,I I A$1 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 1, 1970 Wednesday, July 1, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 12Noon Deadline Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 300 12 Noon Deadline 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 BARGAIN!-$40. One man needed for July-Aug. Arbor Forest Apts. 769-7248. 10C40 1 OR 2 MEN to complete 2-bedroom apt. for fall. Air-cond., disp. $250 for 4, $225 for 3. Also 1 sublet July/Aug. Call Elliott or Animesh, 668-8915 or 761-7435. 11037 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail, for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. 15Ctc MALE ROOMMATE needed to share 4 bdrm. house, reasonable rent. 761-8166 or 763-1491. 13036 JULY-AUG. Girl needed for mod. 2-man apt. Air-cond., swimming pool, near campus. $50/mo. 662-9165. 14036 2 BDRM. FURN. units on campus, avail. for fall. McKinley Assoc., 663- 6448. S0Ctc Summit Associates CHOICE APARTMENTS STILL AVAILABLE FOR FALL FOR RENT EDINBURGH APTS., 912 Brown St. The Royal Dutch Apts., 715 Church. The King's Inn Apts., 1939 Dewey. Taking applications for fall rental for all 3 locations. For rental information call 761-8150 or 761-3466. 4041- 1 AND 2 BDRM. furn. units for fall, 1 bdrm. $155 and $160. 2 bdrm. from $210 for 2, from $225 for 3. Call663- 1761. 15C44 FURN. APT. for rent 'til Aug. 20. 2250 Fuller Id. 663-9576 eves. 16045 BDRM. in 7 bdrm. house, back yard, kitchen facilities, campus. 663-8609. 17037 AUGUST OCCUPANCY (2 bdrm, unit-summer % term) Campus area, cool, furnished apart- ments. 1 and 2 bdrm.-ample park- ing, contact Resident Manager, Apt. 102, 721 S. Forest St. 16Ctc Apartments Limited ONE AND TWO BEDROOM APARTMENTS FOR FALL FOR RENT UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES CAMPUS NEW FURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR FALL DAHLMANN APARTMENTS 54i CHURCH ST. 701-7800 LINES 1 dayy 2 1.00 3 1.10 4 1.35 5 1.55 6 1.80 7 22.00 8 2.20 9 2.40 10 2.60 INCHES 1 2.60 2 4.90 3 6.95 4 8.90 5 10.70 2 days 1.60 2.15 2.60 3.00 3.40 3.75 4:15 4.55 4.95 4.95 9.50 13.50 17.35 21.10 3 days 2.35 3.10 3.75 4.35 4.95 5.50 6.10 6.65 7.15 7.15 13.80 19.75 25.55 31.40 4 do s 3. 5 4.05 4.05 4.65 -6.35 7.20 7.90 8.70 9.30 9.30 17.85 25.50 33.45 41.40 5 days _3.65 4.85 5.90 6.90 7.85 8.85 9.75 10.65 11.35 11.35 21.75 31.15 40.95 51.15 6 days 4.20 5.65 6.90 8.05 9.25 10.40 11.45 12.60 13.60 13.30 25.40 36.65 48.30 60.50 add. .60 .80 .95 1.15 1.30 1.45 1.55 1.70 1.80 1.80 1.80 1.80 1.80 1 .a0 O WASHINGTON (AP) - ApolloA 14 will leave for the moon no earlier than Jan. 31 next year -a delay of two additional months-and then only if ex- tensive design changes costing up to $15 million have been completed. When it is launched, the head of the space agency said yester- day, the spacecraft's service module will have three oxygen tanks instead of two-all niodi- fled to eliminate potential com- bustion hazards in higly-press- ure oxygen. It was an explosion in oxygen tank No. 2 that crippled the Apollo 13 moonship in April, doomed its $375-million moon- landing mission and endangered the lives of the three astronauts 205,000 miles from earth. Dr. Thomas 0. Paine, the NASA administrator, told the I14fa4 Senate Space Committee that the agency is reviewing its con- tracts with North American Rockwell, which built the com- mand and service modules, "to determine what steps should be taken by NASA in light of the accident." North American Rockwell's contract includes an incentive fee. "That fee," Paine said, "will be determined in view of all activities during 1970 and thus will be based not only on the Apollo 13 accident but also on. the effectiveness of the redesign and rebuilding . ." Grumman, which built the lunar lander that provided the astronauts with oxygen and power after the accident, has fee provisions hinging on perform- ance. The lander "clearly demon- strated its ability to have suc- cessfully performed most of the operations of an actual landing," Paine said, and an assessment is being made on what portion of the performance was demon- strated "and therefore what portion of the incentive fee should be paid now." Paine told the senators that it is too early to present detailed cost figures for the design changes. "Our best current es- timate," he said, "is that it will be in the range -of $10 mil- lion to $15 million of increased costs, which we plan to handle within our total Apollo budget." Apollo 15 will not be launched until July or August, Paine said, thus preserving the 8-month in- tervals the agency has decided on. There had been talk Apollo 15 might be skipped altogether, using the hardware for an ad- ditional Skylab launch in 1972. Appolo 14 will again aim for a landing on the moon's Fra Mauro region. That means only one manned moan launch in fiscal 1971, a move which a House committee had recommended, saying it would save 106 million in costs. But Dale Myers, associate ad- ministrator for manned space flight, said the single launching would save only $20 million and that the modification cost would come from those funds. The House-passed appropri- ation for the space agency in the fiscal year beginning today totals $3.19 billion. The Senate Appropriations Committee has recommended $3.31 billion and the measure awaits floor action. Dr. Rocco A. Petrone, Apollo program director, said the major Ces two-month d char oxyj mot( with alun resi recol thin accit potei PS Apo] thro tech he h Acad the : vent cosn 38Ctc AVAIL. FOR SUMME- -FALL ALBERT TERRACE 200 Geddes Beautifully decorated, large 2 bedroom, bi-level apartments. Stopm in daily noon to 5:30 (Mon.-Fri.), 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat. or phone 761-1717 or 665- 8825. 11Ctc Campus-Hospital Fall Occupancy Furnished Apartments Campus Management, Inc. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 47Ctc 711 ARCH-Near State and Packard- Modern 2-bdrm. apts. for Fall. Dish- washer, balcony, air-cond., and much more. Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867. 26Ctc Additional costs-per day after six days. Ads that are 11%A, 2'/2, 312, etc. inch size will average of the lower and higher inch rate. be billed at the i i 663-0511 761-5440 50tc I 2 BDRM. furn. apt. $210 for 3 persons, includes utilities, parking. 761-2939. 9ctc GIRL-Room w/kitchen privilegts. $40/ summer, $55/fall. HU 5-1586. 12038 761-8055 49Ctc KWIK 'N KLEIN 662-4251 740 PACKARD 662-4241 On SHIRTS With Hangers Dry Or 33cCleaning Packaged Order HOURS COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY OPEN Mon. thru Fri. 7:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. MON.-SUN. 7:30 A.M. TO 11 P.M. Saturday 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. WASHERS STILL ONLY 25c, DRYERS Sc FOR RENT FOR QUIET mature female, furn., a/c, 1 bdrm., apt., utilitarian, July 3-Aug. rent negot. 769-1632 appt. only. 18C38 CAMPUS-HOSPITAL REDUCED, attrac- tive paneled small furn. first floor room for man or woman, 21 or over, house refrigerator. $10.50/wk. Lease through Aug. 663-5666 or 971-6270. 19Ctc 911 S. Forest Near Hill St.-Modern 2 Bdrm.. 3-man. 668-6906. Fall. 14Ctc 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 WANTED TO RENT WANT TO RENT parking space fall- winter near East Quad, if you are not using your's write Bill Jacobs, 61-55 98th St., Rego Park, N.Y. 11374. 15L29 GAY GRAD, male, needs clean, quiet, cheap, private room. Call 761-7275 until 11:00 p.m. L35 SINGLE APT., normal facilities, for July-Aug., preferably near campus. Please reply Box 378, Mich. Daily. DLtc FOR SALE DIVING GEAR All major brands at discount prices, Ann Arbor Diver's Co., call Mike Wills, 665-6032 persistently noons or after 5 best, 711 Arch, No. 301. 7B45 GET THE DRUM set used by the Byrds' and Commander Cody's drummers! Ludwig Drums. Full set. Zildjian cym- bals. Reasonable. Call 761-2704 any- time. DB40 WANTED TO BUY CAR WANTED-4 or 6 cylinder flow horsepower), 1967 or older, good con- dition, economical. 761-0047. 30K ROOMMATES WANTED WOMAN GRAD wanted to share really nice apt. Own room. Rent negot. 764- 0510 mornings, or 662-0348 evenings. DY40 PLACES AVAILABLE for summer and fall terms at Friends Center Inter- national Co-op, 1416 Hill St. Room and board for foreign and American women; board for foreign and Ameri- can men. Stop in or call 761-7435. 8Y36 MISCELLANEOUS LEAVING COUNTRY-Must sell entire Great Books set; 4 mos. old, worth $850 for $450. Call 769-0024. DM8 BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEVIS ? VISIT US FOR BLUE DENIM: Super Slims .......6.50 Button-Fly ........6.50 Traditional .......6.98 Bells ............7.50 BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS ..........2.49 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 122 E. Washington Join The Daily Staff P , y... i+ t t : ti :, z i V r a By The Assocza/ed Press EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT GAMAL ABDEL NASSER con- ferred with Kremlin leaders yesterday on Soviet aid to press the Arab war against Israel, but a U.S. cease-fire proposal was be- lieved high on the agenda. Nasser has indicated in speeches that Cairo will reject the plan but Soviet response has been described as "not entirely negative." The question of Egyptian defenses also was a certain topic. The Soviets have indicated they will continue to arm the Arabs as long as the "imperialists" aid Israel. At the same time the Russians are believed to favor a Middle East settlement which provides for Israeli withdrawal from occupied Arab territory. ISRAEL IS REPORTED planning another effort to buy Britain's newest and best tank, the Chieftain. This was reported by diplomats on the eve of a meeting between Britain's newly appointed Conservative Foreign secretary, Sir Alec Douglas Home, and Israel's foreign minister, Abba Eban. Members of the Israeli government, according to Information here, are hoping for a fresh view of the Middle East conflict from the iew Conservative government. The Labor administration last year blocked a long-standing Is- raeli appiication to placey a multimillion-dolar order for the Chief- tains. * * * THlE LAOTIAN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY gave an informal vote of confidence yesterday to Premier Prince Souvanna PhouIaa. The vote followed reports of increasing rightist pressure because of recent North Vietnamese advances in southern Laos. It came -on a resolution that criticized what was called govern- ment defects in veterans' affairs, justice and national bureaucracy but expressed confidence in the continuation of Souvanna's nominally neutraiist government. The resolution was adopted 25 to 8 with A abstentions. THE ANTIPOVERTY a GENCY gave a $7.4 million grant yesterday to the newly created Opportunity Funding Corporation. The grant is to finance an experimental program to attract pri- vate capital to low income areas. When Donald Rumsfled, director of the Office of lEconomic Op- portunity, announced the experimental project March 21, he said the money spent by the federal government, estimated then as between $5 million and $20 million, would attract five times the sum invested. Designed to supplement current antipoverty programs, the new agency will test various projects to determine if they can be made to work in blighted areas. The results could be the basis for new legis- ation. THE UNITED STATES turned over Cicli air base to the Turkish air force yesterday in part of a general American military cutback in Turkey. U.S. Ambassador William Handley and top-ranking Turkish of- ficers attended the ceremonies.c The base, which cost "well above $30 million," a U.S. officials said, was part of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's defense network. It will be used by the Turkish air force and also as a civilian airfield serving the expanding tourist trade along Turkey's Aegean A .unit of about 100 Americans will stay at the base to maintain some facilities. A BARGE BEiNG LOADED with jet fuel ruptured and leaked s0 gallons of kerosene Into the Carguinez straits yesterday be- fore wokmen stopped the leak. A spokesman for Shell ei Co. said the fuel dissipated in Suisun Bay and thatbthe remainder of the 630,000 gallons was being pumped $"in anonnfer barge. Water traffic was uninterrupted'through the straits, a major in- land route to the Central Valley from the northeast end of San Fran- cisco Bay. V c I. -- :,: 4 ;; ?z f l Jn * 7'-2 -r T OFFICE HOURS CIRCULATION - 764-0558 COMPLAINTS - 9a.m. - 11:30 a.m. SUBSCRIPTIONS - 1 p.m. - 3 p.m. CLASSIFIED ADS - 764-0557 10a.m.-1 p.m. DEADLINE FOR NEXT DAY -12:30-p.m. DISPLAY ADS - 764-0554 MONDAY -9 a.m. - 4 p.m. TUESDAY thru FRIDAY -1 p.m. - 4 p.m. DEADLINE 2 days in advance by 3 p.m. Monday at NOON for Tuesday's paper .: :. :..: lZe. : (4. r .. 1 f 1 LIY' ow if lr waCHAN GE N O W !_ Yes, if you want to change your old routine of the same old lunches, try the Michigan Union buffet. Monday through Friday, 11:45-1:00. The Michigan Union serves a buffet luncheon in a relaxed atmosphere. Eat at your leisure with a selection of meat, salads and desserts -to suit the most discriminating tastes: The price is only $1.92 plus tax. hey there, hi these. . . .key Mouse is ba Bright-eyed and clever as ever on sweat s and T-shirts for guys and gals. . .he's the r way to get in the swing of fun fashion, in vivid cartoon colors. Remember, when it c merry mousketeers, he's "top cat'. Sizes S 11 Cotton T-shirt, $3. Cotton/acrylic swept TRY IT SOON FOR A CHANGE ) a * ,.. wrG Private rooms available by reservation MEN'S SHOP AND MISS J SHOP Jaicob~o'S .. PHONE 764-7535 w iiislpl 'L I i a.