THE MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Different Sports Invade Pro Grid HELP WANTED PSYCHOLOGICAL subjs. at $1.25 an hr. American born males and females. See Mrs. Tobin, 3429 Mason Hall. H5 REGISTERED Nurses and Licensed Practical Nurses-Positions available for registered nurses and practical nurses at the University Hospital. Liberal benefits are offered. Write or apply: Personnel Office, Dept. X, University of Michigan Medical Cen- ter, Ann Arbor. An equal opportunity employer. H6 WANTED-Student commercial artist. Write Box 3, 420 Maynard, c/o Michi- gan Daily. H3 CARRIERS NEEDED to deliver The Michigan Daily during the'fall and spring semesters. . I Morning delivery 6 days a week. NO COLLECTIONS HO Call Steve at NO 5-3563 COLLEGE MEN Part time 'nelp-17 hours per week. Summer school student preferred. Working schedule will be arranged to fit class and study schedule if neces- sary, Salary offered-$50per week. Call Mr. Miller,, am. to 2 p.m., 662-9311. Hl FOR SALE BARGAINS! Moving, must sell clean, well-running Norge refrig., $30, Ken- more auto, washer $35. NO 3-7982. B19 G.E. UPRIGHT vacuum cleaner-nearly new. Call NO 2-7206 before 8 P.M. Ask for Mrs. Cruse. B18 FOR SALE - Columbia Stereophonic Record Player. Reasonable. Call NO 3-0302. BO RUGS, NEVER USED--9x12 $25; also matching pair larger sizes. G. E. Vac. $15. Call NO 2-9894. B10 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY on radios, phonos, taone recorders and TVs wt this ad. Campus Radio & TV. 325 19. hoover. X4 1)OMI N IK'S PIZZAS-SUBS 812 Monroe -WE DELIVER-- NO 2-5414 FOR RENT APT. FOR graduate man, 2 room unit, cooking, low rent. Near corner of State and Packard St. Call NO 2-0521 or inquire 917 Mary St. C16 REDECORATED APARTMENTS Close to campus modernly furnished I or 2 bedrooms Girls preferred. Call NO 3-7268. C15 APARTMENTS LIMITED. Call Karl D. Malcolm, Jr., Realtor. NO 3-0511. C31 ONE RM. STUDIO for single woman; in sorority area off Washtenaw. Well furnished, with complete community kitchen. NO 2-6987. 014 Campus Apts. Furnished 2, 3. 4 person apts. for Fall. $90-$180 with or without utilties. Call NO 5-9405. C13 Summer Rates Furnished apts. from $60 up. -NO 5-9405. 020 NEW two bedroom apartment units now being completed on South Forest for Sept. occupancy. For appoint. to see, call Karl D. Malcolm, Jr. Realtor NO 3-0511. C2 STUDIO APARTMENTS $108 and $111 September Occupancy HURON TOWERS APTS. 2200 Fuller Road Call Management Office NO 5-9161 Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30 Sat. 9-12:30 BUSINESS SERVICES MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION-Mimeo- graphing-transcription. 334 Catherine Phone 65-8184. il You too can be IMMORTALIZED IN OIL, Canvas or Silk. Postal card brings brochure. Send to Portraits, P.O. Box 531, Ann Arbor. YOUNG MAN, exp. TV News-reel, Film Prod., Photo, Dark room teck., P.R. available now. These and allied fields. Box No. 3, Mich. Daily. J? Variety is the SPICE OF RALPH'S MARKET Picnic Supplies Party Foods Kitchen Supplies Kosher Foods 709 PACKARD-OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT J6 PERSONAL SWEDISH - Tutor wanted in Spoken Swedish. No teaching experience necessary. Call 665-0246. WANTED - Grad woman student to share pleasant apt. at 1026 Church. Call NO 3-7357 after 5. P29 WANTED-Roommate(s), female, pre- ferably with apartment. Call NO 5- 8337 after 12:15 p.m. F27 DIAMONDS-WHOLESALE prices From our mines to you. Buy direct and save. Robert HaackDiamond Im- porters. 504 First National Bank Bldg. NO 3-0653. F5 BARGAIN CORNER FOOT LOCKERS, CAMPIN6 SUPPLIES AT LOW PRICES. MEN'S WEAR: SPECIALS-Blue cord pants 2.99; Ber- mudas and swim suits 1.49 up. Short sleeve shirts 1.00 up. Wash and wear pants 2.99 up. Briefs, shorts, T-shirts 69c. Canvas oxfords 2.95, 3.88. SAM'S STORE, 122 E. Washington. W TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Female to share expenses and driving to Southern California. For info. call NO 3-2783. G9 WANTED-Rider to New York City Aug. 20, 21, 22, Share expenses. NO 2-3728 after 6. G6 CALL NO '3-4156 NEW YORK A)--A sudden in- flux of top-drawer performers in sports other than college football has invaded the training camps of American and National Football League teams this year. The jury still is out as to whether these non-football heroes can make it. The two biggest names are Frank Budd, former Villanova sprint star who shares the world record of 9.2 seconds for the 100- yard dash, and John (Hondo) Havlicek, the Ohio State basket- ball star. Budd is with the Philadelphia Eagles, trying to make it as a flanker back after having been an all-state halfback for Asbury Park (N.J.) High School before going to Villanova. Havlicek, who turned down luc- rative professional basketball and basebs'l offers, was an all-state quarterback at Bridgeport, Ohio, High School. Like Budd, he was picked No. 7 in the last NFL draft. He is being groomed as a defensive back 'or possibly a flanker back by the Cleveland Browns. Will these two make it? Budd's own coaches are at odds over his chances. They admit to his great speed but point out it takes more than speed to get the job done in the NFL. He must be able to take the punishment of getting hit and must know how to cope with the savvy of opposing defensive backs. He has yet to pass that test. Coach Paul Brown has promised Havlicek a long, hard look, and feels he is big enough and strong enough to make the pros. But again, can he acquire the exper- ience and know-how soon enough to survive final squad cuts? Another Cager The same question was posed re- cently by Houston Oilers coach Frank (Pop) Ivy, in referring to John Crnokrak, who was an out- standing basketball player the past three years at Loyola of Chi- cago but did not play football be- cause his college had no team. Crnokrak, who helped Loyola to a berth in the National Invitation Tournament in New York this past March, is big enough for the pros at 6-foot-4, 221 pounds. He played high school football in Gary, Ind. Now he's trying to make it as a linebacker with the Oilers. Two other basketball players are trying to catch on with the Dallas Cowboys of the NFL, and one, Cornell Green of Utah State Uni- versity, may have clinched a strat- ing defensive halfback post. He is 6-4, 210 pounds. The other player is Charley Sells, who was also a hurdler and high jumper at Washington State. He is 6-7, 220, and is trying to hook on as an end. (w The basketball influence also ing job in Michigan, owner-coach spread to a one-day trial by Tom George Halas said yesterday. Gola, former LaSalle College All Tunnicliff, 6 feet 1 and 230 America who played with the pounds, is a former University of Philadelphia Warriors of the Na- Michigan player. His hometown is tional Basketball Association. He Ferndale. He was Michigan's first tried out briefly as a defensive string fullback last fall. halfback with the Eagles, report- * * * edly in an attempt to land a job U.S. Wins Matches that will keep him from joining MOSCOW-Two United States the Warriors' new franchise in San Francisco. But he gave up af- t'eams won first round mixed dou- bles matches with relative ease Ter one day, yesterday in the Moscow Inter- Track stars, some with college national Tennis Tournament on football backgrounds, are almost the Lenin Outdoor Courts. as prevalent as All-America backs. Donna Floyd of Arlington, Va., Already established in the NFL are combined with Frank Froehling of 1960 olympians Ray Norton, with Coral Gables, Fla., for a 6-3, 6-1 San Francisco, and Glenn Davis, verdict over the Russian pair of with Detroit, and the Los Angeles Maria Kull and Yaak Farmas. Bil- Rams' Ollie Matson, of the 1952 li enMfito ogBah Olympic team. Calif., and Donald Dell of Bethes- Other Thinclads da, Md., polished off Tamara Ish- The 49ers yesterday signed Ted utina and Anatoly Chugunov, also Woods, 1960 NCAA 400-yard dash of Russia, 6-2, 6-3. champion and a member of the None of the Americans played Olympic team. Also on the 49ers in singles yesterday. is Jim Johnson, whose brother * * . * Rafer, was Olympic - decathalon McKinley Wins champion and who was also draft- NEWPORT, R.I. - Top-seeded ed by the 49ers, but declined. Jim Chuck McKinley was extended to starred in track and football at three sets by South Africa's Cliff UCLA. Drysdale before winning his first Jerry Tarr, America's top hur- round match 4-6, 7-5, 6-1 yester- dler is trying to make it with the day in the Newport Casino Invita- Denver Broncos, after starring at tional Lawn Tennis Tournament. Oregon as halfback. All of the other entries listed Then there is Charlie Frazier, on the tournament's seeded sheet a split end with the Houston Oil- copped their day's matches. ers. He was a member of the quar- Allen Fox, Los Angeles, Calif., tet that sent a world 400-meter breezed by Pedro Bueno of Bra- relay record a U.S.-U.S.S.R. meet zil 6-3, 6-3. Bill Bond, La Jolla, in 1961 in Moscow. Calif., served booming ace after Saturday To See Football's Premier Pro Doubleheader CLEVELAND (A') - Other club owners stay cool to the idea of test with the Chicago Bears drew pro football's first doubleheader, 51,076. but Art Modell, owner of the "The other owners want to see Cleveland Browns, has a 45,000 how it works out," Modell said ticket sale as evidence fans are when asked whether any other hot for the twin bill coming up at club intended to try the double- the Stadium Saturday. header. "It's the largest advance sale for "If the concensus is that it's un- any pre-season game," Modell wise and shouldn't be done, we'll said, "and with a good break in yield to their experience and judg- the weather and the customary ment and not do it anymore," he sale at the gate, we'll draw 70,000 said. for an exhibition game record But in the year that has elapsed here." since he first broached theidea Detroit plays Dallas in the 6:30 of playing two football games on p.m. opener; and the Browns meet one night to give fans "an unus- the Pittsburgh Steelers in the ual value," Modell has had a grow- second game. ing enthusiasm and diminishing The largest previous exhibition misgivings about this pet project game attendance here was in 1950, of his. when the Browns were going into "Fans want to see the rookies- their first season in the National and here's the chance to size up Football League. A pre-season con- those on four clubs," he said. "It's I 1963 MICHIGAN- ENS IAN your campus yearbook Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Los Angeles Minnesota Chicago Detroit . Baltimore Cleveland Boston Kansas City Washington W 71 67 66 61 58 58 57 55 53 45 L 45 52 53 58 60 61 61 62 66 73 Pct. .613 .564 .552 .512 .491 .488 .485 .470 .446 .381 GB 5/ 8% 2 11%/ 14 14/ 15 16/2 192 26 NATIONAL Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Chicago Houston New York LEAGUE W L Pet. GB 79 41 .660 - 77 42 .647 12 72 46 .610 6 66 50 .569 11 65 53 .551 13 63 56 .529 15V2 55 66 .455 241/2 43 76 .361 35Y 41 74 .357 354 30 87 .256 472 I ON uSALE during. REGISTRATI ON YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 13-5, Baltimore 10-4 Chicago 9, Cleveland 0 New York 5, Minnesota 2 Boston 2, Los Angeles 1 Kansas City 6, Washington 5 TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Detroit Chicago at Cleveland (2, twi) New York at Minnesota (n) Washington at Kansas City (n) Boston at Los Angeles (n) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 9, Chicago 2 Philadelphia 3, New York 1 (15 inn.) Pittsburgh 2, Los Angeles 1 Milwaukee at Cincinnati (inc.) St. Louis at Houston (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at New York (2) San Francisco at Chicago Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (n) Milwaukee at Cincinnati (n) St. Louis at Houston (n) I at the Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday . . . $15.00 plus 9c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. I Special Advaned 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. G1 i Sale Price of 6.00 USED CARS 158 PLYMOUTH. 4dr., 2 tone, R., H., & WSW, auto trans., power brakes. $425. Call NO 2-2890. N20 '54 CHEVY convertible, power glide, power steering, good cond. Ph. NO 2- 8308. N19 57 CHEVY, V-8, Power Glide-2 door. Excellent condition. Call NO 5-0456. N18 I TIRED OFWPKING? TRY - - OU R Q7:h* 0**** ** * MEAL SERVICE r :-PACKAGED IN 4..^ *.t .-. ,, .\iv;.::.2 $ " : ':2. .a (3 Y. ~x Our Univer sity Shop presents ' Nu mer Outdoor Jr:ckets with ai system of air vents The man Who likes his comfort and participates in sports, Will prize these Wash 'n' wear, Water-repellent cotton jackets for the amazing coolness and freedom they offer. Perfect for a long golf swing or as protec- ' tion in a boat, they're designed with a system of airy, S net-like inserts, mostly concealed along the sides or tW~under seamed flaps, front and back. Left to right: ~ -1 The zippered jacket, in eggshell or cork, 13.00. The r~. - 7' knit-trimmed, lined jacket with zippered fly front, in eeshell, smokey blue or sea mist, 16.00. 36 to 46 ,I