Thursday, June 5, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine 1:G getihe job done (Continued from Page 8) BUSINESS SERVICES AREA HIGH school teacher available PETS AND SUPPLIES for tutoring French or Spanish for sniner. Call 973-9:350 after 6 p.m. 'HREE KITTENS need homes Call 61J606 663-6095. 89T613 PORpRAIT paininng, pastels, char- OVERPRODUCTIVE FISH does it cols, oils.5 igns and posters Banks again! Must find lovng home for Art Stidio, 232 Nickel s Arcade. 761- 20 guppies and swords. Please! My 8347. 59J614 tank's gettingecrowded! Calt Karl,. 482-5731 after 1 p.m. dT607 TUTORING. onsultinl in statistics, m 11ath computers. Coll Walt, 994-3594. LOST AND FOUND cJtc I0USD--A small Cthht. White. TYPING, editing, cassette trans- blOck, antI ban, on 4th . nd criptioi. 3IBM Ilcopies. Jean Whipple, Ann St. Call 662-0922. dA607 01 S State St. 994-3594. 10 a.n- 10 .m. cJtoc FOUND- Jade and gold earring at Hnron Valley National Bank at MOVING North University and Thayer. 5s27 994-3154. 00002 1,ow1rates. 663-7690 o 668-807. SUBLET NEEDED- Sublessee. Share one bed- room, air -0conditioned, furnished apart ient June-August. Block from campus Rent negotiable. Call 668- 7195 95U525 SUB1ET -95 mo., efficiency, quiet, inid-May-Aug., near U-Hospital. 994- 5224. 70U509 _ OF 2 BEDROOM apt . $60'm. Near campus. Call 764-6290 days; 764-1136 ees. 15U64 WANTED TO BUY WANTED: Used filing cabinet. 699- 9824. 76K605 PHOTO SUPPLIES FOR SALE: Omega B22-XL, El- Nikkor 50mm0 1 4., Uniroller, Uni- drus II, Soigor exposure meter, Time-o-lite Master, Exakta 500, Len- tar 35mm f 3.5, others. Call 971- 5209 between 6:30 and 9:30 p.m. 79D605 TICKETS GREECE! Fly Detroit to Athens, July 14-August 20. Bargain $498. Must sell my ticket. Call Debbie, MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS USEDFENDER, superb reterb with 4 10" speakers. Apollo Music Center, :23 S. Main. eXtc NEW EPIPHONE shipment now in. Most models in stock. Get a deal. Apollo Music Center, :323 Main (X606 PANASONIC FM-AM stereo unit with turntable, excellent speakers. $225. 994-6680 eves. 75X606 USED VIDLINS-Good for starter. $89.50. Apollo Music Center. 769- 1400. eXtc USED ARTLEY FLUTE for student. 761-9470. (X606 USED HARMONY 12 string guitar in good shape with excellent sound. Apoo Music Center. 769-1400. (X607 COMPLETE Sterea system os ale. Itnclsides- Sasal 2000A Tuener Ate- plifier, Garrard SL65 turntable and Electrovoice, 15" triaxial speakers mounted in 15 cu. ft. cabinets. A! deal at $275. Call 668-6029 evenings. 943605 USED DREADNAUGHT guitar sale. Starting at $49.95. Come in and (teal. Apollo Music Center, 323 S. Main. (X607 LUDWIG DRUM SET-Double toms Zildjian cymbals, excellent condi- tion. Also Dyna amp with Utah speakers. Sandy, 761-9009 after 6. 72X523 HELP WANTED PAPER CARRIERS NEEDED 1 rhe Michigan Daily is now taking applicatiens for Susitute and fall- tme crn-ees. For mere information call 764-0558 or lust stop in. dH611 ATTENTION artists & craftsmen- your talents are needed now for the Arborland "Free Art Fair" June 26. 27, 28 (Thurs., Fri., Sat.). For space& ®istration catt 971-0636 or 761-7805. 65H611 HOUSEKEEPER-Live-In, Part-time -Starting Jsiy 26. I need some- one who loves children and who can be firm and kind. Two young- sters, 7 and 8 years old. Room, board, salary and weekends off. Near campus. Lovely room and ter- race of your own. 994-1013. 95H610 SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE We are interviewing for a manage- ment trainee program, which will allow you to earn $25,000 or more in 5 years within the financial service industry. Applicants familiar with the Flint or Tri Cities area prefer- red, Send resume to Henry Zuilhof, 1232 N. Michigan, P.O. Box 2023, Saginaw, Michigan 48605. 85H610 BUSINESS SERVICES EDITORIAL ASSISTANCE, book, ar- ticle, dissertation. Howard Rontal, 665-7161, after 5 p.m. 91J612 MOVINO? Call us for a reasonable, professional job. 15 years experience. Free estimates. 971-4585. cJtc CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC 2000 Green Road, Ann Arbor 769-5314 11J65 --C ---O FOR SALE RUMMAGE ond bake sale. Sat., June 7, 8-3 at the corner of De- troit and E. Kingsley Sts. Sponsored by the Neighborhood Food Co-op. Clothing and household items, live music by the Bo-lo Band 11-2. 73B606 POWER-BUILT GOLF irons. $150. ' c6-5291. 860610 Super condition. 2-W, 971-5433 after 6. 11B606 PERSONAL GARAGE SALE. Too aany items to PROFESSIONAL MAN, age 28, work- list. Very good buys. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., ing at UM, seeking warm relation- Sat. and Sun. 1102 Oakland at ships with mature woman in 20s. East University. 769-0853. 00B607 . My interests include international affairs tennis, exercise, mountains, GARAGE SALE - Antiques; baby and the environment. If you have furniture, children's clothing, bikes, similar interests, and are patient games; household furnishings and in your search for a compatible and equipment. Large selection -excel- lent condition. Sat. & Sun., June hMokr Dail Boi lationship, 7 & 8, from 9-5. (NO checks or early sales). 3431 Surry Dr., Saline. lET 05 FILL yoir nest prescrip- (South of Ann Arbor-Saline Rd. & tion. The Village Apothecary. cFtc Pleasant Lake R.), 6306037* TIFFANY STYLE LAMPS for sale. LSAT-GRE-MCAT-DAT 761-6827. 5B612 Money Back Guaranteed Test Preparation FOR SALE-One Sears 'high voltage' Free First Lesson-Jine 7 battery. Like new. $20 or best offer. THE TEST CENTER-662-3700 Call Rob at. 764-0552. dB605 cF611 RECORD SALE by Longtime DJ. ANNUAL DIAMOND SALE-Now in Call 994-3399 before 10 p.m. Hurry. progress. Sale began January 1 and Bargains. 55B607 will end December 31. Austin Dia- --------- -.-----_ - mond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. SUBLET cFtc - PUT SOME STYLE into your life. FEMALE SUBLET. Own room in U-M STYLISTS at the UNION. We sunny apt. Pool, A/C. July, August. have a complete line of RK. cF605 Rent negotiable. 663-8390. 98U610 -- - - - - _-CLASSICAL GREEK * Major or OWN ROOM in 3 bdrm. apt. Pos- grad with speaking proficiency to sible Fall option. $55/month. 662- help with indep. phonetics project 2310. 67U607 in return for beer money. Call Bob, -~-- - -- - -- 761-0579. dF611 JULY-AUGUST. Fall option. Mod- --- - - ern 1 bedroom, A/C, dishwasher, A LITTLE LUCK, a litle skill gets large patio, excellent campus loca- you a free game. Bowling at the Un- tion. 769-0748. 88U607 ion, z cF605 JULY-AUGUST, 1 bdrm., a/c, laun- THE ADMINISTRATIVE COUNCIL dry, quiet- area near campus. Call of the Rackham Graduate School is 769-9798 persistently. 44U606 now sccepting applicationsfor 1 ____ - - Grad. Student Membership far sum- SINGLE ROOM in house available mer term. All fully metriculated July-August. Call Barb, 662-8870 af- U-M Grad students are eligible for ternoon 95U611 namination. The Council will locus ____ - - - . on adminiatration-admision policy, OWN ROOM in friendly campus graduate records, fellowships, and house. June-Sept. 1. $55/month or procedures and policy. Applications make offer. 763-6534. 99U607 for nomination are available M-F _ __ -afternoons May 26-Month of June. MUST SUBLET - Modern, 3-bdrm. (763-5272). 87F604 apt. A/C, dishwasher, balcony, 1?z baths. Negotiable. June-August. 663- SAILING for fun or experience on 7261. 96U612 weekends aboard 35 ft. ocean-going --.-_------------- ketch, made three trans-Atlantic AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY-EFFI- crossings. Call 663-4398. 82F612 CIENCY APARTMENT. FALL OP- TION. DAHLMANN APARTMENTS, PIANO LESSONS. Play by ear/Music 545 CHURCH STREET, cUtc Theory. Low rates. 971-4163. 46F607 LOVELY APT. thru Sept. 1. Female or married couple. Walking distance Albert's Copying campus, Bargain. 994-5657. 97U606 Dissertation quality. Location: In- SUBLET: Your own sunny, bay-win- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. dowed bedroom in friendly, coopera- 994-4028. cFtc tive apartment. Available June 13 ALL NEW STUDENTS- through August. eaking! Female WELCOME TO CAMPUS PINBALL preferred. 993-3155. 78U607 ARCADE, 1217 S. UNIVERSITY GPEN EVERY DAY JUNE-AUGUST, a room suite, rent cFc very negoitabte. 665-5114. 81U606 1 -- --- SUBLET: Late June through August. PAPERS One person, modern opO. near tam- pus. Air conditioned, cheap. Jean, NOTES evenings, 068-6923. 87U616 OWN ROOM in 5-bdrm. house avail- THESES able June 16 'til Sept. On Packard near Arch. 665-5983, best at 6:00. F E ^ 54U607 COPIED I-BEDROOM of large, beautiful 2- bedroom apt., immediately or ust W HILE-U-W AIT July-August. Price negotiable. Su- san, 663-2910. 48U610 High Quality at ___________- - ..-LOW Cast EFFICIENCY APT. near campus, fall option. Call 665-7603,. 1U The CO PY M ILL BECOME more aware of the natural things around you. Wild Plant 211 B So. State, Identification Course. Sis field Ineor GINO'S) trips so local habitats. June 4-25. I 6236 Experienced instructors. Call 761- 662-3969 8518 eves. before 9. dM530 cFtc AP Phota Peek-a-boo One of three baby racoons living in a hollow tree starts the day with a check of the weather. A photographer using a long lens was able to capture the event although the raccoon's house is 15 feet above ground level. Sugar prices remain below win ter record NEW YORK UP) - Sugar prices, which reached unpre- cedented heights seven months ago, have declined so sharply this year there is now talk of reimposing price supports. The price for raw sugar, which is used to make the fin- ished product, is about 15 cents a pound - less than one-fourth the record high of 65.6 cents a pound last November. THE RETAIL PRICE for re- fined sugar has dropped less sharply as refiners seek to sell the sugar made from raw sugar bought before the price drop- ped. The national average for re- fined sugar in April, according to the Bureau of Labor Statis- tics, was $2.09 a five-pound bag, compared with $3.14 in De- cember and 85 cents in January 1974. Although the current price for raw sugar is still twice the historic averages, commodity analysts forsee further drops ahead and note that domestic growers fear further declines could wipe out their invest- ments. "THERE' S T A L K among growers of going to Con- gress with a united front," said one high-ranking official in the Department of Agriculture, who emphasized the government had no present plans to support prices. "If spot prices get down to the 10-cent level, the growers will descend on Washington like lo- custs," said a Wall Street com- modities analyst who asked to remain anonymous. Such a lev- el was a "definite possibility," he said. At the Department of Agricul- ture, the Economic Research Service has begun a study of the relationship of price and production over the next five years. "We're looking at alter- natives rangipg from free trade to reimposition of target prices," said Robert Bohall, who heads the study. BOHALL SAID the House Ag- riculture Committee plans hear- ings this summer to see what should be done. Last year Congress ended the Sugar Act, which for 40 years had protected domestic growers by adjusting imports to meet a target price. Critics of the act said it was unnecessary in a shortage situation with prices far above the 11.45 cent-a-pound target. Any attempt to revive the act to help growers would probab- ly run into fire from consum- ers, who like the declining pric- es. WITH RAW sugar at 15 cents a pound, Bohall said, most growers are doing "reasonably well." However, an official with the USDA's Stegar Division, who asked to remain unidentified, said domestic sugar production need to charge between 14 and 20 cents a pound to cover costs, plis whatever they add for profit. Panic and a worldwide short- age drove sugar prices to last year's record level. Refiners, worried about supplies, bought three to six months ahead as late as last December, some ob- servers say.