- rnay; June 1+, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Ninr Sri or dcv, June 16, 977 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY Page Nine Daily Classif ieds Byrd asks compromise on -water projects bill Continued from Page 8) MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS p05.QQE INSTRUMENTS - Vir- Harpsichord. By builder. 662- 2 cays. l9Xal8 LOST AND FOUND GosT-Parker slver fountain pen in r)ear Hudsona at Briarwood. Great .enrslioital. value. Reward. Pleaue rail V. Jackson collect, 1-831-0149 or 1,274-2808. 23A617 OST--Wuen's Omega wristwatch, grey nylon band. Between ISR and 1non. Reward $45. Cali Louise, 662- 2607. 4A1 HELP WANTED VIuTA JOBS in housing law reform. Nerd atuorys hr lawe grads; econo- n1st; Journalists. Full time, low pay. Send resume to MSA Project, 3903 Mochigan Union. 01H618 PROGRAMMERS S. Gainer and Associates, Inc., a management consutng film, needs. programmers to work part or full time on a variety of interesting pro- Iecte. Applicants must be familiar with their COVOL or FORTRAN. Knowledge of ALGOL or timeshar- in is a plus. For an interview, call 63-2723 00 062-8940. 22116 STHE MICHIGAN DAILY IS NOW HIRING SALES PEOPLE FOR THE aSUMMaER TERM. Na previous sales experience required, but a car ia virtually mandatory. Work is done on a commission basis. If interested, crll Debbie or Pete at 764-0560, or stop by the Daily. dHtc CHALLENGING SURVEY RE- SEARCH job who's responsibilities include: respondant identification, ntervewin and coding. 764-2554. 561709 TEACIHERS The Jewish Cultural co!ou i5 interviewing for Sunday " (ching positions. Call 665- .18925511617 Y P91-AHBOH GAMES needs bowling 111 tor Junour bawling pro- 1 , o Zak at 434-1110. cH618 PERSONAL 1 l IGt N MEDICAL SCHOOL 1 l g applications for this applicants write to: In- Education Center, 200 At°.v Buffalo, N.Y. 14207. 79F709 FEIJOADA! 761-7533, 662-2678. 82F618 111,IAE FREE bowling with this ' -Arbor Loses. Pinball, 1 5;: .1000 tool 1085 Waosote- m10 - east of U.S. 23. cF817 81:CTIN( WINE fron the Village A; cv oerlr means properly 010109 0111 at a reasonable price. Apotmhecary, 1112 S. Univ. cFtc - i01001 HOME RENTAL-Brand new 197 23-l. Bugham, Available im- 01:011 ololy. Sleeps , completely self- om11rd. Generator, roof and cab sr. Clrese-O-Matic, 4-speaker AM- 091 rdls, 4-burner stove, eye-level 000, Lod. of storage space. $350 "EI ' .. p"us l'c/mie. 662-1105. 85F618 J0. 1 lope you're not getting two 'opoes ot the paper now; one is al- mot more than enough tw choke lroo h. Don't think that because E00 Called ysu don't have to write. talls AHE better, but letters are nice, too!!! P.S. King Tut is still in Chico, do you want to meet him? -D.A.D. dF616 PREGNANT? Need help? Cal Problem Pregnancy Help, 769- 128 Pregnancy tests available. eFtc PERSONAL LEARN MEDITATION, a pleasant and easy technique which can be very effective in dealing with stress. Call 665-7671. 83F618 LEARN THE FACTS before you buy -there is more to a diamond than meets the eye. Austin Damond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. CFtc DENISE, Yes, Pete cant)help you with abor- lion referral if yoa really wast it- but are you sure that s the right choice? I'm laoin a lo of troable with Angela right now. All she talto about is some kind of buried treas- ure or something. Oh well,more later CYNTHIA dF616 THE PIZZA MACHINE is at the Cross Eyed Moose. 613 E. Liberty. Open every day. -F6IO JAZZ ot the Untversity Club with vhe Roots Trio and Friends Noel Cun- ningham, piano; Ted Harley, bass; Stanley Slaughter, drums; and fea- turing Vincent York of theaMercer Ellington Bond an alto a. Friday and Saturday evenings 9:30 p.m.- 1:30 a.m. in the club cocktail loupge in the Michigan Union Union build- ing. Ask hostess for a free trial membership. 763-2236. cFtc SAILING One crew-mate needed for weeken racing at iearby Hu- ron/Portage Yacht Club. 19 ft. Inter- lake Class. If you can sail well, will teach SPINNAKER handling. 5'6"- 145 lb. maximum. Phone 662-6058 week-days 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 42F617 LIVE STUDY 9 TRAVEL ABROAD Do it this year! USSR, France, England, Spain, Italy, Vienna, Switzerland. Accredited Uni- versity study. Family stay or dorm, tuition, meals, leader, excursions, air. Summer, semester, full year. Center for Foreign Study, Admis- son-Dept. D-6, 216 S. State/Box 606 Ann Arbor, MI 48107. Telephone 313. 662-5575 eF618 YOUNG MALE is looking for a woto- aa who is really in8 sports tuplay pooldirball, tennois, and waterski dale- n summer months. Phone 973- 2220. 37F617 PERMANENT WEIGHTLOSS Through B e h a v i orModification. Wolverine Institute, 973-1480, cFtc STEVE'S LUNCH-Come for home cooking. Breakfast all day, great soups and egg rolls. 3 egg omelets with fresh vegetables and fresh bean sproats served all day, Sundays 10-8. 1313 South University. cFtc NEW: Loff all copies left over- night (books too)! IMPRESS, 524 E. William, 665-5321. cFtc XEROX AND OFFSET fast, low cost duplicating COPY QUICK 1217 S University 769-0560 ctc DISSERTATION SPECIAL LOWEST PRICE IN TOWN FOR COLLATED COPIES RACKHAM QUALITY GUARANTEED COPYQUICK- 1217 S. University, 769-0560 cFtc WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen- ate Majority Leader Robert Byrd, admitting that Congress could not override a veto on the water projects bill, urged law- makers yesterday to compro- mise on the 17 projects that President Carter wants to scrap. Byrd, citing the House's nar- row 218-194 vote Tuesday to keep nearly $170 million for the proj- ects is a major public works appropriations bill, declared, "a veto cannot be overriden." "IT SEEMS to me the effort ought to go forward to, work out a compromise between the executive and the Congress," he said. Otherwise, he said, "we would have to do our work all over again" in the event of a veto. Carter has said he might veto the $10.2 billion public works appropriations bill if money is left in the dams and canals he feels are economically and en- vironmentally unjustified. As Byrd spoke, the Senate subcommittee on . public works appropriations grappled behind closed doors with the bill, which contains funds for 506 projects. SEN. JOHN STENNIS, (b- Miss., the committee chairman, said when asked for his reaction to the House vote, "I don't react to anything, I'm just try- ing to get a bill." Stennis said at least one of the waler projects was discuss- ed, along with what he said were "highly sensitive" nuclear power issues. The subcommittee invited James Schlesinger, Carter's en- ergy adviser, to sit in on its closed-door meeting to discuss the breeder reactor program. Carter wants the program dis- continued to check the spread Df nuclear arms. Breeder reac- The Michigan Historical Col- lection at the University's Bent- ley Library has more than 14 million manuscripts and 30,000 volumes - all historical mate- rials related to the University, the state of Michigan and its people. tors produce plutonium, which can be used in bombs. In an open meeting last Fri- day, Sen. o James Sasser (D- Tenn.) moved to recommend an appropriation of $150 million for the Clinch River Breeder Reac- tor in Tennessee. Stennis ad- journed that meeting without putting Sasser's motion to a Vote. In a closed meeting last Wed- nesday, Sen. Mark Hatfield (R- Ore.) moved to delete funds for production of the "enhanced ra- diation" neutron warhead for the short-range Lance missile. Opponents say the warhead is an antipersonnel weapon com- parable to biological and chem- ical weapons that the United States has condemned. Its sup- porters o'y it wouild confine kill- ing to h ' t70tlefiekl and cause little dertLtion elsewhere. No actionl Swa, taken list week on latfiel:o Hmotion. Tuesdav's House vote was on an aine dment to %the public works bill to delete 16 of the 17 projects opposed by the Presi- dent. Although the amendment failed, the vote was far short of the two-thirds majority need- ed to override a veto. Byrd was asked why Carter would be willing to compromise if, as it appeared, the vote s-trengthened his position. "I can't speak for him, but over the long term it seems to me there is room for compro- mise," the West Virginia Demo- crat said. W14 i 11 V'7fpWWiW11WWWW WWI W11 VIII IW The Frank Sinatra, Jr. Show Starring Frank Sinatra, Jr. SALE DOWN JACKETS, VESTS, PILLOWS & COMFORTERS At Rockbottom Prices, Ripstop Jackets $34.95 Ripstop Vests $19.95 - SAVINGS in many mare styles And The Larry O'Brien Oclette Appearing At The Ann Arbor Inn 100 S. Fourth Ave./Downtown Grand Ballroom SUNDAY, JUNE 19th 2 Complete Shows 7 P.M. & 10 P.M. $5.00 Advance Ticket Sales $6.00 At The Door CALL (313) 769-9500 FOR RESERVATIONS I 665-3888 Oven li 5:30 ~m.