Tuesday, June 15, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Tuesday, June 15, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine DAILY CLASSIFIEDS (Continued from Page 8) BOWL at the Union Only 55 per game. cP616 MESSAGES FROM TEMANAGER I seems to be anote r l aa day for the classifieds in Box 21. Are you al getting bored with my gems? Probabty sa. Ge maybe the writing 0a Baa 23, our femae taxidermist took precedence. There appears to be an upswing in the amount of people looking for companionship through the classifieds. By the re- sonses that the boxes get, espe- etally the females, I would imagine tat it must work, so don't lose aope out there. Nothing much else ao my except I hape eeryane had a great weekend! WRITEt rebbe cao ao 21. PERMANENT WEIGHT LOSS t'hreugh B e h a v t a r Modification. Weight Control National, 994-0019. eFte GEO MEMBERSHIP MEETING: 7:30 Tuesday, June 15. Raekham Amphi- theatre. Bargaining-Review and dis- alan af Adminstratian Cunter- aroposals-and other issues. 23F615 ARBOR INSTANT PRINTING Offset Printing, Xerox copies Xerox reductions, photostats, half tones, typesetting and much more STUDENT ACCOUNTS WELCOME 214 S. 4th Ave. 994-4664 cF0102 lA's-RA's /SA's-What did the ori- gnal American revolutionaries do when faced with the choice between non-representation, and collective action against oppression? Like George 1ii, the University Admin- stration wants to determine your economic future, whether you like it or not. Interested in continuing he revolution this fail? Send name. address, dept. phone no. to GEO/ YES. 514 E. William, Ann Arbor, 48108, or phone 995-0221. 98F628 BITCH, YOU CRAZY! Will be back!l June 18, 19, 25, 26, 27 CSiiport your local feminist theatre STUDY GROUP FORMING: Grad students or mdergrads-inter- eoed in reading text/articles about .ll biology and or human psysiolo- ad meeting once or twice a a for discussions? If so, ca l D, at 995-3406, after 7 pam. 89F619 HI1AiT CENTER SCHOOL OF AS- ITOLOGY. Instructors: Michael and Mt-g'act Eciewine. Teaching stare '90. Clases Natal Charta, Retat Txtooks Readings, Certification 663-6677. 68F515 I IAENDS LAKE COMMUNITY. 80 -re wildlife preserve near Chelsea- ranoeing, picnitcing Cin" Membership $50 per adult. lic rtire from Bloods. 2005 Penn- eli Ann Arbor. Mich. 48103. 48F630 O jNG CIOSEST TO CAMPUS -.C Aassnotes, papers, resumes . letin qality, low prices t enin Fom per 21 .Sae(er Gi"" ) ICE CREAM-- CARAMEL CORN CASTLE Now Open 11-11 Not open Sundays F618 'AKE LOVE NOT WAR" eas oo for our businessli Austin Diamond 12o0 s, University, 66341-51 cFIc N l ! TIi EXiRCIEE HOUR-- - evr Tus and Thurs., 1 2 et at WINES um 5th at Hill. 09F622 CC;VICS LUNCH - Cme for home CCI'l Breakfast all day. great ,nd e I rol 3 eg onielets Clith Crell vtael,, eald freah clillil 'cotssrved CIIlliay.bill- s i-a 1113 South Uniersey. eFte WC GVEa 'Caisont 11'a- t lens preparations. Village Ci1hecary 1112 S. Uiversity. cFte , Court declines busing case (Continued from Page 3) of justice." She added: "I hope it doesn't cause violence in the city. It probably will. Now people are up against the wall with no place else to go." Boston's bitter division over school integration and busing has erupted in violence before. High schools in the white neigh- borhoods of Hyde Park, South Boston and Charlestown have been p1 a g u e d with frequent fights. Some days the schools had more police than students. AND THE TROUBLE has not stayed inside the buildings. This spring a black lawyer was beat- en with a flagpole by young antibusing demontrators out- side City Hall. A short time later a white man was dragged from his car and beaten nerly to death by black youths. Udall releases delegates Conatinued from Page ) health insurance program and voted to amend a proposed plat- form plank which failed to say how the financing should be handled. THERE WAS disagreement on the platform drafting sub- committee over whether the financing of such a plan should be public, private or a combi- nation of both. Udall was in New York where top state Democrats turned out to endorse Carter. . Gov. Hugh Carey, New York Mayor Abraham Beame, for- mer Gov. Averell Harriman, former Mayor Robert Wagner Jr. and other local leaders held a news conference with Carter to call upon other Democrats to unite behind the frontrunner. "OUR JOB is to banish all differences, organize ourselves for the convention, and go forth as a party determined to cad," said Carey. Only 33 delegates are legally committed to Carter in New York. Beane then introduced Car- ter to the 274 convention dele- gates as "the candidate" and led the applause as Carter pro- laised to help America's urban areas in general and toN ew York is particular. "THERE'S a special prob- lem in New York City," Carter said. I-e promised if elected, he would meet "even before the { inauguration w i tI h Mayor Beame and Gov. Carey to lay down the commitment of our nation to resolve New York Cit's financial problems. The New York delegates gave two standing ovations to Car- ter, but they reserved their loudest applatse and cheers for Brown, who appeared imme- diately after the Georgian. Brown was interrupted by applause when, in an apparent reference to Carter, he said "it's going to take more than an invocation - more than an invitation to love - it's going to take economic planning like we've never seen before to deal with these problems" such as those of the cities. JOSEPH CRANGLE, a New York delegate, said New York would end up solidly behind Carter despite the cheers for Brown and Udall. "Are there going to be votes for them? Well, people are realists." Despite the trouble inside some high schools and middle schools in three white neighbor- hoods, most schools in other parts of the city have been rela- tively peaceful. There has been virtually no resistance to inte- gration in black neighborhoods. Louise Hicks, president of the Boston City Council and an an- tibusing -leader, said, ". . . it is now up to the people to de- cide through whatever means at their disposal what steps they will now take to save themselves from the apostles of urban neglect, the Brookes, the Kennedys, the Levis and the Fords." She was referring to Massachusetts' two senators as well as the U.S. attorney general and the President. "NO PEOPLE anywhere at anytime can be expected to live with the injustice that has been heaped time and time again on the good parents of Boston. They have been had, and they will respond," she said. School Committee Chairman John McDonough said he thought the decision of Atty. Gen. Edward Levi two weeks ago not to file a brief in the case encouraged the Supreme Court's refusal. "I feel to have the attorney general considering intervening GREAT LAKES SHIPWRECKS BOWLING GREEN, Ohio (P) - In what they believe is the first Great Lakes shipwreck study ever done, the Northwest Ohio - Great Lakes Research Center at Bowling Green State University has collected infor- mation on 1,321 ships lost in Michigan waters. The two-year study, dealing only with those portions of Lakes Erie, Michigan, Huron, St. Clair and Superior in Michi- gan's domain, was conducted for the Michigan Department of Natural Resources. It is estimated there have been some 6,000 shipwrecks in the entire Great Lakes. ENJOY Y4 IF w r \c t- lit-El BUlY'; 618 S. MAIN ST 769-4700 HOURS: M-Fnea-9 am. ".t.C J9 - m DURSI We're going to te loudspeaker. . . . But we're n thich ane, becau ver personal. One other man's noise. cogmon sense thin CENTUI JBL dressed uo t monitor and turer most successful lOU $333. J U BA The smallest floor $462. DECA JBL' , ,,,Me inn Natural ik cbine $1688 stoa by HI-FI BU' record and we w things .- and then deciding not to was most damaging to our case," le said. ANOTIER case before the U.S. Court of Appeals, he said, appealing Garrity's placing of South Boston Iigh School in a receivership under the court's control, p r o v i d e s "the best chance to get judicial review- and also the last chance." Sen. Edward Kennedy, who has supported Garrity, said in a statement released by his Boston office ". . . it is my hope that a new effort in bring- ing reason and understanding into this difficult situation will be made" aimed at restoring Boston schools "to their former place of pre-eminence." Eric Van Loon, a lawyer for the black parents whose suit forced the busing plan, said the ruling "underscores the perma- nent and legal inevitability of desegregation in Boston" and shows Garrity "has not been embarking on a personal social policy." 4 you how to buy a ot goin to tell You se loudspeakers are man's music is on- Still there are some s You should know RY L-100 their comtact studio d it into one of the dsoeokers ever mde 00 each L L-65 r ssvtem JBL makes 00 each DE L-26 3 two - Wa syste t. ,00 each YS with vour favorite i show you a few ' BrChrg ANKAMERICARD -B~ Cn