Wednesday, June 11, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Wednesday, June 11, (975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine SasIed d6 hejo cn Women win sports award eligibility (Continued from Page 8) CAR SERVICE, ACCES. CABINET BUILT to fit Dodge Van's '73 on, $35. Peter, 665-2392. 38611 AUTO TUNEUPS! Finest- quality parts used, ludicrously low prices. Work and satsfaction guaranteed. col Mehael, 5-7 p.m., 665-4672. 040611 PETS AND SUPPLIES HOME NEEDED for nice cat. Cl 663-4386 ater 5:30. 72T14 THREE KITTENS need homes. Call 63-095. 89T613 HELP WANTED CLEANING PERSON needed, 1 day o week. References. Cl 662-2491 after 5 p.m. 66H614 STUDENT to do yard work. Call 662-9421. I7H11 SUBJECTS with 20/20 vision. $2.50/ hr. 764-4209 from 9-4:30. 77613 DEPENDABLE strong persons to help disabled working woman with daty activities (meals, dressing, etc) weekends cd lunchtime, kday. C pus area. 662-2734 eves., weekend, 764-9149 days. 61H613 GAY M.N-If you are a U.M. Stu- dent and are interested in making 14.00 by participating in an %a hour research project, call the iuman Sexuality Advocate Office, 763-4186 or 764-0436. Confidentiality assured. 52H614 ATTENTION artists & craftsmen- your talents are needed now for the Arborland "Free Art Fair" June 26. 27, 28 (Thurs., Fri., Sat.). For snae & registration call 971-0380 or 761-7805. 6511611 SITUATIONS WANTED NICE, big, in-loving Jewish boy cises to meet nice, unattached Or, Jewish or othewhse. Wrie c/a Box 23, Michigan Daily, Ann Arbor 48104. dF523 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS GIBSON1 LAP steel- guitar. Apollo Mic Center. 761-9430. extr PIONEER cassette deck with dolby tony reel-to-reel deck TC36. Pio- neer di ec ddrive turntable with two Jensen loud speakers with two 12's each. Whole shot, $750. 763- 6890 after 6 psm. 33X613 LUDWIG DRUM SET-Double toms, Zildjian cymbals, excellent condi- tion. Also Dyna amp with Utah speakers. Sandy, 761-9009 after 6. 72X523 LOST AND FOUND LOST-KITTEN. S. Forest and Hill, three months, black, rust, beige. Reward. 761-1058, Vivian. 67A13 FOUND - Young Siamese cat, 6/9, corner Tappan and Monroe. Call Bruce, 663-3824. dA613 FOUND-1 gray kitten with grey nose, 2-3 months old, South Uni- versity and Oxford vicinity. Call persistently, 764-7969. dA612 BUSINESS SERVICES TENNIS INSTRUCTION Former U. team player, second year in Ann Arbor. Bill, 763-6148. 43J612 PASSPORT and application photos taken Wednesday evenings 6 p.m. at the MIlhigan Daily. For further information call 764-0552 an ask for Pauline or Steve. dJt EDITORIAL ASSISTANCEbook, ar- tiee dissertatioer .owardRonal, 66-711, after 5 pm 9162 4beIat 0t... BUSINESS SERVICES MOVING? Call us for a reasonable, inrofessiooal job, 15 yrs experience. Free estimates. 971-4585. cJtc PORTRAIT painting. pastels. char- coals, oils. Sins and posters. Banks Art Studio, 232 Nickels Arcade. 761- 0047 _59J14 TUTORING. conultaitng in satisitics, oath comItrs. Cl Wlit, 94-3294. cJtc TYPING, editing, cassette tran"- criptio, IBM copies. Jean Whipple, 812 S State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 p.m. cJtc MOVING Low rates. 663-7690 or 668-8807. r,125 SUBLET JULY-AUGUST - Two-bedroom bi- level, beautiful apartment on For- est. A/C. balcony, parking, dish- washer. 665-8769. 59U14 FEMALE, OWN ROOM, large, 2- bdrm. apt. $55/mo. North Campus. Ax a i o be immediately. 449-4553 days. 6U617 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. Large, 2-brn. apt., fully furnished, A/C, cret campus location. , Call 761- 2559. 62U617 ROOMS, summer sublet. 663-943. 7U614 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY for 1-2 Women in spacious 4-man apart- ment. Fall option. Anne, 663-9180. 58U614 AVAILABLE now through Aug. 30- Spacious sunny efficiency 2 blocks from campus. $100/mo. or best offer. Call 662-2310, Tenny or Ravi. 19U611 AVAILABLE immediately. 1-bdrm apt., nicely furnished, campus loca- tion in quiet area, reasonable rates. Call 761-2559. 63U617 JULY-AUG.-Modern, furnished, 2- bedroom apt., A/C, on campus, laindry, parking, negotiable. 994- 01. 4U614 3-BDRM. APT. Fall option. Available now, negotiable rent, fine old house. big kitchen. 665-7586, 5-7 p.m. 39U612 i-BEDROOM, unfurnished, available June 21 through August 15 with option. Rent $180. 662-4032. 42U614 ROOM IN HOUSE. $50/month for summer. Call Randi, 662-0669 eves. 30U613 SUBLET-Female Roommate needed in two bedroom duplex. Rent $60/ month. 971-2152. Pets allowed. 34613 SUMMER SUBLET through August -Modern apt., 2-bdrms. 761-4590. 16U613 OWN ROOM in 3 bdrm, apt. Pos. sible Fall option, $55/month. 662- 2310. 67U607 SINGLE ROOM in house available July-August. Call Barb, 662-8870 af- ternoon. 95U611 MUST SUBLET - Modern, 3-bdrm. apt. A/C, dishwasher, balcony, 1%/ baths. Negotiable. June-August. 663- 7261. 96U612 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY-EFFI- CIENCY APARTMENT. FALL OP- TION. DAHLMANN APARTMENTS, 545 CHURCH STREET. cUte NEEDED-Sublessee. Share one bed- room, air - conditioned, furnished apartment. June-August. Block from campus. Rent negotiable. Call 661- 7195.- 95U52 SUBLET-$95/mo., efficiency, quiet, mid-May-Aug., near U-Hospital. 994- 5224, 70569 TICKETS WANTED-MARIPOSA tickets, sane prices. Itarnie, 361-9579. 5d614 BIKES, SCOOTERS , 23" TEN-SPEED bfor sale. $80. Alan, 629945, 71612 750 TRIUMPH Bonneville, 1973, 1700 miles. Mi t condition., Make offer, 549-9294 r X881-Ml5. 8 56164 ,SPECLAL limited sale. Botecchia professonal -u camp equipment. $: 3.' Anlsport, 6632-23. 691614 PERSONAL A (2ALLJ1GIRG - GAM. Pocket Billiards at te Uio. Opn 11 a Mon,-at., 1 p.m. . Fun eF2: -E -B PARTIIPAT to.-:15 B nte Sild Preacription prio rap. Vuage Apothecary, 1112 So. University Ave. o"'c PERSONAL BOARD EXAM TUTORING STANLEY H. KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Enroll now to prepare for upcoming MCAT * DAT * LSAT * GRE ATOSB board exams. For informa- tion call: 1313) 354-0085. cFtc WE'RE NUMBER ONE in diamond rles in Ann Arbor. ind out why. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151, epc LET ANN ARBOR'S only diamond expert help you style your engage- ment ring. It costs less. Over 5,000 U-M men have. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. oFt- BEGINNING astrology class. 8 weeks $15 (or some fair exchange. Call Jan, 665-8202. 41F611 The ACADEMY BOOK BINDERY is alive and well in Dexter. Call for free pick-up. 426-8081. cFtc WANTED-Male guitarist with good voice to sing a mellow seven golden daffodils, etc. Fee negotiable. Reply Daly Box 15. 44F12 YOU WILL LOOK casual and feel comfortable. U-M Stylists at the Union. _cF61 CLASSICAL GREEK **Major or grad with speaking proficiency to help with indep. pontic project in return f beer money. Call Bob, 761-9579. dF611 LSAT-GRE-MCAT-DAT Money Back Guaranteed Test Preparation Free First Lesson-June 7 THE TEST CENTER-662-3700 cF611 YOU CAN R E L A X WITHOUT DRUGS ... avoid tension, with in- expensive Biofeedback system. Free information-Biofeedback, Box 1194- Cl, Goeta, CA. 93017. 25F611 Albert's Copying Dissertation quality. Lcation: In- side David's Boks, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028 eFte ALL NEW STUDENTS- WELCOME TO CAMPUS PINBALL ARCADE, 1217 S. UNIVERSITY OPEN EVERY DAY cFtc 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 cFtc N EXT- COMES SUMMER CENTER FOREIGN STUDY Still has openings summer/academic year abroad AppliCations Accepted Now EUROPE '75 * FRANCE@ SPAIN* ! VIENNA@" ITALY 0 46 RUSSIA GENEVA@ LANGUAGE ARY THEATER FILM COOKINQ DANCE For new'75 program catalog sod-Application Contact CENTER FOREIGN STUDY 216 So. State St. (Above Morti-Walker ) 662-5575 ' ete (Continiued from Page 1) p-layer for the Green Bay Pack- ers, cast the sole dissenting vote during last night's closed door meeting. Following the meeting, Marie Hartwig, associate director for women's intercollegiate ath- letics, emphatically stated that she was extremely pleased with the Board's action: After the .first discussion of this issue at the Board's April meeting, William Mazer, presi- dent of the University "M" Club - an alumni honor club for let- termen - kicked off a major letter-sending campaign with hopes of preventing the action taken last night. IN A PLEA sent to the club's 3,000 members, Mazer urged the lettermen "to write a letter to the Board of Control express- ing vour feelings. "Your 'M' Club is extremely concerned with the possibility that the Board might vote the same "M" for women's sports as it has for the man," wrote Mazer. "I am sure you will rea- lize how serious it would be for the yellow 'M' to be awarded for, synchronized swimming, softball and so forth. It would make the award worthless in my opinion and obviously in the opinions of the coaches whose letters are attached." The letters Mazer had en- closed with his own were writ- ten by University football coach Bo Schembechler, and basket- ball coach John Orr. SCHEMBECHLER contended that deliverance of the award to female athletes would "min- imize the value of the 'M' in the eyes of not only our players but the public who places such a high value on it." "I am the first to feel that women should have an equal award," continued Schembech- ler. "I believe you should spend the same amount of money on the women's awards as you do the men's, but I am absolutely opposed, and my staff is abso- lutely opposed, to an identical award. "I believe that if this comes to pass we will very shortly petition to change the award for football, rather than give identical awards for football and women's sports." ECHOING Schembechler's in- dication that he would soon pe- tition the Board, Coach Orr, in a May 1 letter written to Ath- letic Director Donald Canham, stated "it wosld be bad for our basketball program if the wo- men's basketball team, for in- stance, were to be awarded the same 'M' as 'the men. It would certainly minimize incentive, and I think we might even con- sider awarding another type of award for our basketball team if the 'M loses its stature." However, when contacted at his home following last night's historic derision, Orr answered, "I doubt it when asked if he wOuld now undertake action to change the men's basketball award. Although Orr maintained in his letter that "it would be a mistake if the womeir were to be awarded the same yellow block 'M' that the men have been aspiring for for many, many years," his stand has ap- parentlv mellowed. He said last night that he did not oppose the action, bsst "thought the women would rather have their own award." My two daughters thoight the same thing." ROBIN and Jennifer Orr are swimmers on the women's inter- collegiate team. One 'M' Club member, Den- nis Sirosky, wrote Canham threatening that "if such a travesty occurs I will immedi- ately return my 'M' award to the Board, as it will have be- come meaningless at t h a t point." Following the meeting, faculty Board member Jack Goldberg said, "It is my opinion that if you were to poll the male ath- letes on campus all of them would favor giving women this award. People who win them, male or female, will cherish them just as much as by any former system." f Disadvantaged youth offered summer jobs (Continued from Page 3) To be eligible, the applicant must provide proof that he or she is between the ages of 14 and 21. A birth certifizata, dr*v- er's license or school I.D. card. could be used, says 'Wirbasne. Economic eligibility will be met if a youth's family is on public assistance, if he or she is a ward of the court, or if the applicant's family income fa:ts below federal poverty ieves. Under those guidelines, a fam- By of four cannot have an nn- come greater than $5,050, with an increase of $820 for e a c h additional family member. Pay stubs, unemployment insurance and social security reeipts can establish economic- eligibility, saysK mpsky. POSSIBLE proofs of esidency for both programs include driv-. er's licenses, or sme form' of identification with an address, or at least .a icancelted 'nVelope to that address. Wiaborne emphasizes th t the eligibiliy checkm: are run so- ty so those who afe supposed to receive the services Are getting them. - Eligibility. cheUks a re something .we're stuck with," says -Kerspeky, "They'r ass- dated by the Labor Depart- 0ent." . The seasonal jobs cover a wide range of employment, in- cluding everything from book- keeping and clerical work to tree trimming and gardening. Most of the johs come from gov- ernment noencies or non-profit organizations. TNSIDE Ann Arbor, "the two biggest single contributors of jobs were city hail and the Uni- versity last year," Wisoorne says. "We placed students in 1S departments at the Univer- sity," Ostside the city. manv o rlo - ieats center aro'nd Ypsilanti. Yolsth crews of ten to twelve with a consalor from the cpon- scring organization will b get- ting a variety of work e.-per- ience. Saline. s, gnL some of' Is Own ftmsds, will have teons ;'w.'rkin~g in the recreatifn nr j gr m. Ano- ther crew 'Ill. he working at Yosilanti State Hosnital. Sev- es kids will halo senior itile's garden and store their oreduce in the Community Gardening program. Another group will be working under a program joint- lv sponsored by Willow R u n S'-hools, C Get It Together.' 'and . the Ypsilanti Commumnty Serv- ices.