The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 18, 1980-Page 9 Daily Late anti-nuke ativist's CassIfieds (Continued from Page8 H E LP W ANT ED ACTIVISTS Work with the State's, largest consumer orgaiation, Mihigas Citie's Lobby is seeig outgoing ad politically motivated individuals to work full time summer positions. Work involves canvassing petitioning, and fundraising for a variety of statewide economic issues. Opportunities for ad- vancemet. For an iterview call 663-Mo4 betwees 12 p.m..and2p.m. only. cH618 PROGRAMMER: Gung ho individual desired to develop system software for mirocomputers. Knowledge of micrcomputer assembly laguage, and high level language required. Send resume to Winterhalter & Assoc., 3825 N. Zeeb Rd., Dexter, Ml. 48130. 45H621 MATH INSTRUCTOR-Part time to teach lower division math classes. Beginning Aug. 25. Apply to Department of Mathematics, Adrian College, Adrian, MI. 49221- 40H21 Interesting work study clerical position available in Adult Out-Patient Psychiatry, Riverview. Calf 763- 0115. 43H628 BABYSITTER, warm creative, responsible person to care for my 5 and 6 year olds in my Burns Park home. Weekdays 12:30-6:00 through July. Begin immediately. Call 761-8477 eves. and week- ends. 1H621 BUSINESS SERVICES WRITING-Editorial services, creative, academic. Rewriting and copy writing.662-4680. 05J621 CORN ROWS AND EXTENSIONS for black & white hair. Call Diane, 487-5212. 50J621 Professional typing of dissertations and term papers, 20 years experience, references, Donna 73- 0433. 44J6190 TENNIS AND GOLF INSTRUCTION offered. by rtified coach to adult ad children. Reasonable rates and flexible hours. Call 971-059. 25.21 TYPING-Secretarial Service. Inexpensive. Flex- ible hours. Deadlines met every time. Call Betty, 424-5480. 36620 WRITINGSERVICES. Creative, Technical, Editing. Research. Experienced. Professional. 996-0566. cJto SITU A TIONS WA TID CERTIFIED TEACHER would like to care for children in ly home. Call 971-0599. Special tutoring alsoavailable. 240710 DRIVING TO DENVER? If you are planning trip to Denver area, leaving week of July 2 and return- ing July 6 or 7, please call Kermit at 74-55 between 8 p.m. and midnight. Will share epenss and driving. dPtc Ride Needed in general directionof N. Carolina. July 5 Will share cost, driving. Cal 9W%%. 42P621 JULY-AUGUST SUBLET, cheap, 3 bedrooms in full house806 Packard.996-9363. 51U621 BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SUMMER- OWN ROOM 1-6 PERSONS PORCH GARAGE NEAR CAMPUS CALL 663-0482 or 995-9345 54U621 SPACIOUS, SUNNY ROOM in friendly house, three blocks from campus. Available immediately for entire summer. CHEAP. Cal 996-0848. dU620 SUMMER SUBLET-For female, own room, price negotiable. Call 996-4105. 26U619 FEMALE SUBLET bedroom in Albert Terrace. Whole apartment available August. Sublet July and/or August. Call 663-8269/668-9389, eves., Laura. 22U21 JULY-AUG. One bedroom in three bedroom apart ment on E. University. $70/mo. 665-8990-Greg. roommate reported nsmg OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) - Two detectives were assigned yesterday to look for Sherri Ellis, a former room- mate of the late anti-nuclear activist Karen Silkwood. She was reported missing along with her unpublished manuscript about the Silkwood case, Police said they had no evidence of foul play and were treating the reported disappearance as "a missing person case." ELLIS, WHO was contaminated with radioactive plutonium as was Silkwood, wrote a book about the case and was to meet with New York publishers next month, said her sister, Linda Ellis. Sherri Ellis failed to return to her sister's northside home after leaving for a drive Sunday night, Linda Ellis said. Her pickup truck was found at the home early Monday, its passenger door open and the keys inside on the floor- board, her sister said. Sgt. Tom Mundy, who characterized Sherri Ellis as a recluse, said the department is treating the report as a missing person case. "There is nothing to establishany foul play," he said. LINDA ELLIS said a check Monday by friends at her sister's rural home near Guthries, 20 miles from Oklahoma City, showed the animals kept there had not been fed nor the eggs gathered. "If someone has her (Sherri) for cer- tain reasons, I'm sure it is for the book," Linda Ellis said, explaining her 26-year-old sister had been working on the manuscript for five years. The 250-page book was finished, Linda Ellis said, and her sister had just spent a week with a typist working on a final draft. HER SISTER kept the manuscript with her at all times, and it was also missing, Linda Ellis said. "She said she was kind of scared," she said of her sister, a rodeo barrel racing champion known as "Dusty." "I've contacted everyone I know that she knew, and everyone I know that they know," Ellis said. Sherri Ellis and Silkwood were rom- mates in Edmond for about six months before Silkwood died in a car crash Nov. 13, 1974. At the time of her death, she allegedly was carrying documen- tation of violations of nuclear safety regulations to a ' meeting with an Atomic Workers union official and a New York Times reporter. THE WOMEN both worked at the Ker-McGee Nuclear Corp. plutonium processing plant in Crescent. Tests of their feces showed they had been inter- nally contaminated with plutonium. The Silkwood estate was awarded $10.5 million last year after a U.S. District Court jury determined Kerr- McGee was responsible for Silkwood's contamination. The company is ap- pealing the verdict. She was arrested July 2, 1975 at the plant after allegedly scaling the fence carrying a .22-calibre rifle. She was reported to have yelled, "I want to be killed," as she climbed the fence, police said. The rifle was not loaded, Officials found marijuana in her car. Sherri Ellis was given a one-year deferred sentence after pleading guilty to forcible entry and possession of marijuana. In August 1976 the charges were erased from her record. Physiceal, mental toll, high or joess (ContinuedfromPage3) are scarred forever by it . . It tears at the very fabric of society." Neal agreed, saying, "We get our identity from our jobs ... Those who have good 'support systems,' people at home to cheer them up, fare much bet- ter when they are laid off." Kahn offered a suggestion to help alleviate the problem. "While making more jobs-available may be a sensible recommendation to nake at the national level, it won't work at the state level, where there aren't the resources available. The negative effects of unemployment could be minimized, however, if there were more people. working at a reduced number of hours." Kahn said he recognized the labor and management problems that would result from implementing the idea, but said he would like to see in- dustry officials iron out those problems. New high school grads invade A2 for orientation (Continued from Page 3) added that the leaders "were very organized." FOR THE NEXT two days, the future 'U' students will rise early, take a plethora of math, English, and language placement exams, attend meetings, and receive counseling to ready them for the coup de grace: registration for classes which may have been closed for weeks. Heidi Winik, assistant director of orientation, explained that one of the goals of orientation is to familiarize the students with the physical layout of the University as well as the Ann Arbor community. "Orientation also gives them the op- portunity to talk to students and ask them the hundreds of questions they have about being at school here," Winik explained. She added that orientation is also a place for students to meet each other. And at dinner last night, that is just what many of the students were doing. Most-of them opted for the salad bar rather than the veal, and they fooled with the food as they shook hands and exchanged courtesies. "I didn't know anybody here," said Dawn Parker of Toledo, and as she looked at the three persons with whom she was sitting, she added, "until now." Platinum is used to line jet engines because it can take high temperatures. It also withstands friction well, and is made into screens through which synthetic fibers are drawn. - --M- COUPON S Tuls lne of Backpacking& yQII CampinEquipment" / FF 9.0 ARMY SURPLUS We stock afullfine of ALL 1 clothing, boots, camping E equipment, and hunting clothing C *With This Coupon 201 E. Washington at Fourth 1 (Except Sale Items) S OP* M-Sat. . 99443572 Expires June 21, 1980 VIS=O .