Wednesday, June 18, 1 r 975 - THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine I Daily Classifieds (Continued from Page 8) SUBLET JULYAUGUST-Furnished two bed- room apt., parking, by both hos- pitals. Price negotiable. 761-8045. 26U625 SUBLET-July-Aug., large room, co- operative house. 763-6339. 28U619 JULY-AUGUST. Large room in house. Kitchen. Great location. Cheap. Call Brad, 761-4338. 27621 FEMALE TO SUBLET. Share room in sunny apt. Close to everything, very reasonable. Call collect if in- terested, 1-474-6582. 290625 2 MEN NEEDED for 3-man apart- ment near N. State, own rooms, kitchen, $60/mo. with fall option same price, no lease. Call 665-7413, 4-6 p.m. 19U618 ROOM IN HOUSE, parking, laundry, A/C. Call Chuck days, 764-6290, eces. 764-1131. 18U621 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. cUte ONE ROOM available for 1 or 2 males in Albert Terrae Apt. near Central Campus and Arb. Available immediately thru August. Call 668- 8003, 25U619 DETROIT. CHARMINGLY furnished 2-bedroom writers apartment in the Palmer Park area to subet for the academig year (SeptJune of ex- change with apt. or house in Ann Arbor. Laundry, parking included. $105. No children or pets. 222-771, 341-1529. 810626 JULY-AUGUST-Two-bedroom, ful- ly furnished, A/C, on campus. Call 665-5069. 95U620 SUMMER SUBLET-Female needed for own room-Abby Apt. A/C, dial- washer, 2 bathrooms, patio. Rent negotiable. Call 763-6560. 0U618 BOOM AVAILABLE now though Oember in communal house very close to campus. Graduate student or working person preferred. Call 761-9441 after 7 p.m. 90618 NEEDED-Sublessee. Share one bed- room, air - conditioned, furnished apartment. June-August. Block from ampus. Rent negotiable. Call 668- 715. - 95525 SUBLET-$95/mo., efficiency, quiet, mid-May-Aug., near U-Hospital. 994- 5224. 70509 MISCELLANEOUS A PROGRAM is now being offered in Ann Arbor to help ombat aleo- 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 cMtc ROOMMATES WOMAN NEEDED now or Fall. Cheap. Anne, 663-9180, evenings. 17Y625 WANTED-WOMAN ts share 2-wo- man apartment near Central Cam- pus, June, July-August. 994-66322 11Y21 PALL - ROOMMATES needed to ahare room In e-ed house $83 plus utilities. Caren, 668-6376. 02Y620 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING theses, resumes, etc. Selec- tric (choose your type style), can pik up and deliver, reasonable. 47-1161. 01621 PASSPORT and application photos taken Wedesay evenings 6 p.m. at the Michigan Daily. For further information call 764-0552 and ask for Pauline or Steve. 4d,9 iOVINGC can us for a reasonble, professonal job. 25 years Bxperiece. Free estimates. 97e.455. cJtc BUSINESS SERVICES TUTORING, consulting in statistics, math computers. Call Wait, 994-3594. rte TYPING, editing, cassette trans- cription, IBM copies. Jean Whipple, 812 S. State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 p.m. cJt MOVING Low rates. 663-7690 or 668-8807. CJ625 PERSONAL SHOOT POOL, get a haircut or go bowling. What else is there? Mich- igan Union. CF619 GEO MEMBERSHIP MEETING 8 p.m., Thursday, June 19, Rack- ham Amphitheatre. Main Topics: affilation, grievances. 44F619 COMPLETE PROPHYLACTIC de- partment at the Village Apothecary, 1112 S. University. eFtc GIVE YOUR QUARTERS to the American Cancer Society by play- ing pinball at TOMMY'S, Wednes- day from 3-5:30 p.m. 46F618 OLD TERM SPECIAL-Billards and Bowling at reduced rates. Wed., June 25, 11 a.m.-12:30 a.m. Michigan Union. eF621 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 CFtc HAPPINESS is making you look great. U-M Stylists at the Union. CF68 BOARD EXAM TUTORING STANLEY H. KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Enroll now to prepare for upcoming MCAT * DAT 0 LSAT 0 GRE ATGSB board exams. For informa- tion call: (313) 354-0085. Ct The ACADEMY BOOK BINDERY is alive and well in Dexter. Call for free pick-up. 426-801 ets Albert's Copying Dissertation quality. Location: In- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028, cFte ALL NEW STUDENTS- WELCOME TO CAMPUS PINBALL ARCADE, 1217 S. UNIVERSITY OPEN EVERY DAY tFtt PAPERS NOTES THESES FLIERS COPIED WH ILEU-WAIT High Quality at LOW Cost The COPY MILL 211 B So. State (near GlNO'S) 662-3969 cFtn NEXT COMES SUMMER CENTER FOREIGN STUDY stm has openings summer/academig year abroad Applications Accepted Now EUROPE '75 " FRANCE 0 SPAIN 0 " VIENNA@0 ITALY " RUSSIAO" GENEVA " LANGUAGE ART THEATER FILM COOKNMG DANCE For new '75 program catalog and Applcation Contact CENTER FOREIGN STUDY 216 So. State St. (Above Marti-Walker) 662-5575 eFte AP Photo Ford sees recession's end President Ford, surrounded by the usual crowd of Secret Service agents and admiring fans, ar- rives at a Washington hotel yesterday where he told a meeting of the nation's businessmen that the long recession is finally nearing an end. Swiss accounts to end? (Continued from Page 3) ers report business abroad is down between 19.7 and 37.8 per cent, idling about one-third of capabilities. "UNLESS THE franc can be brought down to a reasonable level, the alternative . . . will be a crisis extending to all branches of the economy," said Yves Dunant, vice president of Sandoz, a leading chemical company. The exporters were recently told by Swiss National Bank President Fritz Leutwiler that they will have to "live with un- favorable exchange rates for some time to come." But Leutwiler also said that in "certain fields, the interna- tional activity of our banks has reached dimensions which are no longer in reasonable propor- tion to the size of our country." THE SWISS have already taken tough measures to check the inflow of foreign capital, in- cluding a steep penalty charge on bank deposits by foreigners. But there are obvious loopholes and the prohibitive charge has hardly braked the run on the Swiss franc. S w i s s commercial bankers argue that the flourishing state of the Swiss financial centers more than offsets the growing trade deficit. And Alfred Schae- fer, president of the big Union Bank, says bank secrecy fur- nishes the "final touch" for the banks' success. "Relinquishing t h is instru- ment of good will would be equal to self-mutilation and would- by no means prevent in- ternational tax evasion," Schae- fer said. "Cashless payment transactions would decline, sav- ings would be replaced by greater expenditure . . and the already discernible flight into tangibles, gray markets and dark channels would be strengthened." DESPITE these arguments, the largest party in the Swiss coalition government, the Social Democratic, has made the abo- lition of bank secrecy laws a campaign pledge for national elections this fall. And in fact, the erosion of the secrecy has already begun. Af- ter the end of fighting in Viet- nam and Cambodia, the govern- ment banned all "import and storage" of gold shipped out of the two countries and ordered bank employes to provide "all information necessary" to con- trolling authorities. The bank secrecy law, officials declared, could not be invoked in these cases. Foreign governments have re- FBI man activity ir WASHINGTON OP) - A high-ranking FBI official said yesterday that foreign intelli- gence agents are becoming in- creasingly active on Capitol Hill but have not succeeded in infiltrating any congressional offices. "We have no indication of any actual infiltration," James Adams, deputy associate direc- tor, said in a telephone inter- view, HOWE VER, HE added that Soviet and other foreign agents are "developing consid- erable political and economic information" as a result of an increasing number of contacts with members of Congress and their staffs. "Many of these con- tacts are of a clandestine na- ture" in which the intelligence agent poses as an official of a foreign government, . Adams said. Such contacts contrast with actual infiltration, in which a foreign agent would seek to re- cruit a congressional staff member to gather and pass along information. The Scripps - Howard news service reported yesterday that the Rockefeller Commission in portedly also urged Switzerland to tighten control of capital movements from abroad and to combat tax evasion - which is not a criminal offense in Switz- erland. Draft legislation threatening jail in serious cases of the tax evasion has been prepared but so far has stirred little enthusi- asm. Some feel it lacks punch while the Swiss banker's asso- ciation said it was "not a pri- ority matter" because Swiss tax honesty was anyhow better than in most other countries. sees spy i Capitol the course of its five-month in- vestigation of the CIA received evidence that Soviet-bloc ag- ents may have infiltrated con- gressional offices. H 0 W E V E R, A White. House official with access to the evidence turned up by the com- mission denied the report, say- ing "there is absolutely no evi- dence" of infiltration of Con- gress by the KGB, the Soviet intelligence organization. Sen. Barry Goldwater (R- Ariz.), a member of the Senate Select Intelligence Committee, first raised the issue publicly Sunday when he said that he hoped the panel would investi- gate reports he had received from "very, very good sources" of foreign agent infiltration of Congress. A spokesman for the com- mittee chaired by Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), said yester- day that "we are looking into" the reports. Scripps - Howard quote4 one source described as close to both the commission and the Senate committee as saying of the reports of Soviet infiltra- tion on Capitol Hill: "I think there is something to that; in fact, I'm fairly certain of it."