Page Six -fNE MICHIGAI DAILY ednesday, Augtst 19, 1970 4 Wednesday, August 19, 1970 "rHE MICHIGA DAILY For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 12 Noon Deadline Monday through Friday, 10:00 to 3:00 12 Noon Deadline Deadly gas USED CARS FOR SALE 1962 VW Kharman Ghia Inquire at 524 S Forest, AA. 20N71 1967 VALIANT Slant 6 engine, trans., body, all in excellent condition. Call 665-9616. 21N71 VW, 1965 Black sedan. Well cared for; one owner. 769-0510 22N71 VW BUS, 1967 Excellent condition, en- gine with warranty, best bid over $1300. See at 1469 Univ. Terrace, No. 1320. 23N71 1969 BMW 2002 Singi red, quartz lights, Halda, slight engine mnods, one owner, perfect con- dition, price negotiable. Craig, 769- 0227, early evenings. ND71 FOR SALE-1964 Triumph Spitfire. $500 or best offer. Call 769-5031 after 4. 1969 FIAT 850 Spider--Excellent condi- tion. Call 663-9214 persistently. 19N71 1967 MG-B-GT, excellent car for college student with sporting urge, Good condition, low mileage, many extras. Call Bill after 4 at 761-2802. 18N71 '65 BUICK Skylark, standard, 8 cyl., good cond., orig. owner. Call 665- 7551. 15N70 1968 SHELBY Cobra GT-500, red, 13,000 miles, exc. cond., best offer. 434-1942. 9N71 '61 LE SABRE BUICK in good running shape; slightly damaged body. $250 neg. Call 769-0024. ND70 HELP WANTED PAINTERS immediately. 665-7181. 431171 PART TIME HELP - Telephone and office with some sales. For appoint- ment- 662-4550. 44H71 BABY SITTER for 2 yr. old boy, Mon.- Fri., 12:30-5:30 pm w live in or out, 761-9608. 45H71 PART TIME BABYSITTER. One child, Begin Sept. MWF a.m. 662-8337. 421171 FIGHT WATER POLLUTION Fi' openings full or part time. Manage- ment--high income potential. Marian Ottow, 4310 Mill St., Grandville, Mich. 401170 ROOM AND BOARD in exchange for 15 hrs. housework weekly (cook sup- per. ironing, etc.) Mon-Fri. Weekends of Transportation needed 663-2379 or 764-0497 41H71 COCKTAIL. WAITRESSES Full or pan ltne Apply 20 W. Huron. 32H71 ATl"ENTION SI UDENT 1-HUSBANDS Put your wives to work (full or part t"e), applications now being taken for PH'I' {putting hubby through) Inquire today, 971-8700. 391171 WANTED Live-in help for retired University couple, housekeeping and some nursing care, individual or couple, pleasant living quart er. 668- 7144 mornings or evenings. 361171 BABYSITTER 3-5 hrs./day, 3-5 days a week. 971-7364. 37H71 WANTED - Male undergrad to assist professor in wheelchair in return for room and board. 761-9034 after 5. 38H71 Registered Nurse Day shift in modern, pleasant, extended care facility. 761-3800. 35171 BARMAIDS Full or part time. Apply208 W. Huron. 31H71 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS RECORDS! Oldies! 20,000 in Stock. Send 35c for 2,000 listing catalog. Mail Or- ders Filled. RECORD CENTER, 1895 W. 25th-Cleve., Ohio. Record Tapes. 31X1 HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Acoustic, electric instruments, acces- sories, David lessons-repairs. Gibson, Harmony. 209 S. State. 665-8001. 10-7 p.m. X CHARMING OLD PIANO-TUNED Great shape, will negotiate. 761-2743. 18X71 GIBSON CLASSIC (unfinished) guitar. $140/best offer. Call 769-0024. XD70 BUSINESS SERVICESw EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desire work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc MULTIPLE TYPING SERVICE Thesis ervice Papers Dissertations General Office and Secretarial Work Pick-Up rand Delivery Available Prompt Service CALL 485-2086 itc LOST AND FOUND FOUND - Dark grey on white male kitten, 3 mo., Union vicinity, Tues. 769-2984. AD71 FOUND-White cat, about 6 mo. old,' yellow eyes, vic. Fifth Ave. and Wash- ington. 663-6358. AD71 FOUND-Grey and white kitten, male, 3 mo. old, S. Division and Packard area. 665-3279. AD71 FOUND-2-3 mo. old kitten, black and white; also found fluffy black kitten. 761-3884. AD71 LOST BY FOREIGN STUDENT VIS- ITOR-Man's gold wrist watch with metal band, in Union washroom. Please return to Unionndesk. AD7 FOUND-Gold and white Basset, otter skin collar, also long haired black and white poodle. 761-3882. S. Univ. and Washtenaw. AD70 SUNSHINE IS LOST REWARD for lost brown labrador pup- py, 5-6 wks. old, vicinity E. Univ. and Hill. Call Zeke Gabbard, 971-1766, 663-9373. A71 FOUND - Champaign colorednfemale kitten, adorable, owner or interested party call 665-5364 or 764-4080. AD66 FOUND - Keys on Packard, 761-6784. AD66 BIKES AND SCOOTERS DUCATI 160, 1969, excellent condition, also 2 helmets, cover. 761-4756. 2Z71 FOR SALE-2 English racers, 1 with infant seat. 6 mo .old. $40 apiece, $75 the pair. 761-4756. 3Z71 FOR SALE-1968 Harley Sportster-Best offer. Call 761-4983. 1Z71 BSA 441cc SHOOTING STAR, 1968, new in 1969. Best offer over $700, includes tools, helmets, insurance. 769-1123. 50Z71 '69 350 HONDA SCRAMBLER-Excellent condition, owned by Honda mechanic. 6-12 p.m., 662-9738. ZD71 FOR SALE FOR SALE-10 inch Patter's wheel; new size 9 hiking boots. 662-7671. 23B70 MOVING - Household miscellaneous furnishings, great student buys. 1115 Clark Drive, Ypsi. 6-9 p.m. Aug. 19-21. 24B71 GE 200 STTEREO record player. Good condition, inexpensive. Call Debbie at 665-4830 or 764-0562. BD70 STEREO RECORD PLAYER for sale. Inexpensive, good condition. Call Debbie at 764-0562 or 665-4830. BD7O DAVIS TENNIS RACKET, excellent shape, $10. Call 761-1463. 19B70 TRADE OR SELL '63 Buick Special convertible, MG 1100 doesn't run, Phillips AM-FM radio tape deck, for bicycle or motorcycle. 662-6454 or 764-9140. 20B70 MUST SELL 1969 HONDA 90, excellent condition. Call 483-3594. 16871 1968 CHAMPION Mobile Home, 12 ft. x 60 ft., 2 bdrm., carpeted living room, 17 miles from AA, may remain on present site, exc. cond., terms avail- able, located in modern park. 662- 3803. 48B68 PERSONAL PERSONAL FAR OUT PORCH SALE! SUNDAY SPECIAL 1-6 P.M. UNION Wed. and Thurs., 1-8 p.m. 1328 Minerva BILLIARDS $1/HR., TABLE TENNIS 50c (off S. Forest). 37F71 30F71 WOMEN; GAY LIBERATION MEETING GRAD student needs back issues of FRIDAY, 8:00, 824 McKINLEY. CALL LOOK, LIFE, and POST magazines. 761-6310. 38F70 Please contact Cathy, 662-0416. 36F70 JIMMY CARAS-UNION BALLROOM MATURE SINGLE MAN wishes to meet BILLIARD EXHIBITION attractive intelligent cultured woman Advance Tickets $1, At Door $1.25 I for Companionship, Box 14, Mich. SEPTEMBER 16, 7 & 9 P.M. 33n pB4Dailh32F71 33F71 Dly. 3F1 UNION open during Exams and Break. BLURB-Try not to cry at Rich and Barber, Billiards, Bowling, Stand, Cheryl's wedding; look at it this 31F71 way-we're not. losing a salesman, PRETTY FACE, with body, needed for we're gaining a Mrs. Display Dept. photo modelling. Remuneration ne- gotiable. Phone 769-9493. FD71 TO JOE IN ROSLYN: FREE HEALTHY happy parakeet to I'll probably be home (or on the way) kind home. With cage and extras. by the time you read this - THE Call 761-0135. 34F70 BLURB. FD70 WIN A FREE GAME 3 P.M. MON.-SAT. SUN. 3/$1 UNION LANES, AIR-COND. THE ONLY PLACE in Ann Arbor to! 35F71 buy her diamond engagement ring. CHECK IT' AUSTIN DIAMOND ! Creative Photography 1209 S. University 663-7151 WEDDINGS and portraits. Professionai sunk- l ABOARD USS HARTLEY (A",) - The rusting Liberty ship Le- Baron Russell Briggs and its controversial cargo of deadly nerve gas plunged to a grave three miles deep in the Atlan- tic Ocean off the Florida coast yesterday. "It was almost silent as it went down, but when it hit bot- tom there was a t h u d and sounds like parts of the ship and timber breaking up," said Lt. Edward Gibson, operations officer of the destroyer escort Hartley, who followed t h e Brigg's descent on sonar. The dilapidated World War II freighter, carrying 12,540 rockets of GB nerve gas and a single cannister 'of more toxic VX nerve gas in its bowels, was sunk deliberately in a longtime munitions dump 283 miles east of Cape Kennedy, Fla. The Army, claiming the nerve gas had been leaking inside its steel - jacketed v a u I t s for months, had said it feared it would only be a matter of time before the gas seeped into rock- et propellant and detonated. The 442-foot Briggs slipped below the surface at 3:53 p.m. EDT, four hours and six min- utes after a team of ordinance specialists opened flood valves deep in the holds of the vessel. The ship reeled slowly at first. Then, when about h alI f sub- merged, the holds began gulp- ing huge amounts of water and in 30 seconds the hulk disap- peared stern first, leaving only a large geyser of white foam be- hind. Two two tugs blasted their whistles in final salute. "It w e n t almost straight down," said Lt. Gibson. "At the end there was a lot of noise and rocking for about two minutes before it finished." WANT Must p.m. WANTED TO BUY TO BUY used dehumidifier. work. Phone 665-8047 after 6 35K71 F NOTICE TO MICHIGAN DAILY BOX HOLDERS. MAIL IS IN THE FOL- LOWING BOXES: 55, 15. FD PAINTING - Student desires painting jobs, inside and outside. Four years experience. Call 662-4736. FD WEDDINGS and PORTRAITS Professional photography by Richard Lee, Inc. at rates YOU can afford. Call 761-9452 to see portfolio. FD71 quality at student rates. Call John Evans at 769-0053 for appointment to see portfolio. F60 SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL BLUES FES- TIVAL-With an estimated loss of from ten to twenty thousand dollars the blues festival may die. Send do- nations to the Blues Festival, Mich- igan Union. FD71 AUTO TUNE-UP AND REJ'AIR, ludi- crously reasonable. Student. 662-6746. 40F59 19703 HONDA 450. 761-3905. 46Z71I A NAVY SHIP carrying 418 coffins of lethal nerve gas plunges to the boti WANTED TO RENT MALE UNDERGRAD. needs apt. from Sept. 1 thru December only. Call 769-2729 after 6 p.m. 44L71 FEMALE GRAD student wants to share an apartment with- one or more other grad student(s). 761-3910. 45L71 OWN BEDROOM in house or apart- ment with cooking for fall. Near campus. Under $80. 761-6547. 18L71 FEMALE GRAD needs apt. to share for fall. Prefer own zoom. Lee, 663-7718, evenings. 41L71 WISH TO BE 4th man in apartment. Call Al, 352-6730. 42L71 ROOM WANTED, liberal management, max. $16/wk., senior, cngaged. 1-626- 5827. 40L71 PERSONAL PLAYBOY type models eeded. Highest earnings if you qualify. State age, etc. Photo if possible. Reply: Box 15, Whitmore Lake. 22F71 BIO. FREAK seeks adoptable female' companion to share scenery, cooking.) and tent for trip to green mts. and Maine wilderness. Ph. 663-0760. 28F71 -ACTION MOTORCYCLE tune-up and service. By appointment only. Call 665-3114 26Z71 TRANSPORTATION ALASKA, WASHINGTON or wESTERN CANADA-I want a ride to any of these places as soon as possible. Will share expenses. Please call 769-3215. GD7 WANTED - RIDE to Washington, D.C. Would like to leave Ann Arbor around August 20th. Will share ex- penses. Call Bill Alterman at the Daily, 764-0552. GD70 with Daily Classifieds MAGNETIC TAPE SYSTEMS By LEE KIRK The University Club of Chicago, in a strongly worded resolution, has request- ed that University administrators take whatever steps are necessary to avoid shutdowns such as the one which oc- curred during the BAM strike. The resolution, passed by alumni club's -Board of Governors, "requests the President . . . and t h e administration of the University to take all steps re- quired, including the use of la w en- forcement officers a n d the National, Guard, if necessary, to insure that the University shall remain open at all times (and) that classes shall be con- ducted without interruption . ." The resolution states that "the read- iness of University officials to acquiesce to force" has alarmed club members, who feel that "academic freedom must be protected." The resolution also expresses con- cern that students and professors were intimidated during the BAM strike. "(L)arge numbers of students did not attend class out of fear for their own safety," the resolution contends, "many professors cleosd their classrooms in fear . . . for the physical safety of their students, and acts of violance and dis- ruption occurred in classrooms, and on campus ..." A club spokesman contacted yester- day said the resolution was not a direct condemnation of University President Robben Fleming and the Regents. How- ever, he noted that "the wording seems to exhibit the club's feeling- It is our stand that the University should remain open." The spokesman also said t h at al- though the resolution was passed by the club's Board of Governors, he was con- fident that it expressed the opinion of the majority of club members. "Ill fact," he added, "I don't believe we have received one phone call or letter unfavorable to the resolution since we released it." The resolution also notes that "ath- letic events at the University may be cancelled by disruptive tactics w h i c h will result in a loss . . . of thousands of dollars," and recommends that ath- letic events proceed on schedule with- out interruption. There has been concern on some campuses that student demonstrations could spread to the gridiron. Alumni club hits U' handling of strike Iraq pledges I By The Associated Press Iraq told Jordan yesterday that its 12,000 troops there will back Palestinian guerrillas in any naw showdown with the Jordanian army. The warning came a day after Arab guerrillas claimed that King Hussein was massing troops and armor outside Am- man in preparation for a crackdown against commandos. "Iraqi troops on the eastern front- Syria and Jordan-have already been placed at the disposal of the Palestinian resistance movement in Amman," an Iraqi government spokesman said. The statement over Baghdad radio was in the form of comment on talks under- way in the Iraqi capital between leaders of the ruling Baathist Socialist party and Al Fatah guerrilla leader Yasir Ara- fat, who arrived there Sunday night. Several hundred Arab commandos and civilians were reported killed or wounded in Amman during open warfare between the army and guerrillas in June. Relations between Cairo and Iraq, meanwhile, moved another step toward an open break. The semiofficial Egyptian newspaper Al Ahram said the Iraqi gov- ernment has put the Egyptian Embassy in Baghdad un five Egyptian the detention Baathists. Re Arab nations v month-long I President Gam ance of the U.; Al Ahram sa bassy and its were surround{ who were sears leaving. The newspar enment of "ul unjustified har tionals. In Washingt disclosedthat along the Isla to check obse agreement. Press officer the flights are of the cease-fi over Israeli-c spokesman saic that the flight i i PARTY TIME. Q ~P4 If you think you can get the world's most advanced stereo tape deck for $66450 -you're right! " I .'3 / 7I 11 TEAC A-6010 U cat ALBERT TERRACE Can be anytime... and the neighbors could care less. Their quiet evening of study goes undisturbed thanks to excellent sound conditioning and bi-level design. Reserve your apartment for fall semester then have a party-... anytime. Here, indeed, is the ultimate complement to the most sophisticated and superlative high-fidelity systems available today. It starts with three exclusive TEAC technological breakthroughs ... superbly smooth and responsive symmetrical control system for foolproof operation; phase sensing auto reverse system; and newly designed outer rotor reel drive motors plus a dual speed hysteresis synchronous motor provide pro- fessional tape handling. Negligible wow and flutter. From there it goes to every feature contributory to true, professional quality. If you have a demanding ear, come enjoy this audiophonic excellence. NSA told kidnapings freed Huey. ST. PAUL, Minn. (P) -=-Tom Hayden, one of the Chicago 7 conspiracy defendants, said yes- terday Black Panther Huey Newton was released from jail because President Nixon feared the possibility of kidnapings like the ones in Latin America where hostages have been held in ex- change for the release of po- litical prisoners. Speaking before delegates to the National Student Associa- tion 23rd annual Congress, Hay- den said: "'Huey Newton is out thanks to guerrillas of Uruguay, thanks to Brazilian kidnapers ... peo- ple who are able to create a threat t h e government wasn't able to deal with." He said, "Nixon and V i c e President Spiro T. Agnew know it is going to happen to them unless something is done to calm down frustrations." Newton went free on $50,000 bail Aug. 5 and was ordered to return to court Sept. 23 for set- ting of a date for his new trial in connection w i t h the 1967 killing of a. policeman. Open hearin new LSA A~ By LINDSAY CHANEY The role of graduate students in a proposed LSA student-fac- ulty assembly was among ques- tions aired at an open hearing yesterday to discuss recommen- dations of t h e Committee on Establishment of an LSA: Gov- erning Council. The hearing was the first in a series designed to give individ- ual faculty members and stu- dents the opportunity to make recommendations c o c e r n- ing the new assembly. A tentative proposal by the committee was released August 13, and recommends that most kovernmental functions of the literary college be handled by a representative assembly com- posed of 40 students and 40 fac- ulty members. At present, the Governing Faculty is the sole authority in the LSA college. This Govern- ing Faculty is composed of all faculty members who wish to attend the meetings. Under the new proposal, the governing faculty would still retain a ve- to power over Assembly decis- ions, and could initiate legisla- tion, opera ably At day, dent voice meth tives conter dents the 8 Six memt gradu vious dent variou underl quest terday why gradu to the of tea they ulty c is ex whole mend hearin Albert Terrace Apis. Resident manager: 761-1717 1100 Geddes Hours: 12 noon-5:30 p.m. HI.I Ann A 618 S. Main "Quality Soun Fl BUYS rbor-East Lansing Phone 769-4700 d Through Quality Equipment" -Associated Press. Searching the enemy An American soldier in Vietnam searches the body of a slain North Vietnamese soldier looking for identification and other papers that might reveal his unit. Managed by CHARTER REALTY 665-8825 rrrri mmnw. o