THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, T.E WI.IGN AIYTUSDY ick Stays on Job Through '65; L. Ailows Angels To Move For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4781 from 1:00 to 2:30 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'til 11:30 A.M. ICAGO ()) -- Commissioner Frick has been asked to con- in office through the 1965 .d Series while a committee ares a report on the functions is job "in the light of chang- imes." til the committee, composed rick and the two league presi- s, reports at the December ball meetings nobody is orized to screen any candi- s for position. ius, the major league execu- council in effect shut off ulation by owners about a suc- r until it decides on a course otion. other action Detroit Tiger ball club president John er, chairman of the majors' 'ision committee, said plans been approved for a Monday t baseball spectacular on Na- al TV in 1965. One game would elevised each Monday night with the proceeds divided equally among the 20 clubs. "All the 20 clubs have signed their rights to the television com- mittee," said Fetzer. ".We have not met with any networks yet. With- in 30 days he will meet with spon- sors, advertisers and network executives." Fetzer said one of the main problems was schedule-making to provide an attractive Monday night game each week without dis- rupting the regular baseball sched- ule. The American League ended its session by approving the move of the Los Angeles Angels to Ana- heim, Calif., beginning in 1966. The action was a formality, since Angel President Bob Rey- nolds last Saturday signed a 35- year lease to have the club play its games in a new stadium to be built in Anaheim. Agrees Frick, 69, announced last Wed- nesday he would not run for re- election and would step down from his $75,000-a-year job when his successor is named. He readily agreed to stay on until his term expires Sept. 20, 1965. At the sug- gestion of the council he agreed to extend that term through the 1965 World Series. Among those who have been mentioned in speculation for his replacement are Joe Cronin, presi- dent of the American League; Judge Robert Cannon of Milwau- kee, legal counsel of the players association; Sen. Kenneth Keat- ing, (R-NY); former vice-president Richard Nixon, and Supreme Court Justice Byron (Whizzer) White. There has been some feeling for a return to the Judge Landis type of commissioner, stern judicial figure who would act as a supreme court of baseball. Changing Times The council's proposal on set- ting up a committee called for a report on the function of the of- fice of the commissioner in the light of changing times.' The late Judge Landis, the first commissioner, served from 1920 to 1944 and died in office. A. B. (Happy) Chandler, his successor was told he would not be re- elected when he asked for clarifi- cation of his status near the end of his term. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 2 3 4 I DAY 3 DAYS .70 .85 1.00 1.95 2.40 2.85 5 DAYS 3.00 3.75 4.35 Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 2:30 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 )RTS SHORTS bee's J5 By The Associated Press OSLO, Norway-Mike Larrabee Ventura, Calif., set a Bislet adium record of 45.4 seconds . 400 meters and equalled the rld's best time this year for at distance last night. Larrabee's time, opening a two- y international track and field eet, matched- that made by an- her American, Jay Luck of Yale d Watertown, Mass., earlier this ar. The old Bislet Stadium rec- : was 45.6, set by American enn Davis in .1957. * * * Pension Plan 'HICAGO-The National League cepted an umpire pension plan terday which had been ver- ly agreed upon at a meeting New York July 6. The agreement between the um- es and the National League :ecutive Committee calls for $250 year foreach active year of rvice until Jan. 1, 1964, and 00 a year after that date. Another change in the plan re- ires umpires to pay a flat $350 axly into the fund. Previously, ey paid five per cent of their nual salary. Ligament Strain NEW YORK-The ailment that s curtailed the pitching assign- ents of New York Yankee south- w Whitey Ford was diagnosed sterday as a ligament strain of e right hip joint. ream physican, Dr. Sidney Gay- r, said that Ford also was suf- ing from a chronic inflamma- n of the area plus a slight lcium deposit. He emphasized, wever, that the calcium deposit im i\ was no cause for immediate con- cern. Gaynor added that Ford will receive X-ray treatments for the next three' or four days. A club spokesman said it was hoped the Yankee ace would be able to work against the leading Orioles in Baltimore this weekend. The r executive council consists of National League President War- ren Giles, New York Yankee Pres- ident Dan Topping, Cronin, Frick and O'Malley. Bob Carpenter, president of the Philadelphia Phillies, and Fetzer attended as alternates. FOR RENT CAMPUS-Graduate Students Room in private home. Olivia Ave. 665-2425. C60 SECRETARY WANTS roommate to share furnished apt. near campus. Call X 3416. After 5, 662-3763. C59 ROOMMATE WANTED-To share mod- ern apt, at Huron Arms with one other girl. Phone 663-5372. 061 FURNISHED ROOMS For men students, near campus. Lobby with TV and snack facilities. 668-9593. C6 FOR GRADUATE or senior male-a quiet, pleasant single room in a pri- vate home near bus line. Immediate occupancy. 668-6551. C62 FEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted. Very modern comfortable apt. Reasonable. Close to campus. Call after 5, 663- 6664. C58 SECRETARY looking for non-smoking roommate in furn. apt. near campus. Call Univ. x2011. C64 2 BDRM. FURN. APT. Convenient to campus. Ideal for 2 or 3 people. $160/mo. lease. Call 663-4435. C56 3RD GIRL NEEDED for large 2-floor apt. $53/mo. Call 663-1244 or 663- 1561, x222. C63 CLOSE TO State Theatre-Furnished apt. for men. Also room. 662-7274. C40 GEDDES Eight room house near Women's Pool, furnished, 3 or 4 bedrooms, separate study area. Ideal for 6 or more students or nurses. Campus Management 337 E. Huron, Open days, Eves. 7-9 662-7787 310 N. STATE For male grad students. Furnished. One 2-room apt. Also 1 single and 2 double bedrooms with kitchen priv- ileges. Phone 663-1460. C50 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 MAN APTS. available for Fall occupancy. Some modern, air-conditioned. Call 663-0511 or 663- 7926. C41 2-BDRM. APTS. Modern, furnished, air-conditioned apts. Starting at $185. Also avail- able, a few at $165. Contact Apartments Limited 663-0511 days 663-7926 eves. 054 932 DEWEY For male graduates. 2 apts., 1 down with 4 rooms, and 1 up with 3 rooms. All furnished. 663-1460. Available Aug. 10. C51 CAMPUS-AUG. 20 Several remodeled one or two bed- room furnished apts. available for Fall occupancy. NO 5-0234. C29 CAMPUS APTS. AVAILABLE FOR FALL 2, 3, & 4 man apts., modern, fur- nished, featuring split level design. Call NO 3-8866. C22 FOR RENT FURNISHED 2-bdrm. Sept. to June sublet. Washer and dryer, balcony, carport. $135 plus utilities. 1.5 miles from campus. 663-7493. 055{ ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS EXCLUSIVE CAMPUS LOCATION 721 S. FOREST Fall occupancy-1 and 2 bedroom fur. nished and unfurnished apartmentzs. Free parking. Apply manager, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. only. C10 410 05SERVATORY Nearly new, modern, furnished two- bedroom apartment. Ceramic tile bath, disposal, student desks, cov- ered parking. Also one, two and three bedroom modern, furnished apartments in other campus and hospital loca- tions. Campus Management 337 E. Huron, Open days, eves. 7-9 662-7787 PERSONAL WITHHOLD CREDITS are being placed on unpaid bills at The Michigan Daily. Therefore, if you owe us money, send remittance as soon as possible, to 420 Maynard St. Thank You F Whenever you need the services of a DRUG STORE, remember BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! "WHITE LEVI'S" SLIM FITS 4.49 FOR "GUYS AND DOLLS" Black, brown, loden, "white,"'cactus, light blue SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington USED CARS '58 VW SUNROOF. Radio, seatbelts, new tires. $600. Call 665-8127 or 663- 1511, x2110 (days). N38 '63 SUNBEAM Alpine - Wire wheels, tonneau cover. Very low mileage. Ex- cellent condition. 665-5223. N37 '62 FALCON Wagon, auto, shift, radio, rack, white walls, deluxe tires, 13,540' miles. Excellent condition. Reason- able. Call 665-5223. N36 NSU Sport Coupe-'61 engine, '60 body. 40 mpg. 70 mph. $350. Call 449-8252. N22 SPORTS CAR SALE 1960 Alpha-Romeo '2000 Road. 1960 TR-3 Roadster, BRG, nice 1961 Austin-Healey Sprite, Red 1960 MG-A '1600 Roadster, Blue 1963 MG-B Roadster, sharp 1962 Austin-Healey '3000 Roadster. 1963 Jaguar 3.8 Sedan, Auto. All Cars Guaranteed FINANCING AVAILABLE Overseas Imported Cars, Inc. 331 S. Fourth Ave. Ann Arbor, Michigan N32 TRANSPORTATION RIDE 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 I For Airport Limousine Service call 663- 8300. To Metropolitan $4.00. To Willow Run $2.50. Metro round trip $7.00. 01 BIKES AND SCOOTERS 1964 VESPA G.S. Cost $550. For $450, will include windshield and helmet with face shield. Call 665-5027 after 6., ?.12 '64 HONDA 90 for sale. $325. Call 665- 6425. Z1O YOU meet the nicest people. on a HONDA! Join the fun at HONDA of Aon Arbor. 1906 Packard Rd. 665- 9281. G NICHOLSON MOTORCYCLE SALES' Triumph, 'amaha, BMW Scooter Repairs 224 S. First St. 662-7409 FOR SALE 1959 VAN DYKE 40x10 mobile home, 2 bdrms., front kitchen. Complete as on lot. Lot 58, Woodside Park, 6564 E. Michigan, Saline, Mich. B14 SMITH-CORONA Portable Typewriter, good cond. Best offer. 663-7541, Ext. 1204. Bl BRAND NEW FURNITURE-3 double beds, 3 boudoir chairs, 3 upholstered chairs, coffee and step tables, used Englander hide-a-bed. Call 449-2844 for' details; transportation available. B13 TAPE RECORDER, $75. Camp stove, $10. 668-7333.B B LOST-AND FOUND' LOST -- Eternamatic wristwatch. Re- ward. Call 663-1511, x444 or x566. A13 665-8184 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 am., NO 2-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES MOVE ONE WAY IN THE U.S.A. Move Truck Rental System 202 W. Washington St. Call 665-6875 & MANUSCRIPT typing, transcrip' medical, legal, technical conferen mimeographing, offset. Quick, Accurate, Experienced ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ASSOCIATES 334 Catherine TYPING 7T YOURSELF? Grad. students inquire about master and our offset process fessional Service Aswoclates, 66 BUSINESS SERV 81 THE VILLAGE APOTHECARY 1112 So. University Open 9 to 9 By The Associated Press Y e ST. LOUIS-MikeuShannonrand Lou Brock threw 'out San Fran- cisco runners at the plate, pro- tecting St. Louis' 2-1 victory over the Giants last'night. The Cardinals scored single runs in the first and second in- nings off Ron Herbel for a 2-0 lead. Then, in the fifth, the Giants made their first threat. Tom Haller led off with a, single, and two outs later, Harvey Kuenn singled him to second. Hal Lanier then popped a single to right but Haller was out at home on a rifle throw from Shannon to catcher Tim, McCarver. Jim Ray Hart pulled the Giants to within one run in the seventh and the Giants mounted another threat in the eighth when Orlando Cepeda and Hart singled with two out. Haller then singled to left field, but Cepeda, trying to score second on the hit, was out onj Brock's peg to McCarver. CINCINNATI-Mel Queen strok- ed three hits and Steve Boros drove in three runs in support of Bob Purkey's four-hit pitching as the Cincinnati Reds whipped the Los Angeles Dodgers 7-2 last night. A double by Pete Rose, singles by Queen and Vada Pinson and a double by Frank Robinson pro- duced three runs. Bob Reed, who replaced Moeller, forced in an- other run by issuing a bases- loaded walk to Boros. Major. League Stadings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Baltimore 69 43 .616 - Chicago 67 44 .604 11 New York 65 43 .602 2 LosAngeles , 59 56 .513 1114 Detroit 58 57 .504 1212 Minnesota 54 59 .478 15Y2 Boston 53 60 .469 16/ Cleveland 53 60 .469 161/ Washington 44 72 .379 27 Kansas City 42 70 .375 27 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Los Angeles (n) Washington at Kansis City (n) Detroit at Minnesota (n) Boston at Baltimore (n) Chicago at New York (2-dn) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Philadelphia 65 43 .602 - San Francisco 64 48 .571 3 Cincinnati 62 51 .549 5'2 Pittsburgh 59 50 .541 62 St. Louis 59 52 .532 712 Milwaukee 56 54 .509 10 Los Angeles 55 55 .500 11 Chicago 52 57 .477 13Y2 Houston 48 66 .421 20 New York 34 78 .304 33 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS- St. Louis 2, San Francisco 1 Cincinnati 7, Los Angeles 2 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES New York at Pittsburgh (n) Philadelphia at Chicago Los Angeles at Cincinnati (n) Houston at Milwaukee (n) San Francisco at St. Louis (n) MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington 18-Hole Miniature Course Now Open ENJOY THE WONDERFUL HONDA '5O' Fe NEW WORLD f 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 At! I e r , 1906 Packard Rd. 665-9281 I 0 " 0 LINEN SUPPLY SERVICE o INDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY Authorized Sales, Service & Parts AUSTIN CORPORATION S. University 663-7151 319 W. Huron 665-3688 1209 S. University moommmo m U I' I, 1 I SUBSCRIRE NOW' E~rtgan B ty MAIL THIS FORM in Today to 420 Maynard St. or call 662-3241 , Delivered six mornings a week, Tuesday thruU Sunday in immediate campus area. $4.50 semester ($5.00 by mail) ait 11 .. _ -i r I 1 n a- e 11 I