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July 27, 1963 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1963-07-27

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


THE MICHIGAN DAILY

:ATTRDAYIT

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ORTS SHORTS:

N.L.Victorious

61

By The Associated Press
BALTIMORE - The National
ague defeated the American
ague 1-0 last night in a two-
ning re-enactment of the 1938
1 Star Game.
Once More, Chaps?
The University of Michigan
Cricket Club will play their
postponed game today at Cleve-
land against the Cleveland
Cricket Club.
A two-out single by Joe Med-
tk drove in Don Gutteridge in
e first inning with the only run
the exhibition, played prior to

the regularly scheduled Chicago
White Sox - Baltimore Orioles
game.
Gutteridge and Tony Cuccinello,
now coaches for the White Sox,
opened the inning with hits off
American League starter Lefty
Gomez. After Ival Goodman lined
into a double play, Medwick de-
livered his winning hit.
Rollins Hurt
NEW YORK - Minnesota third
baseman Rich Rollins was struck
on the left cheekbone by a sharp
grounder off the bat of Hector
Lopez in the fourth inning of
last night's game between the
Twins and New York Yankees and
taken to a hospital.

Fauq uier,
Failure at
DavisCu
VANCOUVER, B. C. (P)-Mexico
swept into a 2-0 lead over Canada
yesterday as Rafael Osuna and
Antonio Palafox scored straight
set victories over their opponents
in the opening singles matches of
the American Zone Davis Cup
series.
Osuna, Mexico's No. 1 player
and one of the world's top-rank-
ing amateurs, routed Francois
Godbout 6-3, 6-1, 6-2 and Palafox
beat Harry Facquier 9-7, 6-4, 6-1.
Mexico can clinch the best-of-
five first round series by winning
the doubles today.

WARSAW VP) - The United
States track and field team, re-
bounding with a vengeance from
a narrow shave in Moscow last
week, smothered Poland.68-36 yes-
terday'on the opening day of their
two-day dual meet that ended in
pitch darkness and confusion al-
most as black.
Confusion arose over whether
John Pennel, recent graduate of
Northeast Louisiana State, had
broken his own world pole vault
record.
Pennel finally was credited with
a leap of 5.10 meters-16 feet, 8%/
inches-after being credited first
with 5.11 (16 feet, 9 inches) and
later 5.14 (16-10%)-.
The confusion arose from trans-
lation of the metric system and

the use of two languages-Polish
and English.
Automobiles shone their head-
lights on the vaulting pit, Polish
spectators chanted and stadium
announcers vied with each other
in compounding the confusion.
The final result--16 feet, 8%/4
inches-was exactly the same that
Pennel jumped in London on July
13-but was higher by a fraction
of an inch.
The jump in London, where the
metric system is not in vogue, wast
listed as 5.098 meters, compared
with 5.10 here.
Several other measurements
and announcements were given.
Part of the problem was that the
standards could not be raised high

enough and had to be propped on
sand bags, making for difficulty,
in measurement.
After the record jump, Pennel
tried three more times at various
heights. Headlights played on the
pit and Poles set fire to rolled-up
newspapers to try to brighten the
scene.
It was announced that Pennel's
last attempt was at 17 feet. He
missed-perhaps afraid of creat-
ing more confusion.
The pole vault victory gave the
Americans nine first places in the
ten events, a smashing margin.
The American girls, humiliated
at Moscow, bounced back too,
with two victories in five events.
They trailed by only 24-27 after
the day's competition, although
the official scoreboard had it 27-
23. No one seemed interested in
straightening that one out.
Iiajor League
Standings

TRACK TEAM BETTER:
Pennel Ties Own Vault Mark

WANTED TO RENT
TEACHER, 24, Socially minded wishes
to share apt. with 1-3 girls. West
Detroitarea or Ann Arbor. Call 662-
7723 after 4 p.m. L3
WANTED-Room for weekends (or will
share apt.) for '63-'64 school yr. Ph.
3-3244 after 6 p.m. Ire
FOR SALE
VW LUGGAGE Rack, tarpaulin, $20. Call
NO 5-5162 evenings. B16
20 MINUTES from campus, year round
log cabin, 2 bdrm. screened porch,
fireplace, picture window views hill-
side and river. Approx. 3 acred fenced
wooded lot. Fruit trees, etc. Lake priv-
ileges. $9000, liberal financing. Call
Mrs. Burnstein, University extension.
200 N. Campus. B13
FOR SALE-Antique four-poster bed.
Call HU 3-5973.

USED CARS
TR-4-Best offer. Call 663-6990 or 665-
0625. N10
VW '56. sunroof, R & H, WSW. Must
sell. 5-0012 after 6 p.m. on weekdays.
N9
'57 V-W. Low mileage. R. & H. Reason-
able. 213 Glen. N8
FIAT SPYDER--1958 soft-top 500 mi.
since complete overhaul 4-speed-Pi-
relli's-4 wheel disc brakes. R. & H.
Custom steering wheel. Padded dash.
Seat belts. Phone NO 5-5851. N7
1960 FIAT-In good condition, less than
10,000 miles. Phone NO 2-2625. N10
HELP WANTED
NEWSPAPER CARRIERS WANTED for
summer and fall routes. No collect-
ing. Apply immediately at TheMih
igan Daily. Call NO 2-3241. H6
MALE U.S. born students needed for
experiments in decision making and
probability estimation. No drugs or
noxious stimuli used. Mathematical
training not necessary. Apply Engi-
neer Pscy. Laboratory, 1121 E. Huron.
663-1511, Ext. 2092. H5

CLASSIFIEDS

i

REAL ESTATE
CALIFORNIA BOUND

AMERICAN
New York
BaltimoreJ
Chicago
Minnesota
Boston
Cleveland
,Kansas City
Los Angeles
Detroit
Washington

LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
62 35 .639 -
57 46 .553 8
54 45 .545 9
54 46 .540 91/
52 46 .531 10%
49 52 .485 15
46 53 .465 17
48 56 .462 17%
41 55 .427 20/
35 64 .354 28

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 6, Minnesota 5
Boston 5, Los Angeles 4
Baltimore 6, Chicago 0
Cleveland 3, Kansas City 2
Washington 3, Detroit 1
TODAY'S GAMES
Kansas City at Cleveland
Minnesota at New York
Los Angeles at Boston
Washington at Detroit
Chicago at Baltimore (2, t-n)

x-Los A
St. Lou
x-San F
Chlcago
Cincinn
x-Phila
x-Pittsb
Milwauk
Houston
New Yo

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L P
kngeles 62 38 .6
is 56 44 .5
Francisco 55 46 .
D ~ 53 46 .5
iati 55 47 .5
delphia 52 49 .5
burgh 50 49 .
kee 50 51 .
n 37 65 .
rk 32 70 .

ct.
620
564
.545
535
540
515
505
495
375
314

GB
5
7Y2a
8V
8
10%
11/
121
25
30

One block from Haisley School. Large
lot, 10 large shade trees. Excellent
three bedroom home, study in full
basement, dishwasher. By owner. NO
3-0719. R
PERSONAL
LADY WANTS RIDE to Stratford
Shakespeare plays. Call NO 3-4543
after 6 p.m. F35
UNIVERSITY STUDENT can baby-sit-
evenings, week-days or week-ends,
and during the day or Saturday or
Sunday. Experienced. Dependable.
Phone 5-8130. F32
NEED A RIDE to Cleveland or east on
Ohio Typk. Friday, July 26 after 3
p.m. Call Cy at 3-9348 or 2-3241.F30
WANTED-Ride to Grosse Pointe Thurs-
day afternoon after 2 p.m. with re-
turn on Saturday morning. Call
Gloria Bowles, NO 2-7554. F29
DEAR CH,
I've been gathering together a col-
lege wardrobe. Do you think that a
tweed jacket or a blazer would be
suitable classroom wear?
Ever so eagerly,
Charlton W. Wimble III
Dear Charlie,
Neither. Try ripping the arms off
an old sweatshirt and wearing it
inside out. ch F34
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
HI, FI, TV. RADIO, and PHONO SER-
VICE. TV rentals, speaker reconing.
Free pick-up and deliversy service
CAMPUS RADIO & TV, NO 5-6644,
325 E. Hoover. X
A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS
BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS ,
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington,
X1
H I FlI & STEREO
HI FI & STEREO
PICKUP & DELIVERY
SERVICE & REPAIRS
THE MUSIC CFNTER
NO 5-8607
NO 2-1335
Guaranteed Diamond Needles
$5.95
304 S. THAYER ST.
1304 S. UNIVERSITY

Days
662-7781

72

, .

CAMPUS MANAGEMENT
5

FOR RENT at 11315 E. Shore Drive,
Whitemore Lake - Furnished home
with 3 bdrms. Write' or call:
Mr. John Gritinas
19344 Dwyer
Detroit 34, Mich.
Phone FO 6-0712 at all times.
Will be at Whitmore Lake Aug. 24
to Sept. 7. 025
LOOKIN FOR APT.? Campus loca-
tions, for fall. Wide selection of new
and redecorated bldgs. Call 3-0511
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Apts. Ltd., 530 S. Forest.
C20
ATTRACTIVE-Furnished, 4-rooms and
bath. 2nd floor of duplex. Clean and
reasonable. Phone NO 2-2625. O
Campus-2 Blocks
Several spacious studio, one bedrm., or
2 bedrm. furnished apts. Available
Aug. 20 and after. NO 3-7268. 024

2 BDRM. HOUSE for rent, all utilities.
AC 9-6794. C28
FALL VACANCI ES
APARTMENTS on campus from $95.
Duplex, unfurnished, on campus, $120.
Call for locations and descriptions.

7-

FOR RENT

61

Eves.
663-9064
C29

OPENING MONDAY-
THE NEW SOUTH UNIVERSITY

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
St. Louis 4, Chicago 1
Cincinnati 11, Milwaukee 1
New York at Houston (Inc)
Philadelphia at Los Angeles (Inc)
Pittsburgh at San Francisco (Inc)
TODAY'S GAMES
St. Louis at Chicago
Cincinnati at Milwaukee
'ittsburgh at San Francisco
New York at Houston (n)
Philadelphia at Los Angeles (n)
ENJOY THE WONDERFUL
H 0N _ _ 5 0
Foe s NEW WORLD of FUN
People around the world are enjoying
.this new idea in low-cost, high-fun
transportation .Up to 200 miles per
gallon and easier to ride than a
bicycle. .
TRY iT-you'll buy it!
HONDA of Ann Arbor,
1906 Packard Road
665-9281

NEW 2 BDRM. APTS. for fall-Furn'd
carpeted, balconies. For 3 or 4. Ca
663-0511 9 a.m. till 5 p.m. APT'S. LTD
530 S. Forest. C
GIRL TO SHARE campus-Two bed
room, nicely furnished. 721 S. Fores
Call NO 2-9188. d

19
d-
it.
c3

HURON TOWERS APARTMENTS
2200 FULLER ROAD
One, two and three bedroom apts. Mod-
erate rentals include large rooms, air
conditioning, swimming pool, parking
and many other fine features. Low per
person cost for multiple occupants.
Call NO 3-0800 or stop by our rental
office, on premises, to see model apts.
04

{
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i
. ,
.
E

a.,
all
D.,

OFFICE OF

ANNAROR AN

FOXCROT
APARTMENTS
South State near Hill. Designed and
furnished for 4, 5, or 6 student
occupants. 2 bedrooms each.
* Most spacious available
s Separate, dining room
" Air conditioning
" Heat furnished
" Extra storgae :space.

Ann Arbor Bank's beautiful new full-service office on South University will open for business
and ready to serve you this Monday, July 29.
We hope you'll drop in to see this most beautiful Ann Arbor banking office to be built yet.
There will be special commemorative gifts and flowers for all the ladies.
Here, at the corner of East and South University Avenues, you'll find complete banking ser-
vice . . . including full safe deposit and night depository facilities.
The new office dramatically expands Ann Arbor Bank's range of service to students, families
and businesses in the campus-east side area. We hope you'll visit us soon-and bring the entire
family with you. The opening of this new major banking facility marks another milestone in the
century of service which Ann Arbor Bank is celebrating this year.

Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves.'

2-0110
013

s-

CAMPUS APTS.
REDUCED
SUMMER RENTS
Remodeled and completely furn'd. for
3 or 4 persons. $50-90/mo.Few still
available for fall. Single student only.
NO 5-9405.
MISCELLANEOUS
ON A HOT DAY STAY COOL!
Cold Watermelons
Cold Pop
Fresh Fruit

':

RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Always open 'tii midnight

us

BIKES AND SCOOTERS
HONDA of Ann Arbor
1906 Packard Road
665-9281
Z2
BUSINESS SERVICES
SALESMEN to make loans to college
students with which to buy life in-
surance. 25-35 married, 2 yrs. college
credit. No experience preferred. Write
Box -2, Michigan Daily. Ji
665-8184
Manuscript typing, transcription, medi-
cal, legal, technical conferences, mim-
eographing, off-set. Quick-Accurate-
Experienced.
Ann Arbor Professional Service
Associates 334 Catherine

t

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1+1

J2

BARGAIN CORNER

AV

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