Wednesday. July, 16, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAIL ! Rage Nine Wednsda, Juy 1, 195 TE MCHIGN DILY aoeNin DAILY CLASSIFIEDS (Continued from Page 8) PERSONAL WE PARTICIPATE in the Blue Shield Prescription program. Village Apothecary, 1112 So. University Ave. Ftc LAST DAY TODAY. Billiards at reduced rates. Michigan Union. cF716 G.E.O. Membership meeting Thurs- day, July 1, 7:30 p.m., Ann Arbor Public Library Meeting Room. Come, discuss, vote on important issues. 16F717 WE'RE NUMBER ONE in diamond sales in Ann Arbor. Find out why. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. ertc M PIN BOWLING. Win a free game. Union Lanes. Open 11 am, Mon.- Sat., 1 pm. undayn cC7 OFFSET Printing, Xerox, Wedding and Social Announcements. ARBOR INSTANT PRINTING 214 S. 4th Ave. 994-4664 aFtc OPEN AT 1 P.M. TODAY. Billiards and Bowling at the Union. cF12 NINE DAY creativity art Gestalt workshop-rural setting. No exper- lence needed. Aug. 15-24. Bernie, Henrnet Marek, call Dave Brown, 994-5492. 87F716 24 YR. OLD professional student with little free time seeking women interested in friendship, recrea- tional actvites. Call between 8I am.-noon weekdays, 971-2956. SMOKING CONTROL Through Be- havior Modification. Call 94-0019. THE COPY MILL HIGH QUALITY-LOW COST COPYING 211 B S. STATE (NEAR GINO'S) 662-969 HAROLD KLEIN, WHERE ARE YOU? our friends at 2101 Devon- shire would like you to pick up your belongings and settle accounts. --Edith. 52F722 ALL NEW STUDENTS- WELCOME TO CAMPUS PINBALL ARCADE, 1217 S. UNIVERSITY OPEN EVERY DAY eFe PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS through Behavior Modification. Cal 94-0019. 17F02 The ACADEMY BOOK BINDERY is alive and well in Dexter.' Call for free pick-up. 426-8081. cFtc BOARD EXAM TUTORING STANLEY H. KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Enroll now to prepare for upcoming MCAT * DAT * LSAT * ORE ATGSB board exams. For informa- tion call: (313) 354-0085. cFtc Albert's Copying Dissertation quality. Location: In- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028. cFtc NEXT COMES SUMMER CENTER FOREIGN STUDY Still has openings summer/academic year abroad Applications Accepted Now EUROPE '75 " FRANCE 0 SPAIN 0 " VIENNA@ ITALY * " RUSSIA 0 GENEVA 0 LANGUAGE ART THEATER FILM COOKING DANCE For new '75 program catalog and Application Contact CENTER FOREIGN STUDY 216 So. State St. (Above Marti-Walker) 662-5575 cyte E ApoIlo oyuz mission underway (Continued from Page 1) President Ford, watching the Apollo launch from the White house with former Apollo astro- naut, Dr. Harrison Schmitt, said: "It's thrilling." EARLIER in the day, the President attended a ceremony at the Department of State to watch the launch of Soyuz 19 on a huge television screen. He said the joint flight would "lead to further cooperation between our two countries." Meantime, Moscow mission control radioed Leonov and Ku- basov a long list of trouble- ohooting intructions for their cranky television camera. "WE UNDERSTAND," said Leonov. "It'll take a little time, but we understand." The Soviet control center said the cosmonauts experienced more acceleration force at lift- off than expected. Two and one-half hours after the American launch, the astro- nauts pulled their Apollo Com- mand Servire Module away from the remaining S-IVB boost- er, spun the craft around and moved back inward to attach the nose of the space vehicle to the Docking Module housed in the rocket hull. The astronauts then backed out. "WE GOT a good, hard dock," Apollo commander Stafford re- ported. "All the latches are good." The transposition maneuver was vital to a successful dock- ing with the Russian Soyuz. The Docking Module is needed to connect the completely differ- ent docking hardware of the two spacecraft and will serve as an airlock between the incompati- ble atmospheres of Apollo and Soyuz. Pure elation swept into the voices of the usually calm as- tronaits as Apollo streaked into its initial orbit. Some of the first words Stafford spoke after launch swre in Russian: "Mee sahodjesia na orbite (we are in orbit)." ONLY MOMENTS before Mis- sion Control in Houston an- nounced thrust was good' on all engines and the launch was "right on the money." "The liftoff was smooth as silk," said one of the astronauts. "Boy, I'll tell you, this is worth waiting 16 years for," said Slayton, one of the original seven Mercury astronauts. The rookie was grounded for ten years because of a heart mur- mur. MISSION cntrollreported a brief loss of data from a com- puter on the Apollo command shin, but the problem corrected itself. The Soviet cosmonauts were told of the stccessful launch and were quoted as saying, "We heartily congratulate (the as- tronauts) but the main event of the Soyuz-Apollo flight is still ahead of us." Almost forgotten in the excite- ment of the joint flight was the fact that Russia has another two-man crew in space: the M Pin Bowling Win a Free Game Union Lanes OPEN: 11 a.m. Mon.-Sat. 1 p.m. Sundays cosmonauts of Soyuz 18 who are working in the Salyut 4 space station. The Salyut cosmonauts will not participate in any way in the American-Soviet joint venture. THE APOLLO and Soyuz spacecraft will dock over Ger- many on Thursday afternoon if all goes well. During 46 hours of joint operations, the astronauts and cosmonauts will visit each other's spacecraft, exchange gifts, share meals, and beam several television programs to the world below, including a joint news conference and or- bital travelogues of Russia and the United States. During their joint activities, the five spacemen will speak the language of the listener - the astronauts have spent near- ly 1,000 hours each learning Russian; the cosmonauts have an impressive command of Eng- lish. The following is a summary of key events in the ASTP mission for today and early tomorrow: AT 8:46 a.m. today, the cos- monauts will adjust their space- craft to a 140-mile-high orbit. About an hour and a half later, the Apollo astronauts will check out the Docking Module, with a ten-minute telecast from their spacecraft (American tele- vision networks have not indi- cated they will carry the trans- mission live). At 12:31 p.m., Leonov and K'ibasov will test the Soyuz television link with Apollo Mis- sion Control in Houston. Apollo will fire its thrusters, if necessary, at 4:42 p.m. to cor- rectsany errors from previous blirns or the Soyuz circulariza- tion maneuver. Tomorrow morn- ing will bring three telecasts from Apollo (7:30 a.m., 9:10 a.m. and 10:32 a.m.) and an- other Apollo corrective maneu- ver to raise the spacecraft's orbit. About 10 per cent of adult New England oysters change their sex each year. .S- Russian Joint Space lest 00 I u- ttl Isii State Sepoati.e l Activities 0larS iVide a e Aities I) 2Nd State SeparatiJu. HetIsaS ockming ol l.tuaS o an *or C=J l aralod Iuiaino nl 0 lclas 11 1te 0 * lsai" N ldai 01 Act sop 5 41oTa Isnareso escent an Otracted H7 llsouleeS it *11 4610 Cies t sialest Mdules 1renaked 'I Aplt bading in lO 0 1t lasdg in Ill lede:,s: Manoeofs Ileac Ian lalhsla 1S$ LONG BEACH, Calif. (WP) - There has been a marked drop in landings of California's com- mercial anchovy.[ UN . UlOO In past seasons the fishermen OPTOMETRIST had to obtain permission from the Fish and Game Commission Full Contact Lens Service to take anchovy in February. Visual Examinations But because of low takes the 548 CHURCH ST past two years the fishermen were granted permission to go 663-2476 after anchovy during May. -TONIGHT- THE KING OF HEARTS OUR MOST POPULAR FILM This comedy stars Alan Botes and Genevieve Buiold. at 1 & 9 p.m. Aud. A, Angell Hall $1.25 THUS.: BUSTER KEATON in "GO WEST" ann arbor transportation authority Wishes to Publicly Announce Its Firm Commitment to Participation in the MIINORITY BUSINESS ENTERPRISE PROGRAM Minority business enterprises will be af forded full opportunity to submit bids and/or proposals in re- sponse to any advertisement, solicitation or invitation to bid, and will not be subjected to discrimination on the basis of race, color, sexor national origin in con- sideration for an award. For more information call Wm. Wise (313) 665-7701 on Equal Opportunity Employer 3700 Carpenter Road, Ypsilanti, Mich. 48197, 665-7701