Thursday, May 22, 1975 Daily Classifieds THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine (Continued from Page 8) USED CARS FOR SALE - 971 convetitle 850 Fat. Must sell. Leaving for Cal- sornia. Cal 483-1366. 39N524 1967 FORD oalaxie, 55,600, little V8 auto, Rick, 665-0609. 40N522 72 MOB CONVERTIBLE. Blae orange. 3900 miles. $2200 or best offer. 662-4201. 21N528 62 FALCON. $7500. Good transpor- tation 761-6456 persistently. 99N524 HELP WANTED PART-TIME ADVERTISING sales position. For information calb'663- 0569. 38H531 TREASURER-Fund raiser for Com- munity Center Project, 3/4 time, subsistent salary, good fringe aene- fits, administrative and organizing skills needed, and ability to work cooperatively and independently. Call Michael at 663-6746 or 429-9735 by May 23. 34H522 SECRETARY. Conscientious, self- motivated person for 25-30 hr. per- marent position in small office. General typing 50 wpm, bookkeep- ng, receptionist duties, errands. Conservation or natural resource background desireable. Available immediately. $3/h. to start. Huron Biver Watershed Council. 665-0514. 19H528 BIG BROTHERS If you have some free time, why not volunteer as a big brother? Contact the Ann Arbor Y, 663-0536. 97H53 COUPLE NEEDED as resident man- agers for Half-Way House. 769-7535, Bob or Kathy. 78H523 HOUSE PARENTS-Married couple to provide residential treatment, supervision for three adolescent boys in small group home. BA and ap- propriate experience required. $7,000- 10,000 plus rent. expense and re- llef. Call Vicki, Family Group Homes, 973-1260. 91H523 ALASKA PIPELINE BOOM! Infor- mation on construction and non- construction jobs in Alaska and on the pipeline-wages, addresses, quoal- iftonos - the true story ram Alaska. $5.00. Denali Information Service, P.O. Box 1763, Anchorage, AK., 99510. 98H529 SITUATIONS WANTED 'TRAINED BARTENDER DESIRES part-time (15-30 hrs./wk.) position for summer and fall. Pay is open tO discussion. Call Dave at 764-0560 1-4 p.m. or 994-0413 after 6 p.m. C105311 BUSINESS SERVICES I10NNIS SERVICE INC Experienced playersaltfering lesos 17aol 764- 0715 ors 994-0550. 33J523 TYPING. Fast. accurate 50c'pg. 663- 6742. 17J524 TYPING, fast, accurate. 973-2776. 14J528 TYPING. editing, cassette torans- cription, IBM copies. Jean Whipple, 812 S. State St. 994-3594. 10 am.- 10 psa. _ Jt 1 ESUME P R I N T I N G SERVICE. Twenty copisseachtyped eror free ,n IBM comptr printero. bnd 57.95 and resume to: F.E.E., P.O. Box 1866, Midland, Mi. 48640. 12J529 MOVING l 0-9w rate s 6 8-8807. IDISSERTATION editing. Textual, ;grammoatical, stylistic adoice bp Eglih do0toralst1ldents on any writing. 662-5912, 663-5547, or 665- 1 444. 77531 if you see news happen col 76-DAILY BUSINESS SERVICES TUTORING, consutin in statisics, oth computers. CillW alt 994-3594. ct PERSONAL RK PRODUCTS at tl Usios The latest in hair prodocis and stlig UMs lists.oc s ,'52s PUBLC NOTICE -Wll the two men who mistakenly removed -a large u5mber of cooies of ms ,bookr "Shiba kokan," srom my office in Tappan Hall please return them Students or faculty memb-bs who are offered copies of this book in cl andestie sale are asked to report the "Sellers" to Dr. Cal French at 764-5400. 37F522 LET US FILL your next prescrip- tion. The Vilao Apothecary cFtc RATHER be traveling abroad but spending Springo 1 Ann Arbor in- stead? Learn about othecountries. Board at an International Co-op. Tom o' Carol ,761-7435. 01F524 Wanted Women interesed in Free Pinball. Friday 12-2. Cross-Eyed Moose, 613 E. Liberty. 35F523 ANNUAL DIAMOND SALE-Now in progress. Sale began January 1 and 2iledDecembUver 1.ustnDia mood, 1209 S. University, 66-7151. cFtc MALE GRADUATE student looking for female companionship. Inter- ested? Replies to Bob at Daily Box 2. 13F523 NICE, big, fun-loving Jewish boy wishes to meet nice, unattached girl, Jewish or otherwise. Write c/o Box 23, Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor 48104. dF52 NEEDED - CONVERSATION PART- NERS oo Sping and Smmer to spek Engih, 1 hr./wk. with Eng- lish Institute students. Exchange of Spanish, Japanese, Arabic and Farsp ossible. Call 764-241528-12, 1--doly. 2-524 GESTALT ARTS WORKSHOP. Un- lock creativity through use of ma- terials and Gestalt with Bernie and Henriet Marek. May 30-June 1; $35. For info or registration call Michael And es662-2801) or Catherine Llly (994-42). 1152 STILL TIME to sig up for mixed lea ueb 1owlin. UNION LANES. Opn 11. cF52 YOUNG MA dsis oomee01young woman. Richad, 663-577. 86F524 SPECIAL this weekend. Sat, Sun, & Mon. at the Union. Reduced ates for billiards and bowling, open 1 p0m cF524 FOR COMPLETE information on summer employment in the state of Michigan, send $2 to the Active Em- ployment Services of Michigan. P.O. Box 981, Southfield, Michigan48075. 34F522 NATIONAL Medical Boards Prep courses are being offered for all 3 parts of the NMB. The Stanley H. Kaplan soulses offered have been extrermely successful for all NMB. ECFMG0114Fe eams. Por infr0- mastion call1134-0005. c~la Albert's Copying Dissertation quality. Location: I- side Did's Books, 529 E. Libery. 994-402. cFc ADVISE on getting U-M in-state reidncy Monday, May 1, 730 p.m., Lgal Aid Ottic , 4310 Unions 0F17 MIXED BOWLINGLEAGUES. Too- days and Thusdays. Sgn up now. Union Lanes. B Pin bowling all summer. Open 11 a.m Mon -Sat. 1 p.m. Snday- F517 LSAT-GRE-MCAT-DAT Money Back Guaranteed TetlPreparation Your First Lesson Free THE TEST CENTER-662-3700 I cF611 REGENCY TRAVEL 601 E. WILLIAM ANN ARBOR 48104 665-6122 SPECIALIZING in business interview trips MAKE YOUR HOLIDAY TRIP HOME RESERVATIONS NOW qFtc Dog days YESTERDAY'S heat and humidity was just too much for Smokey, a pet retriever from Woods- town, N. J., as he chose to collapse atop his favorite resting place. Grocery and m eat prices drive up consumer cost, WASHINGTON {") - Inflation quickened a bit in April as sharply higher meat prices drove grocery costs up afetr two straight months of decline, the Labor Department report- ed yesterday. The over-all rise in consumer prices last month was six-tenths of one per cent after adjuSt- ment for normal seasonal fluc- tuations. Although double t n e March pace, this was well be- low the torrid monthly increas- es typical during 1974. GROCERY PRICES, w h i c h had fallen in February a n d March, were a major factor in the April retail price rise. Non- food commodities and the cost of services also rose at a some- what sharper pace than in March. When retail prices rose only three-tenths of a per cent in March, the White House cau- tioned that'this was unlikely to continue. Agriculture experts had pre- dicted that food prices w3uld soon start climbing again. In April, retail meat prices jumped an adjusted 1.2 percent, :he first increase in seven months. Despite the rise, meat prices were 9.1 per cent below the lev- el in April 1974. "THE DATA is not at all inconsistent with what we per- ceive as a continuing modera- tion in the rate of inflation," said James Pate, the Commerce Department's chief economist. The basic rate of inflation now appears to be in the 6-to-7-per cent range and by the end of the year it will probably drop to a range of between 5 and 6 per cent, he said. Consumer prices rose 1c2 per cent in 1974. IN THE three montns oendog in April, consumer -rites iose at an annual rate of >.3 p e r cent, a sharp contrast wit the figure of 13.4 per cent in the three months ended last Sep- tember. The declining rate oft fa- tion has coincided with the ad- tance of the nation's recession and the sharp rise in unoemploy- ment. In separate reports, the Labor Department said the purchasing power of the average worker's paycheck continued to ose ground last month even though the work week and average hourly earnings incraa-ei. ALLOWING FOR inflation and deductions for taxes, real spend- able earnings fell one-tenth of a per ,cent in April and were 4.1 per cent below a year ago. New claims for unemployment insurance benefits rose by 12,300 to a total of 433,200 1 the week ending May 10, the government said. But the total number of Americans getting jooless hene- fits declined by 28,300 to 6,257,- 100 in the week ending May 3, the latest week for which hose figures were available. In the Consumer Price In- dex for April, nonfood commiDo- dities increased eight-tenths of one per cent after a rise of five- tenths in March. MIoathly in- creases in this index have fluc- tuated within this range since last summer when the index was rising in excess of oe per cent per month. IN APRIL, gasoline, coal, home maintenance ad furntuse prices rose more than in recent months and hoise -pricas con- tinued to increase. New cars, recreational goods, drugs and alcoholic beverages also in- creased but at a sower rate than in previous months. Chambers of original Supreme Court to "WASHINGTON s/) - Looking just about as it did when -it considered the case of runaway slave Dred Scott, the first per- manent home of the Supreme Court will reopen to the public today. It has taken three years, $478,000 and the scraping away of paint which was a quarter- inch thick in places. But the old chamber on the ground floor of the Capitol is ready for the nation's bicentennial. CHIEF Justice Warren Burg- er, Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield (D-Mont.) and Republican Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania are scheduled to take part in dedication cere- monies at 5:30 p.m. Although the court began be opened meeting in the room in 1810, the restoration reflects the period of 1850 to 1860 when it was last in use. After that, the court moved to a second-story room in the Capitol which it occupied until its own building across the street was completed in 1935. A reporter for the New York Daily Tribune called the first- floor courtroom a "dark, damp, low subterranean apartment" and at least one observer blam- ed the early deaths of some justices on its dampness. U N C O M F OR TA B L E or not, however, it was the stage for some memorable scenes in American history. It was there on March 5, 1857, that the court edged the nation further toward civil war with to ublic its Dred Scott decision. The de- cision held that a Negro who was a slave under Missouri law had no constitutional right to sue in a federal court to obtain his freedom. It was in this room, too, that Daniel Webster argued some of his great cases, holding the floor sometimes for three days. Describing a scene in the court room in 1835, British writ- er Harriet Martineau spoke of Webster "standing firm as a rock" and Henry Clay leaning against a desk amid "groups of idlers and listeners . . .the dark . Cherokee chiefs, the stragglers from the Far West" and "the gay ladies in their waving plumes,"