Tuesday, June 17, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Tuesday, June 17, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Daily Classifieds Police harassment of band probed (Continued from Page 8) SITUATIONS WANTED PROFESSIONAL VOCALIST seeks bard rock and roll band. 50's thru 70's. Carolyn Moon. 663-9128. 990618 TRANSPORTATION RIDER WANTED to NW Wyoming. Leave 614. 662-8945. 14G607 PETS AND SUPPLIES HO-Ni --- - ---- --- - HOME NEEDED for nice eat. Ca 663-4386 after 5:30. 72T614 SUBLET 2 MEN NEDED foe 3-rnan apart- mentnena N State, awn rooms, kitchen, $60/mo. with fa loption same price, no lease. Call 665-7413, 4-6 p.m. 19U618 ROOM IN HOUSE, parking, laundry,. A/C. Call Chuck days, 764-6296 eves. 764-1131. - 18U62 JULY-AUG.-Modern, two-bedroom, convenient location, $150. Call 761- 7852. 22U621 AVAILABLE JULY-AUG.- Large efficiency with balcony. 418 E. Washington. Call 668-6906 or 663- 3641. cte ONE ROOM available for 1 or 2 males in Albert Terrace Apt. near Central Campus and Arb. Available immediately thru August. Call 668- 8003. 25U619 DETROIT. CHARMINGLY furnished 2-bedroom writer's apartment in the Palmer Park area to sublet for the academic year (Sept.-June) or ex- change with apt, or house in Ann Arbor. Landry. pring included, $85. No children or pets. 222-7871, 31-1529. - 81U620 JULY-AUGUST-Two-bedroom. ful- ly frn ished, A/C. on campus .Call 665-569. 95620 SUMMER SUBLET-Female neded for own room-Abby Apts. A/C, dish- washer. 2 bathrooms, patio. Rent negotiable. Call 763-6560. 80U618 ROOM AVAILABLE now th ough December in communal house very close to campus. Graduate student or working person preferred. Call 761-9441 after 7 p.m. 89U618 FEMALE, OWN ROOM, large, 2- bdrm. apt. $55/mo. North Campus. A v a i l a b 1 e immediately. 449-4553 days. 60U617 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY. Large, 2-bdrm. apt., fully furnished, A/C, great campus location. Call 761- 2559. 62U617 AVAILABLE immedilely. 1-bdrm apt., nicely furnished, campus loca- tion in quiet area, reasonable rates. Cal 761-2559. 63U617 ROOM IN HOUSE. $50/month for summer. Call Randi, 662-0669 eves. 30U613 OWN ROOM in 3 bdrm. apt. Pos- sible Fall option. $55/month. 662- 2310. 67U607 NEEDEDO-Sublessee. Share one bed- room, air - condittoned, furnished spartemen Jne-Augut. Block from campus Rent negotiable. Call 668- 7195. 951253 SUBLET-$95/mo., effiiency, quiet, mid-May-Aug., near U-Hospital .994- 5224. - 70509 MISCELLANEOUS GETTING MARRIED? If you're planning on getting married during July and want some fantastic pres- ents worth over $1,000 and the thrill of your life, contact: Ned Gershen- son, promotional director, Arborland Shopping Center. Call IMMEDIATE- LY: 971-0380. 74M617 A PROGRAM is now being offered in Ann Arbor to help combat alco- hol and drug abuse among gay women. For further information, call 763-4186. All communication held in strict confidence. 22M328 REGENCY TRAVEL 601 E WILLIAM ANN ARBOR 48104 665-6122 SUMMER CHARTERS ABROAD, BUSINESS INTERVIEW TRIPS, HOLIDAY TRIPS HOME Corner William & Maynard cMt ROOMMATES WOMAN NEEDED now or Fall. Cheap. Anne, 663-9180, evenings 17Y625 WANTED-WOMAN to share 2-wo- man apartment nearCentral Cam- pus, June ^Jly-Agust. 994-6632. 11621 FALL - ROOMMATES neded to horeow in c-d hose. 83 plrs utilities. Caren, 668-6376. 02Y620 NEED 3 MALE art stdents fr fall. arolashed apt., aloy, pking. dishwasher, near State and Law- rence Streets. $68.75. Fred, 663-5923. 28Y617 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING theses. esumes, etc. Selec- tric (choose your type style), cano pick up and deliver, reasonable. 437-1161. 61J621 PASSPORT and application photos taken Wednesday evenings 6 p.m. at the Michigan Daily. For further information call 764-0552 and ask for Pauline or Steve. dJtc MOVING? Call us for a reasonable, professional job. 15 years experience. Free estimates. 971-4585. cJtc TUTORING, consulting in statistics, math computers. Call Walt, 994-3594. cJtc TYPING, editing, cassette trans- cription, IBM copie. Jen Whipple 812 . State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 p m. cJtc MOVING Low rates. 663-7690 or 6608-007. - J625 PERSONAL HAPPINESS is making. you look great. U-M Stylists at the Union. PF618 PIRST, Gilfriend gone for month. Desire female companion for the- ater,, etc. Second l(nelated) need male roommate through August . 665-4864. 16F617 COME AT 11 A.M. and you have a choice of lanes. U-M Bowling at the Union. cF617 THE DISTINCTION of being South U's only drug store belongs to the Village Apothecary, 1112 S. Uni- versity. eFti MAKE LOVE-NOT WAR" it's food fr our business) Austin Diamond 1209 S. University, 663-7151 cFtc REDUCED RATES for coples eve Tuesday. Billiards at the Union. cF617 IF YOU HAVE somelg to say, say it on your T-shirt and play pin- ball free at Tommy's, Wednesday, 3:30-4 p.m. 09F617 TRANSMOGRIFYING TYPING All electric. Serving the academic, professional and business communi- ties for 15 years. PRINTING, RE- SUME, EDITING. TASK, 761-4146. cJt1 BOARD EXAM TUTORING STANLEY H. KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Enroll now to prepare for upcoming MCAT 9 DAT * LAT a GRE ATGSB board exams. For informa- tion call: (313) 354-0085. Ft The ACADEMY BOOK BINDERY is alive and well in Dexter. Call for free pick-up. 426-8081. cFtc 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 nFtc PAPERS NOTES THESES FLIERS COPIED IWHILE-U-WAIT High Quality at LOW Cost . The COPY MILL 211 B So. State Inear GINO'S) - 662-3969 eptc (Continued from Page 1) Whatever Murray decides his position will be a controversial one. The mayor wants the re- port for the public, while a majority of Council, in a 6-5 decision, decided not to release the report to any city official. The incident involves at least 10 city police and county sher- iffs who allegedly used brutal tactics and made threats against the lives of six members of Blue Magic band after they were stopped last month by the offi- cers near the city. THE BAND, managed by At- lantic Records, was pulled over early May 10 by police after leaving the Howard Johnson's restaurant on Carpenter Rd. The group had finished an en- gagement in Muskegon and was enroute to their Philadelphia base. Sheriffs ordered all available cars to the scene after receiving a report that a black man was carrying a gun iat the restaur- ant. Six members of Blue Magic were apprehended by officers as they were leaving the res- taurant. The group was hand- cuffed, frisked, and allegedly manhandled in violation of their civil rights. OFFICERS found two "start- er guns" in the car, however, the person who called in the complaint confidently denied these could have been the gun reportedly seen. The citizen de- scribed the gun as an "auto- matic." Wheeler's move followed three days after the Washte- naw County Sheriffs' Depart- ment fired two of its deputies, Randy Evans and William Tom- melein, involved in the inci- dent. Six members of the band, Blue Magic, last Tuesday filad criminal and civil law suits to- talling $18 million against Ev- ans and Tommelein. The snits also alleges that an Ann Arbor police officer injured one of the band members by standing on his ankle, however, the band has been unable to identify any city police officers involved in the incident and law enforcement agencies refuse to rel-se the officers' names. Friday sheriff Fred Postill fired Tommelein and Evans af- ter sntisfving himself that five charges brought against the demities were true. The charges are.: -Gross mishandling of peo- ple (the band) placed under a technical state of arrest; -Grossly and negligently mis- handling the group's property; -Submitting false reports to the sheriff's department; -Withholding material and information from the agency; and -Engaging in conduct preju- dicial "to the good name of the Washtenaw County Sheriff's De- partment." Sheriff Lieut. Laird Harris stated yesterday that Evans and Tommelein were fired after refusing on four different occa- sions to answer departmental questions concerning the inci- dent. The two deputies did not ap- pear at a sheriff's hearing de- scribed by Harris as "their last shot to submit any information for their case." TOMMELEIN left the Ann Ar- Council rejects contract. bor police seven years ago to become a deputy, however, his record as an officer remains marked with citizens com- plaints. Harris said the sheriff has received "some citizen complaints on Tommelein) for similar activities in the past, which the department investi- gated but could not prove." Ivan Barris, Blue Magic's at- torney and a well-known crimi- nal lawyer in the state, con- tended in the lawsuits that Ev- ans and Tommelein criminally violated the national Civil Rights Act by violating the band's proerty, freedom, and personal safety. The Federal Bureat of Inves- tigation (FBI) was brought into the case when the alleged civil rights violation was filed with a U. S. attorney. The FBI in- vestigation is still underway. THE SHERIFF'S department submitted a 25 page report on the incident to various law en- forcement agencies and County Prosecutor William Delhey, who is also conducting an investiga- tion. The sheriff's investigation, which the report stemmed from, substantiated the five miscon- duct charges against the depu- ties Harris reported. "We have proven those charges." However Police Chief Wal- ter Krasny state last night that a city police department inves- tigation did not corraborate the county sheriff's report. "We found that none of Barris' char- ges are substantiated," he said. HARRIS chided the city police for "giving Delhey a three-page report," and declared, "It's the responsibility of the Ann Arbor police to investigate this case as we have done." Krasny explained that his of- ficers were "completely cooper- ative" during the police investi- gation and that he received no reports from his staff of their misconduct during the inci- dent. The Police Chief claimed that he could not release the names of officers concerned, because doing so could embarrass them. He added that the department is awaiting further proof on Bar- ris' charges before making a final decision on the guilt of the police involved. Blue Magi is a Philadelphia- based group with Six vocalists and seven musicians. ;There S ** :difference"' * PREPMRE FOR: * Over 35 years MCATu of eperience DAT and-scess Small classes j LSAT voluminous home : stGRE materias * Coorses Ibal ane constanty pdated " "apelalde a DCAT tait :fo tevews of class osprAT lessons and for use UVMf0 sopplemenlary FLEX " Makeups for " ECFMG : NAT'L MED DS " wrluoncl. « (313) 354-0085 " " 21711 W. Ten Mile Rd. * Southfield. Mi. 48015 * " TUCA7iONAL cENTER " "g ' TEST PREPARATION "_ SPECAISTSSINCE 1936 S ter see i Os setOwnsnEsa (Continued from Page1) fringe benefits which would have upped the total cost of the package. Police Chief Walter Krasny, after Council nixed the union contract, admitted he had "an- ticipated" the negative reaction to the proposed pact. However, he added that he had hoped one unnamed C o u n c i I Democrat might have voted with the five Republicans to give the contract final approval. KRASNY said he anticipates the arbitration period will last a minimum of three days "de- pending on how many issues the two parties bring up." Arbitration will in all likeli- hood commence at the end of this month after the city and the police have each chosen their arbitrator and after a third is agreed upon by both parties. Prefacing his vote against the union agreement, Democratic Mayor Albert Wheeler express- ed concern with the ramifica- tions of taking contract discus- sions int arbitration. "I KNOW that when we talk about arbitration, we're taking a lot of chances," said Wheeler. However, he said he wasn't willing to accept numerous pro- visions in the contract as pro- posed by Teamsters. "I feel that the city should not give up its perogatives for layoffs," said Wheeler. "At that point you take away just about any clout that the city has." STEVE'S LUNCH 1313 SO. UNIVERSITY Home Cooking Is Our Specialty Breakfast All Day Specials This Week Beef Stroqanoff 3 eggs, Hash Browns, Chinese Pepper Steak Toast & Jelly-$1.05 DeliciousKorean Bor-a Beef (seeved sfter 4 Daily) Eaq Rolls Horn or Bacon or Home-mode Soups (Beef, Sausage with 3 eggs, Barley. Clom Chowder, et.) Hash Browns, Toast and ChiliVservedTafer 2mur jelly-$1.50 Homburger Steak Dinner- (/2 lb.) .........$1.99 3 eggs, Rib Eye Steak, Spgheeti in Wine Sauce Beef Curry Rice Hash Browns, Baked Flounder Dinner $2.25 Toast & Jely-$2.10 1/1b. Rst. Beef, Kaiser Roll $1.69 1! Ib. Ham on Kaiser Roll $1.39 FAST AND FRIENDLY SERVICE BY MR. AND MRS. LEE SUMMER HOURS s u IMONDAY-SATURDAY 8-8 I V_ SUNDAY 9-2 769-2288 1313 SO UNIVERSITY STEVE'S LUNCH