Saturday, June 14, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine getthejob doe I Rodents invade c u Ms ___ _____. (Continued from Page 8) TRANSPORTATION RIDER WANTED to NW Wyoming. leave 6/14. 62-8945. 140607 USED CARS - 1971 TOYOTA Corolla, good body. nod mech. $1100. 764-6712. 08N614 '69 AUTIN-Nmed strter. Great body, fair motor. Best offer round $200. noon-4 p.m., 764-0554; mid- night to noon, 663-5428. dN620 YAMAHA 1973 RD 350, exc. cond. 2700 miles, helmets, saddlebags. $700. 1-229-2616. 51N530 WANTED TO RENT FEMALE GRAD needs furnished one-bedroom apt., efficien, or room with kitchen privileges for all. Call 662-0667 persistently. 1210619 FEMALE GRAD, 27, needs quiet 1- bedroom or efficientcy apt., Aug.- Dec. 662-7916. 37L614 WANTED TO BUY 35MM CAMERA case, Pentax pre- ferred. Wil pay up to $100. 663-5874 early morning, evening. 69K14 CHECK YOUR CLOSETS-I want to by yourebid Levis in any condition. Ca11 761-497 eveing. Kld PETS AND SUPPLIES R 3OMENEEDED for nice ca Call 663-4386 fter 530 72T14 ROOMMATES WANTED--WOMAN to share 2-wo- oan apartment near Central Cam- pus. June. July-August. 994-6632. 1Y02 FALL - ROOMMATES needed to shre room in co-ed house. $83 plusa utilities. Caren, 668-6376. 02Y620 NSED 3 MALE art students for fall. Furnished apt., balcony, parking, disiwasher, near State and Law- rnce Streets. $68.75. Fred, 663-5923. 28Y617 BIKES, SCOOTERS SPECIAL limited sale. Bottecchia profesional full amp eqsipment. 4'550. Allsport. 663-2233. 69014 450 TRIUMPH Bonneville. 1973, 1700 ilea Mnt conditon. Make offe 549-0394 or 01-341 5114 LOST AND FOUND WOMEN'S gold watch FOUND 6 11, N. University & State, 11:30 a.m. Call Jerry, 994-0413 and identify dA617 SITUATIONS WANTED PROFESSIONAL VOCALIST seeks hard rock and roll band. 50's thru 70's. Carolyn Moon, 663-9128. 990618 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS USED FENDER. superb reverb with 4 10" speakers. Apollo Music Center, 323 S. Main, xtc COR SALE-Stereo, BSR turntable Pioneer amplifier and speakers, good condition. $175 or best offer. Call 761-8073. 07620 USED ViOLINS-Good for starter. $89.50. Apollo Music Center. 769- 1400. exte PIONEER cassette deck with dolby. Sony reel-to-reel deck TC366. Pio- nea direct drive turntable with iwo Jensen lud speakers with twa 12's ach. Whole shot, $750. 763- 6890 after 6 p.m. 33613 LUDWIG DRUM SET-Double toms, Zildian cymbals, excellent condi- tion. Also Dyna amp with Utah speakers. Sandy, 761-9009 after 6.' 72X523 SUBLET SUBLET WOMAN TO SHARE bedroom in large house. Great location. July- Aug. $45. Dahlia: 994-5012. 79U614 ROOM AVAILABLE now through Decembermincommunalhouse very cose to campus. Graduate student or working person preferred. Call 761-9441 after 7 p.m, 59U61 JULY-AUGUST - One bedroom, three-room apartment near campus In beautiful, old house. 662-0137. 88U614 JULY-AUGUST. One bedroom, fur- nished, on campus. $160. 663-4594. 93U614 JUIlY-AUGUST - Two-edom 5- level. beautiful anartment on For- est. A/C, balony poking, divh- washer 665-8769. 59U614 M7AlF OWN ROOM. r e. 2- bdrm, at. $55/mo. North Camt'.. A a a le immediately. 449-4553 days. 600017 AVAILABLE 19?MEDTATELY. Large, 2-bdrm. ant.. fuly furnished A/C, great campus location. Call 71- 2559. 2017 ROOMS, summer sublet. 663-9433. 76U614 IMMEDTATE OCCUPANCY for 1-2 Women In spacious 4-man apart- ment. Fall option. Anne, 663-9180. 50014 AVAILABLE immediately. 1-bdrm apt., nicely furnished, campus loca- tion in qiet area, reasodable rates. Cal 71-2559. 63017 JULY-AUG.-Modern, furnished, 2- bedroom apt., A C, on campus, laundry parking, negotiable. 994- 6088. 46U614 I-BEDROOM. unfurnished. available June 21 throueb August 15 withb option. Rent $180. 662-4032. 42U614 ROOM IN HOUSE. $50/month for summer. Call Randi, 66-0669 eves. 30U613 OWN ROOM in 3 bdrm. ,apt. Pos-. sible Fall option. $55/month. 662- 2310. 67U607 NEEDED-ubOlese.Share sne bed- rooctaile- conditioned. futinsed apartment June-Atgust. Block from camus. Rent negotiable. Cal 668- 7195. 95U525 SUBLFT-- 95'mo.. efficiency, quiet, mid-May-Aug., near U-Hospital. 994- 5224. 70050 MISCELLANEOUS FREE PINBALL AT TOMMY'S this Monday,. 9-9:30 p.m. 0M14 GETTING MARRIED? If you're planning on getting married, during July and wnt same fantsti pres- ents worth over $1,000 and the thrili of your life, contact: Ned Gershen- Stn. promotionai director, Arborland Shopping Center. Call IMMEDIATE- LY: 971-0380. 74M617 0 A PROGRAM is now bin offered in Ann Arbor to help combat alo- ho and drug abase among gay women. Fr further information, . call 763-4186. All communication held in strict confidence. 22M328 REGENCY TRAVEL 601 E. WILLIAM ANN ARBOR 48104 665-6122 SUMMER CHARTERSj ABROAD, BUSINESS INTERVIEW TRIPS, HOLIDAY TRIPS HOME Corner William & Maynard Mtc vvnHite nouse FOR SALE 2?, CUBIC FOOT REFRIGERATOR. Excellent condition, $70. 663-8619 dB621 MEN'S GOLF CLUBS and accesso- ries, bowling ball. 665-4779. 86B614 TWO SECTIONAL SOFAS, coffee table, lamp, portable stereo with cabinet. dinette set, bar, two bar stools, two area rugs, bean bag chair, 5-ft. artificial piant, miscel- laneous, all in excelent condition Call 663-6491 84B618 FOR SALE-One wedding-engage- ment rings set, yellow gold, 22-pt. diamond, price negotiable. 994-5017. 4B14 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING theses, resumes, etc. Selec- tric (choose your type style), an pick tpand deliver. reasonble. 437-1161. 01J621 PASSPORT and applcation phto taken Wednesday evenns 0 p.m. at the Michigan Daily. For further information call 764-0552 and ask for Pauline or Steve. dJt MOVING? Call us for a reasonable, professional job. 15 years experience. Free estimates. 971-4585. cJtc PORTRAIT painting, pastels, char- coals, oils. Signs and posters. Banks Art Studio, 232 Nickels Arcade, 761- 8847. 59J14 TUTORING, consulting in statistics, math computers. Call Walt, 994-3594. cJtC TYPING, editing, cassette trans- cription, IBM copies. Jean Whipple, 012 S. State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 P.m. cJtc MOVING Low rates. 663-7690 or 668-8807. cJ625 PERSONAL IF YOU HAVE something to say, say it on your T-shirt and play pin- ball free at Tommy's, Wednesday, 3:30-4 p.m. 09F617 SUNDAYS at reduced rates. Billiards at the Union. 1-6 p.m. cF614 THE LATEST IN MAKE-UP at the Village Apothecary, 1112 S. Univer- sity. cFt YOU COULD teach a friend Billiards at the Union. Open till I a.m. Fri- day and Saturday. cF-- 4 CINEMA II looking for new mem- bers. Jane, evenings, 665-9348. 94F614 TRANSMOGRIFYING TYPING All electric. Serving the academic, professional and business communi- ties for 15 years. PRINTING, RE- SUMES, EDITING. TASK, 761-4146. cJtc YOUR SUMMER will be complete- Bowlng at the Union. Open till 1 a.m. tonight. cF614 LANDLORD PROBLEMS? Contact Ann Arbor Tenants Union: 4110 Michigan Union; 761-1225. 54F614 BOARD EXAM TUTORING STANLEY H. KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Enroll now to prepare for upcoming MCAT 0 DAT 9 LSAT * ORE ATGSB board exams. For informa- tion call: (313) 354-0085. cFtc The ACADEMY BOOK BINDERY is alive and well in Dexter. Call for freepick-up. 426-8081. eFt Albert's. Copying Dissertation quality. Location: In- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028. cFtc ALL NEW STUDENTS- WELCOME TO CAMPUS PINBALL ARCADE, 1217 S. UNIVERSITY OPEN EVERY DAY eFtc PAPERS NOTES THESES FLIERS COPIED WHILE-U-WAIT Higb Quality at LOW Cost The COPY MILL 211 BSo. State (near GINO'S) 662-3969 cFte WASHINGTON (UPI)-Some- one spotted one of the intruders near President Ford's office re- cently and, down in the White House basement, they say you hear things going bump in the night. In short, there are rats in the White House. MICE, TOO. And some dis- gruntled officials are blaming the whole thing on Richard Nixon. "It all goes back to four years ago when Nixon took that ter- rible helicopter ride over the Mall," the broad grassy strip that sweeps through downtown Washington and past the White House backyard, said one offi- cial involved in executive man- sion rat-trapping. "He looked down from the hel- icopter and asked an aide what were those unsightly buildings cluttering up the Mall." THEY W E R E creaky old Navy munitions sheds thrown up during Worldf War I and, the official agreed, they were a mess. "But did he know what was inside those old four-story mon- sters? I guess not. Those build- ings were crawling with ro- dents." Nixon ordered the buildings torn down, the official said. The job sholld have taken a year, but with the heat that only a President can put on they fell in six months. AND OUT carne hordes of rodents in search of new quar- ters. "Tearing down those Mall buildings and the current exca- vation for a new building next door on 17th Street has given us a rat invasion," the official said. Nixon's chief of staff, Gen. Alexander Haig, heard so many rats scurrying to and fro be- hind his office baseboards he nicknamed the area "the Ho Chi Minh Trail." THE RAT-CATCHERS went to work in earnest after Ford en- tered the White House, using peanut butter as the main lure. T h e y figured, optimistically, they had knocked off their last rodent last October. But now, a mouse has been seen foraging just down the hall from Ford's office. And in some of the basement offices, late at night, one can hear the pitter-patter of little feet scurrying about in the ceil- ing. EPA says city's air fairly pluinfree (Continued from Page 3) compliance this year. In issuing the report, EPA He also noted that most sul- Administrator R u s s e 11 Train phur oxide pollution comes from said, "significant progress" has burning of high sulphur coal in been made in ending air pollu- factories and power plants. tion since passage of the 1970 More of this fuel must be used, Clean Air Act, because of the oil and natural But he noted many local areas gas shortage, he noted, but pol- failed to meet the May 31 dead- lutioi can be controlled if line for complying with anti- "scrubbers" and similar de- pollution standards, and that vices are required on smoke the goal of clean air is still stacks. distant. TRAIN'S REPORT disclosed e e the amount of carbon monoxide Eussinger, in the nation's air dropped 50r*en inefasae f h per cent since passage of the emission control devices re- quired on cars. Particulate mat- ter is down more than 14 per cent, he added. Of 20,000 major stationary sources of pollution - such as talks power plants, factories and steel mills-15,600, or 78 per cent, are now in compliance. (Continued from Page 1) Nonetheless 60 of 247 Air THE PRIME Minister also re- Quality Control Regions across ferred to continuing technical the country do not meet par- differences with the administra- ticulate standards, 42 do not tion, "When we think that some- meet sulphur oxide standards, thing serves our interest we do 74 do not meet petrochemical it even if it is not always liked oxidant standards, 13 do not by some people here," he said. meet nitrogen oxide standards Sources said a final decision and 54 do not meet carbon by Ford on another Kissinger monoxide standards. mediation awaits post-summit Train noted there is a lag of deliberations in Jerusalem and up to a year in collection and Cairo. analysis of air pollution data, Kissinger is said to be re- and some areas listed as not luctant to board the shuttle meeting standards may now be again unless he is 90 per cent in compliance. certain it would produce an A NUMBER of factors com- agreement. His last effort col- hined to prevent the natiofi from lapsed three months ago. meeting standards called for in FORD EXPECTS to know the law by May 31, 1975, accord- within the next two weeks ing to Train.whthertersfxt atw ith- Causes include the fact that whether terms for Israeli with- some pollution abatement is drawal n Sina can be ar- very complex, the energy crisis ranged. which forces burning of more A key factor is the visit here dirty fuel, defiance of the law next Friday of foreign minister and court challenges brought by Abdel Halim Khaddam of Syria. some polluters and lax enforce- Egypt and Syria are pressing ment by some states. for a prompt withdrawal of Is- Train said most big steel mills raeli forces on the Gohlan are not meeting the standards, Heights, but Israel doubts that but that stepped up enforcement a deal can be struck with Da-. will start to bring them into mascus. JULY-AUGUST--Two-bedroom, ful- -- - --- - --- ly furnished, A/C, on campus. Call FOR SALE 665-5069. 95U620 6--0------506---AQUARIUMS and stands, 50 and 30 APT.-July-Aug. Near bus, central gallon, salt water set-up, other campus. $80 per mo. 769-4019eves, Items, cheap. 665-8423. 10B618 910014 __ A.K.C. GERMAN SHEPHERDS, 14 DETROIT. CHARMINGLY furnished mos. old, female; 7 mos. old male 2-bedroom writer's apartment in the and female. Best offers accepted. Palmer Park area to sublet for the 769-9796. 05B621 academic year (Sept.-June) or ex- change with apt. or house in Ann FOR SALE-10 speed bicycle, Portu- Arbor. Laundry, parking included. goese Flandria, lugged.frame, aim- $185. No children or pets. 322-7821, 1piea dere, 25" frame, virtually 341-1529. 81U614 new 27" 75 lb. tubular tires, $160 negotiable. 994-6489. dB614 for own rom-Abby Apts. A/C, dish- RECORD ALBUMS - Over 200 to washer, 2 bathrooms, patio. Rent - choose from. 994-6332 persistently. negotiable. Call 763-6560. 80U618 98B619 e