Tuesday, May 20, 1975 Daily Classifieds (Continued from Page 8) TRANSPORTATION ROOMMATES STUDENT WORKING on Detroit Free Press this summer needs ride ROOMMATE NEEDED for Fa t. to and from Detroit daily, Will Graduate, professional student, or share all expenses. Calli Sara at 665- couple to share furnished 2 bdrn., 9265 or 764-0553 persistently. dG524 lakefront house. 769-8325. 81Y520 ROOMMATE WANTED--Male. for 2 BUSINESS SERVICES adrm. apt. N. Campus area. Call WANTED on consignent-Arts and 1-239-2706. 43Y522 Handicratfs. Will consider outright purchases. For Saginaw Shrp open- NEED 1 MALE raomate Crl2 inlinlSetemae.law lla bdrm. apt in Faill (own room). R iqu S ieber Iark (1) 646-1552. 34Y522 17 'Valentine Ct. Saginaw Township USED CARS Michigan 48603 90J.524 62 FALCON. $75.00. Good tranpor- MOVING taalon, 761-6456 persistently. 99N524 1ow rates. 663-7690 or 668-8807. 1964 OLDSMOBILE ambulane 98. cJ625 call 437-0624. Good condition. Best offre. 89N524 DISSERTATION editiln. Textua~l, rammi atial, stylistic advice by 1971 PINTO, low mileage. automatic, English doctoral students on any AC, radio great price. Call 663-8362. writing. 662-5912, 663-5547, or 665- 52N521 9444. 77J531 THE MICHIGAN DAILY' Page Nine TRAVEL 1ATHER be traveling abroad but sending Spring in Ann Arbor in- stead? Learn about other countries. Board at an International Co-op. Tom or Carol, 761-7435. 01P523 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Prinaeton "1973" Class ring with aqua-marine stone. Reward oCffered. Contact Alan, 994-02895per- sistently. 98A521 FOUND-PUPPY on Thompson St. near the LS&A Building. Approxi- mately 6 weeks old. Looks like a Labardor and has a docked tall. Call Kathy Feldkamp, 764-6293 daily or 429-7485 evenings. dA522 LOST - Neutered male seal point Siamese cat. Vicinity of Tappan & Mlonroe. Please call 769-8791. 84A523 FOUND on 5/13--A pair of sun- aasses on bench in People's Plaza. Call 761-7277 after 6 p.m. dA520 MISCELLANEOUS A PROGRAM is now being offered il Ann Arbor to helpacombat alco- hoal and draug abute among gay women. For further information' all 763-4186. All communication eld in trict confidence. 22M328 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS KINGSTON B A N J O needs new boe. $81with case 665-4580. 0X521 USED VIOLINS-Good for starter. ,89.50. Apollo Music Center. 769- 1400. eXte YAMAHA EM 150 amp-mixer, 75 waitts/ch. $5S0. Two Maestra pianoI ISi-aps. $106. 665-2423.s 31X520 LUDWIG DRUM SET-Double toms, Zildjia n cymbals, excellent condi- tion1. Also Dynsa 11p11with Utah speakers. Sa1dy 761-9009a fter 6. 72X523 USED FENDER, superb ceverb with 4 10" speakers. Apollo Music Center, 25 .Main. eXtc DUAL 1216 turntable, like new. Ditch controla nti-skating, base 1nd cover wt M91ED cartridge. $125 or best offer. Call Geoff, 668-7183. FOR SALE DYNACO Dual Hegeman Stereo and 10-Speed. Jeff, 663-5909. 91B522 MEN'S 10 SPEED BIKE, 27" frame, 175. 994-6062. 68B516 HELP WANTED - ---- - - - BIG BROTHERS If you have some free time, why 'lot valunteer as a big brathser? otact the AsnArborY, 663-0536. 97H53 COUPLE NEEDED as resident man- agers Car Half-Wlay Roase. 769-7135, Bob or Kathy. 78H523 WANTED-Catsitter Car two fe- male cats, four yrs. old, through Sept. 1st. Will pay $25/mo., plus food. Call 763-3908 persistently. 601520 HOUSE PARENTS-Married couple t0 protide residential treatment, supertian Carthrcm adalescent bays in small group home. BA and ap- propriate experience required. $7,000- 10.08 p0lus rent. expense and r - lef. Call Vicki, Pamily Graup Homes, 973-1260. 91H523 ALASKA PIPELINE BOOM! Infor- 1111118l1oan canstruction and nan- construction jobs in Alaska and on the pipeline-wages, addresses, qual- ilications - theetne story ram Alaska. 05.00. Denali Information Service, P.O. Box 1763, Anchorage, AK., 99510. 98H529 T 'YPING, fast, accurate. 9,73-2775. 14{528 TYPING. editing, cassette trans- criptioa, IBM copies. Jean Whipple, 812 &'State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 p.m. cJtc TUTORING, consulting in statistics, mat caputers. Cal Walt. 994-3594. eJtc PERSONAL STIL L IME to sgn up fCr mixed league bowling. UNION LANES. Open 11 a.m. eF522 YOUNG MAN desires o meet young woman. Richard, 663-5877. 86F524 PEMALE NEEDED as occasianal campanian Car 28 year male writer. Prefer 20-26, short or red hair, about 5'4" slim attractive, interested in antique and sport cars, travel in Michigan, camping, canoeing, story- telling and adding facets to my life -- unaccountably stalled in a small town. No drugs, serious re- plies only-please write at length to Ron, 120 N. Center, Northville, Michigan, picture appreciated. 88F520 15%.DISCOUNT on all acne prepa- rations at the Village Apothecary, 1112 S. University. Ftc W0HERE MARGINAL PRICES buy quality dionds-Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. eFtc SPECIAL his weekend. Sa., San. & Mogn. at the Union. Redulced rates for billiards and bowling, open 1 p.m cF524 FOR COMPLETE information on summer employment in the state-of M~ichigan,. send $2 ta the Active Esn- ployent Services of Michigan. P.O. Box 981 Southfield, Michigan 48075. 34F522 10 ENLARGERS, Scarier, Omega, Vi- vitar, available for rent with chemi- cals. Phone 668-6244. Art Worlds, 21310 S Main, Ann Arbor. cF520 NATIONAL Medical Boards Prep courses are being offered for all 3 parts os the NMB. The StanleyH. Kaplan callrses offered hove been extremely successful for all NMB, ECFMG and Flex exams. For infor- mation call 354-0085. cFtc Albert's Copying Dissertation quality. Location: In- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028. t- ADVISE on getting U-M in-state residency Monday, May 19, 7:30 p.m., Legal Aid Office, 4310 Union. 00F517 MIXED BOWLING LEAGUES. Tues- days and Thursdays. Sign up now. Union Lanes. M Pin bowling all sulmmer., Open 11 a.m. Man-Sat., 1 pm. Sundays. cF517 LSAT-GRE-MCAT-DAT Maney Back Guaranteed Test Preparation Your First Lesson Free THE TEST CENTER-662-3700 cF611 REGENCY TRAVEL 601 E. WILLIAM ANN ARBOR 48104 665-6122 SPEC IALIZ ING in business interview trips MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY TRIP HOME RESERVATIONS NOW cFtc . AP Photo THREE FORMER Ohio National Guardsmen and an unidentified man head for lunch in the first day of a civil trial stemming from the 1970 Kent State University shootings. All three men were defendants in the criminal case last year in, which charges stemming from the same in- cident were dismissed. Jurorsn ri in Kent State case CLEVELAND, Ohio (1P) - A federal judge questioned poten- tial jurors yesterday on ability to ignore out-of-court comment in the civil trial of Gov. James Rhodes and 43 other persons that stems from the 1970 Kent State University shootings. Rhodes and other defendants, batteries of attorneys and the plaintiffs jammed U. S. District Court as Judge Don Young of, Toledo opened the proceedings. U. S. MARSHALS turned away all spectators and all but 16 newsmen. The suit seeking an estimat- ed $11 million in damages is a consolidation of 13 original ac- tions and is brought by the nine Kent State students wounded and the parents of the four stu- dents slain in the May 4 con- frontation of Ohio National Guardsmen and demonstrators protesting U. S. military in- volvement in Cambodia. Defendants include former Guardsmen and former state officials as well as Rhodes, who was governor at the time, and Kent State's then-President Ro- bert White, who now is a teach- er on the campus south of here. Y O U N G referred to "con- siderable pretrial publicity" in questioning the seven women and five men as prospective jurors. "It doesn't matter whether you've read or heard about the case," he told them. "What's important is whether a juror is able to set aside what he has read outside and deliberate on only what is said in court." Young indicated the first phase of the trial could last four to six weeks. THE INITIAL phase is to de- termine whether the defendants are subject to damages. If nine of the 12 jurors vote yes, the second phase will be a hearing to determine the amount. Plaintiffs contend that Rhodes and White failed to take ade- quate precautions to avoid in- juries after Guardsmen were ordered to the campus during the series of antiwar protests which began that May 1. Rhodes is accused in a pretrial brief of having called theguard to give himself a "law and or- der" image in a campaign for Republican nomination for a U. S. Senate race. The original suits were dis- missed without a hearing by a federal judge who agreed that Rhodes and other officials acted as public ofifcials and therefore were immune under sovereignty of the state. The ruling was upheld by an appel- late court, but the Supreme Court disagreed unanimously and ordered the hearing which began yesterday. - Ford creates refugee aid unit WASIINGTON(P) - President Ford appointed 17 prominent persons to an advis- ory committee on refugees yes- terday, but postponed for . a day signing a $450-million bill to help resettle more than 100,- 000 Vietnamese and Cambo- dians who fled to the United States. The bill arrived at the White House from the Capitol late yes- terday afternoon, and aides said Ford would not sign it un-' til today. ONCE THE bill becomes law with Ford's signature, the gov- ernment will be able to sign contracts with nine private, voluntary relief agencies to be- gin moving some 45,000 refu- gees from military bases in California, Arkansas and Flori- da to new homes throughout the United States. Administration officials had asked for speedy congressional approval of the appropriation because the resettlement pro- gram was running short of funds. They offered no explana- tion, however, as to why Ford did not sign the bill immedi- ately. In a White Ilouse ceremony, Ford spoke of the problems in- volved in resettling 100,000 peo- ple but said they are "individ- uals who can contribute signifi- cantly to our society in the fu- ture." "THEY ARE people of talent, they "are industrious, they are individuals who want free- dom," Ford said after signing an executive order establish- ing the President's Advisory Committee. on Refugees. "We do have some difficulties in trying to assimilateas quick- ly as possible some 100,000 peo- ple," the President said. "I don't mean to discount the problems but all of you and those you represent can help tremendously in the days ahead." The committee is headed by John Eisenhowgr, former am- bassador to Belgium and son of former President Dwight Eisen- hower. O T H E R S INCLUDE Mayor Joseph Alioto of San Francisco, singer John Denver of Aspen, Colo., Gov. Daniel Ev- ans of Washington, President George Meany of the AFL-CIO and A Theodore Tuttle of Salt Lake City, elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The comnittee's duties are to advise the President and the heads"of federal agencies on re- settlement of the refugees, on health and environmental mat- ters reloted to it, adjostments required and the general well- being of the refugees and their f=)milies in their new American communities. Federal agencies and depart- ments were directed by the ex- ecutive order to cooperate. None of the 17 people will be paid.