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July 23, 1964 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1964-07-23

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

VVI

THE MICHGAN DAIL

1

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iIFESo

Satellite To MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP

fl

Beam Live

Five Run 5th Keeps Yanks Aheac

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .70 x.95 3.45
3 .85 2.40 4.20
4 1.00 2.85 4.95
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Classified deadline, 2:30 daily.
Phone NO 2-4786
FOR RENT
ROOMMATES wanted to share 4 girl
furnished apt. Fall. Call 665-8249
after 4. C34
N CAMPUS-Efficiency, $85; new 2-
bdrm., $200 for fall. Call 5-8330. C32
PT.-3 ROOM, private bath, garage,
unfurished except stove, refrigera-
tor. Mid-August. 3rd near Madison
St. $70. 662-4684. C37
ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS
EXCLUSIVE CAMPUS LOCATION
7215.FOREST
all occupancy-I and 2 bedroom fur-
nished and unfurnished apartment.
Free parking. Apply manager, 9 a.m.
to 8 p.m. only. C10
!UET, CONVENIENT-Room for men.
$35/mo. 408 'Thompson. 663-4815.mC35
IRL WANTS ROOMMATE to share
campus apt. for fall. NO 2-7075 after
5. C19
CAMPUS-AUG. 20
Severall remodeled one or two bed-
room furnished apts, available for
Fall occupancy. NO 5-0234. C29
CAMPUSFAPTS.
AVAILABLE FOR F~ALL
2, 3, & 4 man apts., modern, fur-
nished, featuring split level design.
Call NO 3-8866. C22°
MISCELLANEOUS
LEAVING COUNTRY
Must sell 4-month old equipment.
Mimeograph, $45 2 4-drawer, letter-
size, non-susperision steel files, $30
each. Year old tape recorder, little
use, like new, $75; Salon type hair-
dryer, $20. 665-7507, M
DAGWOOD SANDWICHES-YUMMY!
Think of it: tunafish, peanut butter,
tomato, 2 or so raisins, egg slices, old
peas, ham, salami.
All ingredients available at
RALPH'S
709 Packard
TRANSPORTATION
IDE WANTED to N.Y.C. on August 13
and back to Ann Arbor on the 23.
Will share driving and expenses. Call
3-1561, X 545 after 5. G
NOTICE!
or Airport Limousine Service call 663-
8300. To Metropolitan $4.00. To Willow
Run $2.50. Metro round trip $7.00. GI
ECON-0-CAR
:ENT A COMPACT CAR

USED CARS
ALFA-VOLOTE - SCCA 1962 national
champion. Excellent street condition.
Full race equipment. UN 3-4457, 9-5
weekdays. N25
NSU Sport Coupe-'61 engine, '60 body.
40 mpg. 70 mph. $350. Call 449-8252.
N22
1950 MERCURY.-Good running condi-
tion. Best offer. After 8, phone 663-
2010. N
1953 MG-TD-xcellent. Call 663-9979.
N24
EXCELLENT late 1962 MG Midget. Must
sell! 663-6567 evenings. N18
'62 BUICK Special Convert. V6, auto.
trans. $160. 665-7410 after 5. N
1958 DODGE - Power steering and
brakes, push-button drive, radio,
white walls, 2 good snow tires. $199
or best offer. Call 662-0218. N27
1960 WHITE MG-A convert., $1,000.
First offer accepted. 482-0511 after 6.
N17
'62 BUICK Special, white conv., buck.
seats. Best offer. NO 5-6811. N15
HELP WANTED
WANTED-Baby-sitter for one regular
weeknight and occasional weekend
nights. Prefer someone living near
neighborhood-2 blocks south of Hill
between Church and Forest. Call 665-
9842. H13
NEED EXTRA MONEY?
Want a typist who can spell. Part-
tim'e. Phone Ron Paul, 662-9890 6 to
8 p.m. H12
BABYSITTER FOR FALL-Must be ex-
perienced, mature. Light housekeep-
ing. 665-3257. H8
BOYS-BOYS-BOYS
Part-time summer work. Earn up to
$30 per week in spare time. Apply
Mr. Patterson, Mich. State Employ-
ment Office, 210 S. Fourth Ave., Fri.
10-12noon only. H10
SALES POSITION
AVAILABLE
-igh starting salary plus commis-
sions, in an industry with a future.
Training program and fringe bene-
fits.
Write C. B. Gould, P. 0. Box 127,
Flint, Michigan.
PERSONAL
SKY DIVING is Adventure.
Adventure is good.
Therefore . . . Call 665-8294. F

BIKES AND SCOOTERS
1958 LAMBRETTA-Clean, reasonable.
NO 2-0779. Z7
ITALIAN 10 speed racing bike. Red, ex-
cellent cond., 1 yr. old. $55. Call HU
2-7446. Z7
YOU meet the nicest people on a
HONDA! Join the fun at HONDA of
Ann Arbor. 1906 Packard Rd. 665-
9281. Z2
NICHOLSON MOTORCYCLE SALES
Triumph, Yamaha, BMW
Scooter Repairs
224 8. First St. 662-7409
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
GUITARS, ETC.
Make Repairs, Buy and Sell
Private and Group Instruction
Hoots Daily
Herb David Guitar Studio
NO 5-8001
209 S. STATE
X
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan,
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington
FOR SALE
AUCTION
SAT., JULY 25
1706 Pauline
Bookcases, books, elem. ed. materials,
Stanford Binet Test materials, large
stamp collection, guitar, dishes, pans,
chests of drawers, beds - complete.
Autioneer, Milford Osburn. B10
SNIPE CLASS racing sailboat. Dacron
sails, full equipment. Can be seen
locally. Phone 668-8180 after 6. B9
TAPE RECORDER, $75. Camp stove,
$10. 668-7333. B
FOR SALE-One Rek-o-kut K33H turn-
table, in good condition, reasonably
priced. Call NO 3-6211 after 6. B4
WANTED TO BUY
WANTED TO BUY-Indian Head Cents
and other coins Phone 662-2373. K1
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING ITT YOURSELF?
Grad. students inquire about penny
masteraand our offset process. Pro-
fessional Service Associates, 665-8184.
J
665-8184
MANUSCRIPT typing, transcription,
medical, legal, technical conferences,
mimeographing, offset.
Quick, Accurate, Experienced
ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL
SERVICE ASSOCIATES
334 Catherine
J.
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign ana Sports Cars.
Lubrication $1.50
Nye Motor Sales
514 E. Washington

Olympic TVI
WASHINGTON (MP-The 1964
Olympic Games in Tokyo may be
flashed by television to the Unit-
ed States and Europe via com-
munications satellite and jet
planes.
The Communications Satellite
Corporation (COMSAT) announc-
ed plans yesterday to flash the
television directly from Japan to
the United States and Canada via
Syncom III satellite to be launch-
ed in mid-August.
Then from Montreal, Canada,
jet planes would carry the video
tapes of the games to Europe for
telecast the same day.
Syncom III is to be launched
into a stationary or hovering or-
bit, 22,300 miles above the Pa-
cific. The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration will per-
form the launching without
charge.
COMSAT said it plans the
Olympic Game coverage-Oct. 10-
24--as an experimental, non-prof-
it venture-in compliance with a
State Department view that it
would be in the national interest.
COMSAT was created by Con-
gress to develop a commercial
communications satellite system.
It worked out its current plans
with the aid of the space agency,
Defense Department, and the Jap-
anese government.
Needed-besides the launch of
Syncom III-are permission to
modify the antenna at the naval
missile center, Point Mugu, Calif.
The Federal Communications
Commission, acting swiftly in ac-
cordance with a State Depart-
ment declaration of national in-
terest in the project, approved this
temporary measure yesterday with-
in hours of COMSAT's announce-
ment.
COMSAT will spend up to $250,-
000 to modify the antenna, with
the total Olympic project not ex-
pected to cost more than $350,000,
supported by the Radio Corpora-
tion of America and the Japanese
Broadcasting Corporation.

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Held hitless
through four innings, the New
York Yankees erupted for five
runs in the fifth inning, knock-
ed young right-hander Alan Koch
out of the box and went on to
defeat the Washington Senators
6-3 yesterday.
The victory, second straight over
the last place Senators, assured
the Yankees of retaining their per-
centage point hold on first place.
A bases-loaded triple by Joe
Pepitone was the key blow. It
came off Jim Hannan, who had
replaced Koch, after a two-run
double by Mickey Mantle and a
walk to Roger Maris. Hannan fill-
ed the bases with a pass to Tom-
my Tresh and Pepitone unloaded
them with a smash against the
bleacher wall in right center.
* * *
MILWAUKEE -- Light - hitting
Bobby Wine slammed his second
homer in two nights, a bases-
Ex-Chmp
Probing Clay
For Matcb
OSLO, Norway P) -- Former
heavyweight champion Floyd Pat-
terson said yesterday that Cassius
Clay had promised him a shot at
the title.
"I hope we can meet early in
1965," Patterson added, "that is,
if he keeps his promise."
Patterson, who won a decision
over Eddie Machen in Stockholm
July 6; is completing a series of
20 exhibitions in Norway and
4Sweden.
The former heavyweight king
said Clay promised before win-
ning the title from Sonny Liston
that he would give Patterson a
bout-if he ever won the cham-
pionship.

empty shot off Warren Spahn in
the seventh inning snapping a
1-1 tie and triggering National
League-leading Philadelphia to a
4-1 victory over Milwaukee last
night.
Wine's homer, only his fourth
df the season, also was his sec-
ond game-winning hit against the
Braves. Last night, after hitting
his homer, he singled home the
decisive run in the eighth inning.
* * *
SAN FRANCISCO - Rookie
Kal Lanier and Orlando Cepeda
hammered wrong field homers in
nearly the same spot to drive in
five San Francisco runs as the
Diants snapped a four-game win-
ning streak in beating the Cubs 7-3
yesterday.
Lanier smashed his second hom-
er of the season with two on in
the fifth and Cepeda drove his
17th with one on in the sixth.
Both homers went over the right,
field fence near the foul line
against right-hander Larry Jack-
son.
* * *
MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL -
Rocky Colavito's second homer of
the night, a two-run blow in the
ninth inning, gave Kansas City
a 6-4 victory over Minnesota last
night and extended the Twins'
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE

losing streak to seven games.
* * *
BOSTON-Al Kaline, Dick Mc-
Auliffe and Norm Cash each
homered and drove in two runs
apiece last night, powering De-
troit to an 8-6 victory over Boston.
Kaline hit his first homer since
June 14 in the first inning, and
McAuliffe followed with a blast
in the second. Cash homered into
the right field bleachers in the
sixth.
** *
CHICAGO-Willie Smith raced
home with the winning run in the
ninth inning as a Hoyt Wilhelm
pitch got by J. C. Martin for a
passed ball, boosting the Los An-
geles to a 3-2 victory over the
Chicago White Sox last night.
The Angels, held to three hits
in eight innings, trailed 2-1 going
into the ninth. Jim Fregosi singled
with one out and went to, second
when Wilhelm hit Smith with a
pitch. Bob Rodgers followed with
a single, driving in Fregosi with
the tying run and sending Smith
to third.
After Felix Torres grounded out
and with Lou Clinton at bat, Mar-
tin lost one of Wilhelm's pitches,
and Smith dashed home.
* * *
BALTIMORE - Pitcher Dick
Donovan slapped a two-run, tie-
breaking single as the Cleveland
Indians struck for four runs in

the eighth inning and defeated
Baltimore 7-4 last night for the
third straight time.
The loss, giving Baltimore an
8-9 record since the All-Star
Game, dropped the Orioles a full
game behiind the American
League-leading New York Yan-
kees, who defeated Washing-
ton, 6-3,
Donovan crossed up the Oriole
strategy after Woody Held was
purposely walked, loading the
bases with two out in the eighth,
Donovan, with only three hits in
26 previous trips, then broke the
3-3 tie.
* * *
ST. LOUIS -- Bill Mazeroski
drove in five runs and Willie
Stargell hit for the cycle with a
single, double, triple and homer
as Pittsburgh walloped St. Louis
13-2 last night with an 18-hit
attack.
Mazeroski batted in a run with
a sacrifice fly in the four-run
first inning, doubled home two
runs in the seventh and homered
following Stargell's double in the
ninth.
Stargell, only the second Na-
tional Leaguer to hit for the cycle
this season, tripled across two
runs in the first and homered in
the fifth. He singled in the sev-
enth and scored on Mazeroski's
double. Stargell walked in the
fourth in his other time at bat.

fourth in his other time at bat.

New York
Baltimore
Chicago
Los Angeles
Minnesota
Detroit
Boston
Cleveland
Kansas City
Washington

W
55
56
55
50
47
47
46
42
36

L
34
37
37
48
47
47
50
50
58

Pct. GB
.618 -
.602 1
.598 1%
.519 9%,4
.500 10x/2
.500 10x/
.479 12%
.457 14x/
.373 21%,
.367 23/

d
b
bi

raft
ee-r in
ottles

McKinley, Ralston Blast
Way into Quarter Finals

ATHLETE'S FOOT REMEDIES

available at:

THE VILLAGE APOTHECARY
1112 So. University

per 12 hr. period plus
pennies per mile

ECON-0-CAR

of ANN,
E. Huron
BARGAIN

ARBOR
NO 3-2033
CORNER

HAVE POWER DRIVEN SWEEPER-
Will travel anywhere to sweep up
torn parking tickets. Call day or
night . . . If no answer-hang up.
"PALADIN" F
A.C.W.
Too late has your cry of outrage
fallen on this cleansed land. Our
cause lies in the gutter. But weep
not for me. We have fought the
litteral fight in a defense of liberty.
Victory will of a day descend.
Extremely,
H.N.B.
HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
You, yes you, can be the lucky, favored
privileged 2500th person to call 662-
3241 to order the Michigan Daily to
be delivered to you five mornings a
week full of the latest news, pro-
vocative editorials, and latest adver-
tising specials. If you are Number
2500, you will receive your subscrip-
tion gratis. Why don't you call up
right now, as we are rapidly approach-
ing the Magic .Number. F
Meet the Right People
The purpose of our organization, using
established techniques of personality
appraisal and an IBM system, is to
introduce unmarried persons to others
whose background and ideals are
congenial with their own. Interviews
by appointment. Phone after 9 a m.,
NO 2-4867.
MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC
INTRODUCTION SERVICE
ROOM AND BOARD
BOARDING FOR MEN-Friends Center
Intn'l. Co-op, 1416 Hill St., Summer
$70. 4 hrs. work required. Call 3-3856
or 2-93890 El

ANNOUNCING
Whit's Truck Rental
202 W. Washington St.
Ann Arbor
Call
NO 5-6875
Pick-ups Panels
Small Vans

HAVERFORD, Pa. P) - Top-
seeded Chuck McKinley, the de-
fending champion, advanced to the
quarterfinal round of the 65th an-
nual Pennsylvania Lawn Tennis
Championships yesterday after
being under considerable pressure.
McKinley, of San Antonio, Tex.,
rallied to defeat Raymond Moore,
the junior champion of South Af-
rica, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2.
Dennis Ralston, of Bakersfield,
Calif., Frank Froehling of Mi-
ami, Fla., and Eugene Scott, of
St. James, N.Y,, other top seed-
ed players, also advanced to the
quarter-finals.
Ralston overcame William Le-
noir, of Tucson, Ariz., 6-1, 9-E.
Froehling defeated Bisty Harri-
son, of Richmond, Va., 6-3, 6-2,
while Scott beat David Sanderlin
of El Cajon, Calif., 6-3, 9-7.
In the women's championships,
Mrs. Karen Hantze Susman, of
San Diego, Calif., No. 2 seeded,
reached the quarterfinal round
with a 6-3, 6-4 victory over Car-
ol Loop, of Arcadia, Calif.
Also reaching the quarterfinal
round in the women's division was
Kathleen Harter, of Seal Beach,
Calif. She defeated third-seeded
Judy Alvarez, of Tampa, Fla., 6-
3,6-4.
SOFTBALL SCORES
(Playoffs)
Psych. "C" 7, Economics 6
AFIT 9, Eng. Mech. 8
Gashers 4, Misfits 2
Authorized
TRIUMPH Dealer
Sales, Service & Parts

Other women victors were Tory
Fretz, Harrisburg, Pa.; Carol
Hanks, St. Louis; and Justina
Bricka, also St. Louis.
Miss Fretz defeated Mary Ann
Eisel, the U.S. indoor champion
from St. Louis, 6-2, 6-1; Miss
Hanks beat Virginia Minor, of
Trenton, N.J., 6-1, 2-6, 6-0, and
Miss Bricka defeated Chris Saf-
ford, of Landsdowne, Pa., 6-4, 6-4.
In other mren's matches, Martin
Riessen, of %vanston, Ill., defeat-
ed Abe Segal, first foreign seeded
player from South Africa, 6-4,, 10-
8.
Arthur Ashe, Richmond, Va.,
rallied to defeat Clark Graebner,
Shaker Heights, Ohio, 5-7, 6-4,
6-4.
Charles Pasarell, of Puerto Ri-
co, ousted Patricio Rodriguez, of
Chile, 6-1, 6-2, and Ron Holm-
berf, of Brooklyn, eliminated sec-
and - seeded foreign contender
Premjit Lall, of India's Davis Cup
team, 13-11, 6-3.

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 6, Washington 3
Cleveland 7, Baltimore 4
Los Angeles 3, Chicago 2
Kansas City 6, Minnesota 4
Detroit 8, Boston 6
TODAY'S GAMES
Washington at New York (t-1)
Cleveland at Baltimore (n)
Los Angeles at Chicago
Kansas City at Minnesota
Detroit at Boston
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct.
Philadelphia 54 37 .693
San Francisco 55 40 .579
x-Cincinnati 51 42 .548
Pittsburgh 47 42 .528
Milwaukee 47 45 .512
St. Louis 47 46 .505
Chicago 46 46 .500
x-Los Angeles 45 47 .489
x-Houston 43 52 .453
x-New York 28 66 .3983
x-Played night game.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
San Francisco 7, Chicago 3
Philadelphia 4, Milwaukee 1
Houstongat Los Angeles (ine)
Pittsburgh 13, St. Louis 2
New York at Cincinnati (ine)
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at Milwaukee
Chicago at San Francisco
Pittsburgh at St. Louis
Houston at Los Angeles (n)
New York at Cincinnati (n)

kIeep trim
ARCADE BARBERS
NICKELS ARCADE

GB
1
4
6
7V2
8
8%
9%
13
27Y2

and o
offers you the exact
same beer on tap
and under the cap.

SAM'S STORE
s Genuine LEVI's Galore!

"WH ITEI
SLIMI

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FITS

4.49
)R "GUYS AND DOLLS"
Black, brown, loden,
vhite," cactus,'light blue
SAM'S STORE
122 E. Washington

I

RENT-A-CAR
$8 For 24 Hours
Plus 8c per mile
All rates include gas, oil
and necessary insurance
SPECIAL
Week-End Rate
From Friday Noon
Until Monday Noon
$3.50 Per Day
Plus 8c per mile
RENT-a-CAR
Call NO 3-4156
514 E. Washington St.

fl------------COUPON SALE ------.-----m-m-m
U I
BERMUDA SHORTS
Reg. $4.99 and $6.99
I I
d.77 with this coupon
bleedng madras, dacron and cotton, plaids
solids. Sizes 28 to 46.
Offer good thru Mon., July 27
ANN ARBOR CLOTHING
113 S. Main St. 662-5187
I i

If you prefer the
taste of draft beer
insist on Pfeiffer
draft beer in bottles
its extra smooth,
more flavorful, the
iSewing Co., Det"it * Mih. full-taste beer.

HERB ESTES
I AUTOMART

18-Hole Miniature Course Now Open

I

319 W. Huron
665-3688

Temperature
Weather

I

I I I I rl i 1711

rL

I

I

Stop!
Halt!

Do not pass GO

Go directly to Ann Arbor Bank for all your
banking needs. Whether you live on Park
Place or State Street, you'll find an Ann
Arbor Bank Office near you. Why, not stop
in and ask about Specialchecks, the checking
account designed particularly for students.

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