Saturday, May 24, 1975 THE-MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Ml l II Daily Cl (Continued from Page 8) MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS YAMAHA EM/150 amp-mixer, -75 atts/h. $400. Twoa esro-piano pick-ups, $50. 665-2423. . 73X531 USED ViLINS-Godfor starter. $89.50. Apoilo Music Center. 769- 400. rXtc lUDWIG DRUM SET-Double toms, Zildjian cymbals, excellent condi- tion. Also Dyna amp with Utah speakers. Sandy, 761-0009 after 6 72X523 USED FENDER, superb reverb with 4 10" speakers. Apollo Music Center, 323 S. Man. cXtc TRANSPORTATION STUDENT WORKING on Detroit Free Press this summer needs ede to and com Detroi daily, Will Soare all expenses. Call Sara at 6- 9265 or 764-0553 persistently. dG524 SITUATIONS WANTED SPANISH TUTOR. Native speaker, groduae studet,, teaching exper- ece. 663-8623. , 6507 'RAISED BARTENDER DESIRES part-time (15-30 hrs./wk,) position or summer and falL Pay is open to discussion. Call Dave at 764-0560 1-4 p.m. or 994-0413 after 6 p.m. d0531 NICE, big. fun-loving Jewish boy wises to hmeet nice, unattached gSir, Jwish or otherwise. Write c/n Box 23, Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor 48104. d523 LOST AND FOUND FOUND - WHITE CAT. Geddes- Awixa vicinity. Call 662-1615. dA529 FOUND on State St. near Ann on Thursday, May 22 at 8:00 p.m.-A bunch of keys-several colors-on a non-descript ring. If you think it's yours, call Rob at 764-0552. dA529 FOUND - GM trunk key outside tsaysarrd House 519. Call 764-0551 -days, rok foe C. dA524 LOST-Princeton "1973" Class ring with aqua-marine stone. Reward offered. Contact Alan, 994-0289 per- sistently. 32A524 BUSINESS SERVICES EDITORIAL assistance, dissertation, article, book, article. Howard Rontal, 605-11. 83J530 'YPING Fast, accurate, 50e pg. 663- 6742. 17J524 WANTED on coninment-Arts and Handicratfs. Will consider outright purchases. For Saginaw Shop open- tmg in September. R. Liquie 17 Valentine Ct. Saginaw Township Michigan 48603 903524 TUTORING, consulting in statistics, math computers. Call Walt, 994-3594. cJtr TYPING, fast, accurate. 973-2776. 14220 TYPING diting, cassette trans- cription, IBM copies. Jean Whipple, 812 S. State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 p.m. cJtct RESUME PR I N TI N G SERVICE. rwenty copies each typedcerrorfree n IBM computer printer. Send 7295 and resume to: FE.E., P.O. Box 1866, Midland, Mi. 48640. 12J529 MOVING Low rates. 663-7690 or 668-8807. cJ625 DISSERTATION editin Textrl, c romatical, stylistic advice by Erglish doctoral students on any writing. 62-5912, 663-5547, or 665- 444. 77531 PERSONAL 2-BEDROOM APT. also rooms. 971- 1246 or 663-7990. 72E528 MASSAGE classes - Irntroductory class ($2) posponed until May 28 due to beautiful weather. For more information, call Warren Shear, 769- 7508 isupprtimebest). 77F528 WOMAN WANTED. Good ntured; sensitive; Intelligent; over 21. I'm sicecre. Passionate after mutual trust. Background includes music; art: scietrce; environmental advo- tcry. Love to dance; massage; learn; camp; play music . .. Please write Richard at Daily Box 1. 50F52 NUTCRACKER Arrived safe in0 Tokyo. Wish ol were here. Have a good B-duty dinner tomorrow. Lav2, F.S. 44F524 YOUNG MAN desires o meet cyoung u0o,0an. Richard, 663-5877. 86F524 ssifieds PERSONAL ARE YOU interesed in serving as a graduate student member of the new Adisory Committee for the Deanship of the LS&A College? Rackham Student Government is soliciting five graduate student nominations or one psition on the Advisory ;Committee. Women and minority graduate students are encouraged to apply. The new Coso- mittee will assist and counsel Pres- ident Fleming and the Regents first in determining qualities and exper- lence necessary for a new Dean of the LS&~A College, second, compile a list of suitable cndidates, and third, help determine a final panel of candidates for the position. Ap- plications for graduate nomination to this Committee are available in Room 2006 Rackham Building, Mon- day-Friday afternoons, May 25-30. (763-5272). Only goaduate students registered for '75-76 U-M school year need apply. 62F530 PASSPORT PHOTOS are takn Wed. 6 p.m. at the Daily. Call 764-0552, ask for Steve or Pauline. dF24 RATHER be traveling abroad but spending Spring in Ann Arbor in- stead? Learn about other countries. Boacd at an Interrtionl Co-op. Tom or Carl, 761-745. 0F524 STUDENT CHARGE accounts avail- able at The Vilage Apothecary, 1112 So. University. c~tc LSAT-GRE-MCAT-DAT Money rac uaranteed Tet Pepaaton Free First Lesson-June 8 THE TEST CENTER-662-3700 CF611 STUDY ART LANGUAGE THEATER"e DANCE IN EUROPE THIS SUMMER Earn up to 8 hours U-M Transfer Credit Contact CENTER FOREIGN STUDY 216 So. State St. (Above Marti-Walker) 662-5575 cFtc UNON BILLIARDS and HOWLING. Open 'tilI 1 a.m. Fri. & Sat., 12:30 a.m. Sun.-Thurs. cF524 PAPERS NOTES THESES FLI ERS COPIED WHILE-U-WAIT High Quality at LOW Cost The COPY MILL 211 B So. State (near GINO'S) 662-3969 c't c NEEDED --CONVERSATION PART- NERS for Spring and Summer to speak English, 1 hr. wk. with Eng- lish Institute students. Exchange of Spanish, Japanese,7Arabic and Farsi possible. Call 704-2415 8-12, 1-5 daily. 23F524 GESTALT ARTS WORKSHOP. Un- lock creativity through use of ma- terials and Gestalt with Bernie and Henriet Mek. May 30-June 1; $35. For info or registration call Michael Andes (662-2801) or Catherine Lilly (994-5492). 11F529 SPECIAL this weekend. Sat.. Sun. & Mon. at the Union. Reduced rates fo billiards and bowling, open 1 p.m0. r524 NATIONAL Medical Boards Prep courses arebeing offered forall 3 parts of the NMB. The Stanley H. Kaplan courses offered have been extremely successful for all NMB, ECFMG and Flex exams. For infor- mation call 354-0085. cFtc Albert's Copying Dissertation g1uality. Locationt In- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028, cFte American citizens leave ..Laos (Continued from Page 1) of luggage each some brought along tennis rackets, teddy bears and souvenirs. One elder- ly American woman carried a tiny -mongrel dog in her hand- bag. OTHER women complained they had to leave all their pets behind. An American official said, "the Laos don't know what they're doing. This will hit them hard. There's a common say- ing that USAID was the second largest employer in the coun- try after the government." A U. S. Embassy spokesman said recently that about 3,000 Laotians were employed by the U.S. AID program. The first 18 American women evacuated were generally som-r ber as they left their bus cara- van and a truck, piled high with 200 pieces of baggage was load- ed into the plane for Bangkok. Each woman and child was al- lowed to take along 66 pounds of possessions. THE SENIOR AID official evacuated from Savannakhet, Sanford Stone of Cleveland, said that seven right-wing Laotian officers wanted for corruption by student radicals in Savan- nakhet apparently have "jump- ed on the left-wing bandwagon" Pilot head named (Continued from Page 1) University of Newfoundland, her master's degree at Duke University, and a doctorate de- gree in Asian history at the Uni- versity of London. Expressing a strong interest in "living-learning situation," Morrow praised the Pilot Pro- gram for its "sense of com- munity involvement." Continued Morrow, "The ideal learning situation is one where you can apply learned principles to your daily living." "I'M extremely interested in the job," Morrow said, noting that she would make her de- cision 'probably sometime DR. PAUL USLAN Optometrist Full Contact Lens Service ' Vsual Examinations 548 Church 663-2476 next week." She explained that Housing Area Director Gerald Burk- house, Psychology Professor Donald Brown, who was on the selection committee, and Feld- kamp had all contacted her in regards to the Pilot position. However, Burkhouse and Brown refused comment yester- day when asked whether Mor- row was tapped for the job. Said Burkhouse, "I can't make any comments. It would be entirely inappropriate." UNION BILLIARDS and BOWLING OPEN TILL 1 A.M. FRI. & SAT. 12:30 P.M. SUN.-THURS. or think they have. "I think maybe they can hold out for about a week," said Stone, who was evacuated along with 13 other Americans Thurs- day night after nine days of house arrest and "increasing unpleasantness" from students who took over the Mekong Riv- er town. THE STUDENTS, who took over the town after ransacking the U. S. aid office May 14, ask- ed Uou Peth to take charge. Stone said "I think he figured he had no place to go and might as well play ball." For the Student Body: DENIM: Big Bells ... $14.50 Regular Bells $13.50 BootJean . . $12.25 Straight Leg $12.25 CHECKMATE State St. at Liberty HA SH UMP H REY BOG A RT W E EK END