAL WANTED-Potter's wheel. 2117 Wash-;FOR SALE--A ticket. Londion-Detroit, HONDA 300Scrambler. 769-3952.323 LAKE CHARLEVOIX Frontage. 10 Acre PAPERS written and typed, cheap, very te-awJ AA 48104J29K31 June 23, $70. 665-5653, 48B31 John St. Best offer.10235 parcels. $125 per ft. Restricted area. fast. Esp. Eng. 662-6485. 7F35 Excellent terms. Call or write for MOTORCYCLE tune-ups. 1 day service.! ANDREW! PHOTO SUPPLIES SONY T.V wcabinet, excellent condi- T Call 665-3114 for appointment. 935 COMPLETE DETAILS. NORTHERN and CAMERA Kanon FX piu lens, must t.6B32 HONDA 15 Scr4aembr 3,500 mile4.v306S.C L ke St.. Boyne City. Michigan' 3 combination apricot and banana- Oll, 483-3372 after D 2D31 Great shape. 1036 Oakland, No 2. 49712. Phone (616 582-7121 or (616) one with ketchup, and 37 blurbs - ... 15-FT. TRAVEL TRAILER. couble di-4Z31 347-3943. Res. phone (616) 582-9549. which you can write in your time off. l5-F TRVELTRAIER.di-DF32 PETS AND SUPPLIES ! nette, brakes, propane. Sleeps 7. Anti Ref. A-227. R33 Sway Bar. $1000 or best offer. 665-5017. DESPERATE-I want a small motor- KrTENS $ e igt k d r41B29 cycle that's in good used condition. BY OWNER-4-ldrm.. 2 yr. old colonial, heoWSE in draft comfort-well kee trained femai's mike 'ood pets, two ~----- - - Call Sara, 769-3215. DZ33 on acre, AA schools, low 40's. 663-7679, will now be open EVENINGS only- grey tigers. one black and white. Call US A.EU-EL T n -u.e rn NW section 2R33 7:00 to 10:30. 38F33 971-4762 neh9ixT 2 MUIC LBUCO 8100HELMET and Bubble, brand - - .---- RADIOS, REPAIRS new, $25. 769-5232. 8Z32 PERSONAL 2, 3, N 4 FOOT black light wfi FREE 2 friendly kittens Call 761-4914. RADiO TV Hi-F repair. H c - '68 BSA 250 Staifire, 2900 miles . -- _ture, under $16. 18. and $20. 769-2098 T2 Very Reasonable! Very Cheap!! 769- 662-8585 after 6 pm., 715 Church. No. MEET YOUR MATE at the Bach Club or 6626550. 8F35 6250. DX35 11. 6Z31 TONIGHT (Canterbury House. 8 P.M.) Nixon ur~ on wages, WASHINGTON (A)-President Nixon a yesterday delivered a stern lecture to tr business and labor, urging them to curb Si price boosts and wage demands. To back it up, he created two commissions and is a new "inflation alert" system to spot- pr light excessive increases. al "The fight against inflation is every- 30 body's business." Nixon told the nation th in a broadcast speech at noon. "If you act against the national in--ea terest; if you contribute to inflation in pr your price and wage demands--then you us are acting against your own best inter- C ests and your customer's best interest." 7 Nixon's words were the strongest of m his presidency and appeared to mark fe another step away from his earlier policy in of not seeking to influence industry's prices or labor's wage settlements. is It was the first time he had gone so p1 far as to set up an entirely new mechan- an ism for helping control inflation, which a, is emerging as a crucial issue of the November congressional elections - in su which the Republicans have hopes of u capturing control of Congress. pe The President's steps received a mixed st reaction in Congress, and drew praise from some Democrats. e His tone was optimistic. He said the an wartime ying to ion. He nlo droppi reviously 11 U.S. t 0 and 15 he next y At the s arlier pie Tices and se such ongress g Nor will nen or la ederal ca nflationa He urge lative pr rovide a ,nce syste nd aid tc He aske upplemer seful tra eople wI ummer m "All gov d to deter nd regula ixon said TRKANSPRTKAION FOR SALE-Round trip ticket to Eur,. Windsor to London, June 26-Aug. 6, very inexpensive, avail, immediately. Call anytime (preferably after 4), 761- 2240. 30035 RIDE WANTED to Vermont. Boston or vicinity. Leave today. Call collect-- Det. 923-3303 or 874-2363, ask for Rob. 31G31 RIDER NEEDED to Calitornia, leaving end of June. 663-7371. 28032. LEAVING for San Francisco June 22, share driving and expenses. 663-9785. 24G31 RIDER(S) WANTED for round trip (anywhere). Dep, 6-27, Ret. 7-23. 663-0174. 29032 S.F. MAGIC BUS leaves when moon is full (6-20). Need riders. Call Dr. Sun- shine, 668-8052. 27031 HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Unavailable instruments, repairs and instructions-=209 S. State. 665-8001. X PR. SONY SS-23 speakers. 1 yr. old, still in factory container-never used. 769-0894 after 6:30 p.m. 3X32 AM/FM STEREO 35 watt receiver. Best offer. Must sell. 761-9593. 2X33 CHEA'P, CHEAPCheap- - or 2 girls needed to help divide $90 mo. furn- ished 2 bdrm. apt. close to campus. Call Margi or Peggy at 483-4683. X33 ALTO SAX and CLARINET and trom, and drum set. Must sell. Best offer. Call 662-4058. 1X33 FOR SALE-SPINET PIANO Wanted, responsible party to take over low monthly payments on a spinet piano. Can be seen locally. Write Credit Manager, P.O. Box 276, Shelby- vilier. Indiana. 48X32 HONDA CB 160. 1966, Scrambler pipes,.{ with helmet, $200. 769-5232. 7Z32 USED CARS 1964 OLDS. Jetstar I, excellent condi- tion. 49,000 miles. best offer. 769- 2396. 46N34- 1962 SUNBEAN Alpine. Ray Lewis, 761- 6867. Good trans., rebuilt eng. 47N33 '67 OLDS 442-New engine, almost en- tirely rebuilt. Excellent condition. 769-4289. NDd 1969 KARMANN GHIA. In excellent condition. Call 663-4821. 44N33 CHEVY IMPALA, 1967 4 door, auto-f matic, power steering, V-8, radio, good condition. 769-3341 after 5. 45N32 1964 VALIANT Convertible. Ugly but runs well. Call 769-1147 or 663-9785 after 5:00 p.m. 43N31 45F: DISCOUNT BOOKSTORE? We've been discounting diamonds Ann Arbor for years. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University 663-7151 Student Book Service will now be ope EVENINGS from 7:00 to 10:30 an we promise not to replace the burr ed out bulb in the Romance langv gaes room. 32F; SUMMER HEBREW classes organizin beginners, intermediates. 761-678 4F; FREE CRAFT FAIR Artists-sell your handicrafts-- FREE U. CRAFT FAIR JULY 17-18, DIAG (concurrent with South U. Street fai open to everyone). Please regist4 how: 763-2130 or 663-2709. 3F: Women s Liberation Mass Meeting 8 P.M. Sunday f Newman Center 331 THOMPSON 6F32 TO AVOID the blistered noonday tripes -Student Book Service will now be open EVENINGS from 7:00 to 10:30. 40F33 ONCE AGAIN! Light or heavy house- keeping: rates depend on what you have me do. 764-7622. DFtc DON'T THROW away money And time on an amateur when you can have your thing photographed by a pro- fessional at a reasonable price. Call Richard Lee at 761-9452 before noon. PAINTING -- Student desires painting jobs,rinside and outside. Four years experience. Call 662-4736. FD U-M MALE professional student. emo- tionally stable, rationally liberal, in- terested in many things and life in general-wants to meet mature stable girl. This ad is placed in order to meet new faces, not because I am hurting! Reply to Mich. Daily, Box 50. 5F33 EXOTIC RECIPES! GOURMET COOK- ING! and fun to boot-Call 665-3369 early morning and eve. to sign up for cooking lessons. DF35 Creative Wedding and Portrait Photog- raphy by a top professional need not be expensive. if done by RICHARD LEE. Call 761-9452 before noon. DJtc FOR SALE: Keith Jarret's first Jazz album, Dion's Sit Down old friend, and Biff Rose's Thorn album. All only played once: I've overspent this month. $2.50 each or if your tastes are this desperate, $7.00 for all (big deal). 764-7622. DFtc BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEVIS? VISIT us FOR BLUE DENIM: Super Slims ...... 6.50 Button-Fly ...... 6.50 Traditional... ..6-98 Belts ....... 7.50 BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS..........2.49 MORE LEVI'S "White" Levi's .. 5.50 14 Colors) Sta-Prest "White" Levi's ..........6.98 Nuvo's ...........8.50 Over 7000 Pairs in Stock! Sa1mEs "Store 122 E. Washington, New CO guidelines -Associated Press The President after his noon speech nation is succeeding in converti brin-- ng from N mild reaction- on campus By LINDSAY CHANEY Campus reaction to the recent Supreme Court ruling broadening the conscientious objector classification ranges from neutral to favorable, with most people taking a wait- and-see attitude. "It's opening the door to a whole lot of legal problems," says Henry Barget, '70P. "Someone has to decide who qual- ifies for the CO status." Barget says he views the rulings as principally a "polit- ical gesture." On Tusday, Draft Director Curtis Tarr outlined a def- inition of conscientious objector, based on the Supreme Court ruling. Tarr's definition contained the following four condi- tions: --The man's belief must be sincere. -The man must be opposed to war in all forms. No one can be granted exemption for opposition to a particular war. -The man must have taken into account the thoughts of other wise men; he must have consulted some system of belief. -The man's belief needs to be the result of some relig- ious kind of training. Tarr said he will send d-aft boards a set of guidelines in the next few days. John Rieley, a visiting student from Wayne, maintains that the change was a move to "appease liberals." "These are just tokenisms," he says. "What is needed is a total revision of the system, in fact, the draft should be abolished altogether." A business administration graduate student however, calls the ruling an "enlightened step." "The government has to respect a person s conscience. It can't expect you to obey laws, but still go out and kill if its against your moral principles." The ruling was a "recognition of people's moral and ethical values, even if these values do not fit into a tradi- tional religious doctrine," says one graduate student in natural resources. "Of course, its going to be awfully hard to determine who qualifies as a CO," he admits. Gary Gerbstadt, '72, agrees that someone would have to define more strictly who qualifies as a CO, "And I think the Selective Service is going to fight it." An engineering student says it probably will be as hard to get a CO deferment now as it was prior to the new ruling. "I find it hard to believe that a large number of people have evolved personal pacifict beliefs stemming from extensive reading or training outside of religion," ibe says. "Nonetheless, the ruling is still progressive since there is no reason why organized religion should have any mo- nopoly on pacifism." Col. W. J. Meyers, deputy director of the Michigan Selective Service System says he anticipated "very little change" due to the new ruling. Meyers says his office has not received the official guide- lines and he is therefore unwilling to make any further comments on the rules. '*U' g4 mflk ByC The state Hc day approved ar building constru the 1970-71 fisca the University h The $3.5 mill --$100,000 for of the East Medi $80,000 for t: North Campus I lege; $150,000 for modernization a center. -$826,000 fo: Bldg.; -$175,000 fc room and office Flint campus; -$1.7 millioi of the new Mode --$500,000 'f sity Hospital. M1o K a 'Ile - t " Police-sniper clashes continue in ORLON' STRING-KNITS TIE UP A COOL THING FOR SUMMER. Burly to look at, breezy to wear, and a cinch to take care of. These Wintuck Orlon" string-knit shirts have a ring neck, come in celery, star blue, umber, maize, grey or sandstone, with contrasting trim. Sizes S,M,LXL at $9 MIAMI M-i-Snipers and police officers yes- terday exchanged, gunfire and at least four build- ings were set ablaze in two black sections as Miami was thrown into its third night of racial violence. Five persons were wounded in the exchanges. Bullets struck a young man and woman as they stood on a balcony watching firemen battle a blaze at a firebombed convenience store. Offi- cials said neither was wounded seriously and it was not clear who fired the shots. Another youth was wounded by snipers in the Brownsville district, police said, and a third man and a 60-year-old women were also shot. Officials said it had not been determined if the shots were fired by snipers concealed in darkened buildings or by policemen. Firebombs were hurled at a half dozen build- ings including a school and a soft drink bottling plant where thousands of 'wooden cases sent flames 50 feet in the air. Shotgun-carrying policemen were assigned to guard the fire fighters after the firemen were bombarded with bottles and stones. Heavily armed squads of helmeted police offi- cers swept through the troubled areas continually. through the night. Some 51 persons were arrested during the night on various charges. Police said they were returning fire from snipers at two points in the Brownsville district where the trouble first began Monday. The violence flared despite a strict curfew being clamped on nearly half of Miami and ad- joining black areas of Dade County. Five persons were shot, two critically, and 25 others injured Tuesday night and yesterday morning before CityeManagar Melvin Reese de- clared a state of emergency and imposed an indefinite 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew. The order banned vehicular or pedestrian traffic, sale of liquor, and sale or purchase of firearms or ammunition in a huge area em- bracing the Brownsville, Liberty City and Coco- nut Grove black communities. Ignited by reports that a black housewife had been insulted in the Pic N Pay supermarket in the Brownsville section, the rioting began Tues- clay and grew more furious yesterday. Many automobiles were overturned and set ablaze. Dozens of stores were fire-bombed and looted. Jackson Memorial Hospital brought in 10 extra surgeons to deal with emergency cases. Two white men, L. C. Morris, a 42-year-old cement contractor, and Douglas Leach, 57, were mistaken as snipers and shot by police as they stood guard on the roof of Morris's Plant. /fY~ Arborland Store open: Monday thru Friday 10-9, Saturday 9:30-9 A MIAMI METRO POLICEMAN gu that was set on fire during the s turbanees in the Brownsville section