Thursday, August 14, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Thursd. . Aug 4 97 H IHIA AL Pg ee Daily Classifieds Uncontracted Classified Rates WORDS 1 2 3 4 5 6 add. 0-10 1.15 2.30 3.05 3.80 4.55 5.30 .75 11-15 1.40 2.80 3.70 4.60 5.50 6.40 .90 16-20 1.65 3.30 4.35 5.40 6.45 7.50 1.05 21-25 1.90 3.80 5.00 6.20 7.40 8.60 1.20 26-30 2.15 4.30 5.65 7.00 8.35 9.70 1.35 31-35 2.40 4.80 6.30 7.80 9.30 10.80 1.50 36-40 2.65 5.30 6.95 8.60 10.25 11.90 1.65 41-45 2.90 5.80 7.60 9.40 11.20 13.00 1.80 46-50 3.15 6.30 8.25 10.20 12.15 14.10 1.95 INCHES 1 3.15 6.30 8.25 1020 12.5 14.10 1.95 2 5.65 11.30 14.75 18.20 21.65 25.10 3.45 3 8.15 16.30 21.25 26.20 31.15 36.10 4.95 4 10.65 21.30 27.90 34.20 40.65 47.10 6.45 5 13.15 26.30 34.40 42.20 50.15 58.10 8.95 N.B.: Each aroup of characters counts os one word. Hvphenated words over 5 characters count as two words (this includes telephone numbers) 10 lines equals 1 inch 5 words per line Ford likely to appeal decision on oil tariff VAIL, Colo. (M - President Ford presumably will appeal to the Supreme Court a U.S. Court of Appeals ruling that his $2 a barrel tariff on imported oil is illegal, a White House spokes- man said yesterday. Press Secretary Ron Nessen said. "I've assumed, and I think everyone has assumed, from the beginning that it would' be appealed ... to try to have the authority of the President upheld." THE APPEALS court, in its decision Monday in Washington, said that Cingress had not delegated to the President the authority to impose such a tar- iff. Nessen told reporters in re- sponse to questions that Ford has not yet actually made his decision to appeal. But the pres- idential spokesman said he didn't want the speculation "to build up into a big thing," so he delivered his own personal view that an appeal would be made. (Continued from Page 8) 1 ROOMMATES QUIET GRAD STUDENT needs roommate to share 2-bedroom, NC., aroadveiew Apt. 8-month Fall lease. $135/month. Call 0-219-483-8739 af- ter :00 p.m. 04Y816 OWN ROOM in modern, 2-bedroom apt. near campus and hospital. Will be sharing with two other women. Grad student preferred. $120/mo. Call 662-7084 after 5:30. weekdays, anytime weekends. Available Sept. 1. 14Y816 GRADUATE ROOMMATE service of- fered. 763-5270, Rackham Housing/ Orientation Office, open 9-5. Rm. 2006. 19Y820 BIKES; SCOOTERS MOTORCYCLE for sale. 1967 Riv- erside. very dependable, cheap transportation. $110. 475-1764 after 5 p.m. 412816 PUI1INE1S SERVICES TRANSMOGRIFYING TYPING All electric. Serving the academic, professional and business communi- ties for 15 years. PRINTING, RESUMES, EDITING. TASK. 761- 4146. cite HAULING Local moving. Very negotiable rates. 973-1485 after 5:00. 45J820 MOVING AND HAULING: Furniture and appliances. Ray Springer, 449- 2554. 39J820 EDITING SERVICE. Textual gram- matical advice, Engllsh doctoral stu- dents work with you. Technical din- sertations. Foreign students wel-! come. 663-5547, 662-5912. 19J819 MOVING? Call us for a reasonable. professional lob. 15 years experience. Free estimates. 971-4585. cJtc TUTORING, consulting in statistics, math computers. Call Walt, 994-3594. cJte TYPING, editing, cassette trans- cription, IBM copies. Jean whipple. 812 S State St. 994-3594, 10 a.m.- 10 mm. cJte LOST AND FOUND REWARD: Lost kitten. White with grey spots. Packard/Monroe, 8/13. Call Vicki at 668-6686, 769-7940. 70A816 POUND: Key at IM track, Monday, tug. 11, evening. Call 994-0673. dA816 GERMAN SHEPHERD LOST: West Ann Arbor, 8/12, 1 yr. old, brown and black, 60 lbs., female, wearing choke collar. Anawers to Shoasta. 761-3406. 72AB16 LOST: Aug. 11. One pair women's tortoise shell prescription sun glass- es in flowered case. If found, call 761-2311 eves. Reward. 5MA813 SLACK DOG LOST. One year old, male, part Shepherd, tan face marks, feet. Reward. 662-5912. 61A814 SITUATIONS WANTED YOUNG WOMAN, ex-Vista, wants Work. Have experience in carpentry, home repair. BA in biology. Like outdoor work, physical labor, peo- Aie. Reply Box 17, Michigan Daily. 960814 PERSONAL CHtRIS,HAPTY211 May God mesa Ton. LOVE, JIMg. 00114 WE DON'T need air conditioning and don't need new euipment, car- peting or drapes-who says so? Riu- liards at the Union. cF814 ADVICE on getting U-M in-state residency, Thursday, Aug. 29, 7:38 p.m. Legal Aid office. 4310 Michigan Union. 47F820 MALE GRAD, 25, seeks traveling companion, preferably female: cy- cling. driving vacation in Canada, New England. Leaving immediately. Tom, 763-6647. 37F814 CONTROL of tension and anxiety through Behavior Modification. Call Behavior Science Services, 994-0019. cFtc A PROFESSIONAL SERVICE and we do think professional at 8:30 in the morning. Mon.-Sat. U-M Stylists at the Union. cF814 PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS throueh Behavior Modification. Call 994-0019. 17F802 The ACADEMY BOOK BINDERY is alive and well in Dexter. Call for free pick-up. 426-8081. eFtc Albert's Copying Dissertation quality. Location: In- side David's Books, 529 E. Liberty. 994-4028. eFte SMOKING CONTROL through Be- havior Modification. Call 994-0019. OFFSET Printing, Xerxox, Wedding and Social Announcements. ARBOR INSTANT PRINTING j 214 S. 4th Ave. 994-4664 RIPLEY SAYS, believe it or not, Ohio State mugs are on sale at the Michigan Union Stand. cF8l4 THE COPY MILL HIGH QUALITY-LOW COST COPYING 211 B S. STATE (NEAR GINO'S 662-3969 BOARD EXAM TUTORING STANLEY N. KAPLAN TUTORING COURSES Enroll now to prepare for upoming MCAT * DAT * LSAT * GRE ATGSB board exams. For informa- tion call: (313) 354-0085. eFte ALL NEW STUDENTS- WELCOME TO CAMPUS PINBALL ARCADE. 1217 5. UNVERSITY OPEN EVERY DAY LET US FILL your next prescrip- tion. The Village Apothecary. cFte ANNUAL DIAMOND SALE-Now in progress. Sale began January 5 and wili end December 31. Austin Dia mond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. PASSPORT PHOTOS taken at the Daily, Wednesdays at 6 p.m. 764- 0552, ask for Steve or Ken. 36F14 DAILY CLASSIFIEDS BRING QUICK RESULTS SHORT or LONG HAIRSTYLES TO PLEASE DASCOLAA STYLISTS ARBORLAND-971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE--761-2733 E. LIBERTY-668-9329 E. UNIVERSITY--662-0354 _Ex-juror amis ia in. Kent State trial (Continued from Page 3) WATTS said that after hear- was open-minded when the ing the testimony, "I can't pos- trial began May 19 but is sibly feel the plaintiffs have "strongly concerned about law any grounds" for the damages. and order." He added he thought it was HE SAID he felt the Ohio Na- wrong of them to have brought tional Guard, Gov. James the suit. Rhodes and the former state of- He said Young questioned ficiols named defendants 'were him privately before court only doing their job" in the May Wednesday "and of course I 4, 1970 campus flareup in which admitted at this stage that I am four students were killed and prejudiced, and so the judge nine others wounded when let me go." Guardsmen fired on anti-war "I've only talked to a couple demonstrators protesting U. S. of guys at the shop, but some- entry into Cambodia. one could have overheard us," The suit was brought by the Watts said. He understood his wounded students and parents comments left the plaintiffs "in of those who were killed. a delicate situation," he said. Asked how he felt about his But he added, "From the evi- dismissal, Watts replied that dence I've heard, it sounds 'you hate to think that you wrong to be trying to sue the wasted 13 weeks of listening to people we have in government the evidence and not being able who are trying to do what's to vote for the defendants." right . . . The press secretary pointed out that Ford is still reviewing the recommendations of his legal advisers, while also con- sidering whether he may vol- untarily remove the $2 a bar- rel import duty on his own for economic reasons. FORD IS considering possible ways to ease any inflationary impact from his planned veto of a congressional six-month exten- sion of domestic oil price con- trol. Nessen said Ford still wants to consult with Federal Energy Administrator Frank Zarb, due in Vail today, before announcing any decision on the court or oil price decontrol issues. At the Justice Department, spokesman Robert Feldkamp said administration officials have made no decision yet on whether to appeal the case. He said Asst. Atty Gen. Rex Lee, head of the department's civil division, met yesterday after- noon with White House counsel Roderick Hills and FEA offic- ials to discuss the matter. FORD, meanwhile, worked with two of his speechwriters on an energy speech he will make tomorrow morning at a Vail symposium on energy and en- vironmental issues affecting the Rocky Mountain West. Ford played golf yesterday for the third day in a row, but lim- ited his play to nine holes be- cause of light rain. Marshall French, Republican leader of the New Hampshire House of Representatives, was among Ford's golfing partners, One of French's friends, Stan- wood Sterling of Denver, joined the foursome, which also includ- ed Vail golf club pro Bob Wolfe. Controls on FBI investigations proposed MONTREAL (P) - U.S. Atty. Gen. Edward Levi has proposed tight controls on techniques the FBI may use in domestic sur- veillance as well as on the length of investigations and the time the agency may hold cer- tain information. Levi said yesterday he was seeking to balance the interest of individual liberties, abused by the FBI in the past by "some- times outrageous" activities, with the legitimate needs of domestic intelligence inquiry. HE SPOKE at the American Bar Association's annual meet- ing-the same forum which FBI Director Clarence Kelley told Saturday that Americans "must be willing to surrender a small measure of our liberties to pre- serve the great bulk of them." "I do not think it is a question of giving up individual liber- ties," Levi told newsmen after his address. "I do think it is a question of fulfilling them," The proposed guidelines would restrict FBI domestic intelli- gence investigation to activities that may involve the use of Ann Arbor Civic Theatre Presents SEPARATE TABLES FRI-SUN., AUG. 14-16 201, MULHOLLAND Curtain 8 p.m. donation $1 force or violence in the viola- tion of federal law. THEY WOULD require the FBI to report immediately to the attorney general full-scale investigations. The attorney gen- eral would review the investiga- tions periodically and order an end to them when he deter- mined they no longer met cer- tain standards. Unsolicited information, in the past used to help compile the so-called White House Enemies List, would be kept only for 90 days so long as it did not allege serious criminal behavior that ought to be investigated, Levi said. The guidelines would prohibit the use of FBI informants for fomenting crime or inducing others to carry out crimes. They would ban wiretaps and other electronic surveillance in so- called limited investigations and require a judicial warrant in full investigations. "DESPITE the argument that to an investigative agency all information comes across may be valuable-may even turn out to be crucial-the guidelines bal- ance the argument against the interests of individuals in pri- vacy," Levi said. "Despite arguments that do- mestic intelligence operations are essential to national secur- ity and must proceed unencum- bered by detailed procedures of authentication, the guidelines recognize the effect that unfet- tered investigations of that kind might have on legitimate do- mestic political activity and pro- pose tight controls." the " ! NV imCooperatlive PRESENTS MARLON BRANDO in ON THE WATERFRONT. Elia Kazan directed this Oscar loden American classic about cracking big time corruption on the New York docks in 1954. Good (Eva Marie Saint, Karl Malden and Brando) triumphs over evil. Music by Leonard Bernstein. TONIGHT 1 & 9 p.n. Aud A, AngelHail $125 TUES.: T.A.M.I. concert film THURS.: THE ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD