WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY N WEDNESDAY, JULY 1~, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 Monday through Friday, 1 P.M. to 3 P.M. Perez's Home Run in 15th Leads Nats to 2-1 Victory rrirr_ rr r FOR RENT FOR RENT The Ann Arbor Fair Housing Ordi- nance and the University of Mich-.R Igan Regents' bylaws prohibit dis- crimination in the University com- munity. Questions should be direct- ed to Off-Campus Housing, 764-7400. No. But a nice two bedroom, 3-man Lapt. in a brand new, modern build- _____________ _______________ ing. Located near campus and the SINGLES FOR MEN-Hill and Forest. commuter bus. $40/mo. Linen, TV. Call 761-1743, 3-12 p.m C27 i 1 Hil 3 OR 4 MAN bi-level furnished apts. 110 HillO c available for Fall. On campus. Dish- washer, disposal, free parking, air- conditioned. Call NO 5-9627 after C I 761-805 5 p.m. C23 / V055 C24 ATTRACTIVE SINGLE room, with bath. for quiet girl. Grad preferred. First floor unit. Ample parking. $75. NO 3- FALL RENTAL 6838. 022 says C221 546 Packard WANTED-Beginning fall semester, 1 grad or med. student to share mod- Ann Arbor's Most Spacious Apt. 2, 4. ern, 4-man apt. Call Bob or Larry, or 5 man, large porches, ample 761-8589. 021 parking. Call 1-864-3852.C5 FURFNISHtD ROOMS for women, some 4 with cooking facilities. Phone 668-1 7727. C5 i 772. _os CAMPUS 2 ROOMS available for fall in 5 bed-I room house. Private room, share rest of house. Call 662-2043. CA REDUCED RENT 1 UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES LINES I day 2 day 3 day 4 day 5 dav 6 day add. 2 .65 1.25 1.80 2.30 2.80 3.25 .45 3 .85 1.65 2.40 3.10 3.75 4.35 .60 4 1.05 2.00 2.90 3.75 4.55 5.30 .75 5 1.20 2.30 3.35 4.35 5.30 6.20 .90 6 1.40 2.60 3.80 4.95 6.05 7.10 1.00 7 1.55 2.90 4.25 5.55 6.80 8.00 1.10 8 1.70 3.20 4.70 6.15 7.50 8.80 1.20 9 1.85 3.50 5.10 6.70 8.20 9.60 1.30 10 2.00 3.80 5.50 7.15 8.75 10.25 1.40 INCHES 1 2.00 3.80 5.50 7.15 8.15 10.25 1.40 2 3.75 7.30 10.60 13.75 16.75 19.55 1.40 3 5.35 10.40 15.20 19.60 23.95 28.20 1.40 4 6.85 13.35 19.65 25.75 31.50 37.15 1.40 5 8.25 16.25 24.15 31.85 39.35 46.55 1.40 Additional costs per day after six days. Ads that are of I e, 21/2, 31/2, etc. inch size will be billed at the average of the lower and higher inch rate. , e 5 BIKES AND SCOOTERS FOR SALE-'66 Honda 305 Scrambler. $500. 663-0660 before 3 p.m. Z44 '66 SUZUKI, 250 cc. 400 miles, exc. shape, 2 helmets, best offer over $500. 761-9450 after 5. Z45 HONDA '65, 1967. 600 miles, exc. cond, *250. Mustsell. Call 761-6406 after 5. Z46 FOR SALE-Yamaha YDS 2, 250cc. Best offer. Call Steve, 761-9027. Z41 AVAI LABLE AUG. 22 CAMPUS-near f ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL -NetW, spacious, 1 bedroom apt. -Completely furnished, air- conditioned and sound-proofed. -$195 per month includes all utilities except electricity. DAHLMANN APTS. 761-7600 C19 PACKARD AVENUE APARTMENTS 738 PACKARD Now Renting for Fall 2 or 3 man' bi-level or efficiency. Furnished, air-cond., parking, close to campus. Manager on premises. Phone NO 3-5584 or NO 3=8866 before 6 p.m. C FALL RENTAL , STATE ST. MANOR 1111 S. State, across from Yost Field House. 3 and 4 man, modern, luzury, air-cond., garbage disposal, balcony. !ali 1-864-3852. Call collect, C4 WANTED-A spidery attic for this fall. Must have: floor, walls, air and other essentials. Call 665-8722. CE 815 EAST ANN Fall Occupancy Air-conditioned 1-bedroom apartment with off-street parking. Also: other air-conditioned 4-man apartments with wall-to-wall car- peting, new furnishings, disposal, laundry facilities, and parking. Rent starts at $205 per month. 662-7787. SHORT TERM LEASES -New, just completed building -Located in the heart of the campus -Completely furnished and equipped with Frigidaire appliances and air conditioners. -Immediate occupancy in apart- ments designed for two to four persons. 761-7600 days C141 BSA 175cc. $235; 761-9677 after 5. Me- chanically good, dependable. Z42 HONDA 300, plus7helmet. 8700 miles. $500. Call 761-5857. Z39 1964 DELUXE HONDA 90, low mileage, many ;extras. $250. 536-9829 Detroit. Z17 BRIDGESTONE 90 Trail, 12 horsepower, $300; Honda Sport 50, $110; 1967 Bridegstone 175 new, $595; 1967 Bridgestone 175 Scrambler, $625. Custom Painting UNIVERSITY MOTORCYCLE SALES 211 E. Ann NO 2-3979 Z HONDA 150. $300. Call Campus Bootery. Ask for John, Z24 418 E. Washington Street WASH I NGTON OMANOR N CAMPUS-NR. FRIEZE & ANGELL HALL! We are now leasing for.Fall 1967 DELUXE & SPACIOUS 1 BEDROOMS FOR 3 STUDENTS. Fully furnished in modern decorator colors, bal., air- cond., disposals, soundproof, laundry, storage. EXTRA FEATURES - Large study hall and a very quiet building. For appt. call NO 8-6906. C11 1506 Broadway Modern unfurnished 1-bedroom apart- ment with wall-to-wall carpeting, dis- posal, stove, and refrigerator. Immed- iate summer or fall occupancy. Other 2-bedroom unfurnished apart- ments. CAMPUS MANAGEMENT, INC. 337 East Huron 662-7787 C' COUPLES ONLY VAN DUSEN MANOR PERSONAL ANN ARBOR'S finest buy in a diamond Engagement Ring. Check it. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University. 663-7151.j Fl LOOKING for a nice secluded place to swim and picnic on the warmj Saturday afternoons -with a small compatable group. See the SWING- ERS' GUIDE. On sale at newsstands and book stores, or send 69c toj Swingers' Guide, 11357 N. Shore Dr., Whitmore Lake, Mich. F32 STROBE LIGHTS. 662-2769. 1215 S.- University, Apt. 4. F S.A.E. ROAD RALILY-Picnic. Sat., July 8, 12 o'clock. Auto Lab. Call 764-2239 for info. F33 RECORDS - Selling my collection-f mostly jazz and a few classical; 50c to $1.25. Call 761-837'2 between noon and 2 p.m. FE NERVOUS? Learn self-help. Recovery Inc., Box 231, Ann Arbor. 668-7030.T F FRESHMAN! ! Are you taking Spanish 101 or 102 inC ,he Fall? Get your workbook cheap1 for $2.50. (In the bookkstores it costs $3,95). Call Steve, 662-8225, evenings. FA LITERATURE-POLITICS - GENERA- TION(s). Contribute to "Overflow." Ron, 663-2348 or Richard, 665-2154. FEf WAKE-UP SERVICE. Have your phone f ring at any designated time, day or night-LOW RATES, DON'T BE LATE1 FOR CLASS OR WORK -- AGAIN.r TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE, 665-8871 (24 hours). F RENT Yopr TV from NEJAC1 Zenith 19 in. all channel portabl esfort only $10 per month. FREE service and delivery. Phone 662-5671. F FOR M.G.s and TRIUMPHS-Two 15- inch wire wheels and two new tiresT which have never touched pavement. Ron, 663-2348. FEi HELP WANTED ANAHEIM (AP)-Tony Perez' 380- foot home run in the 15th inning of the longest baseball All-Star game ever played gave the Na- tional League a record fifth straight victory over the American League 2-1 last night. The Cincinnati Reds' third base- man sent the sellout crowd of 46,309 home for a late dinner when he blasted a pitch by Kansas City's Catfish Hunter into the bleachers in left field. It was a tense battle of fine pitching that broke all records for strikeouts in All-Star play with a total of 30. The twilight game started in searing 91-degree heat and ended in the cool of a fine California evening. Allen Horne Run Rich Allen of the Philadelphia Phillies smashed a home run off Minnesota's Dean Chance in the second inning, and Brooks Rob- inson of Baltimore evened matters with a homer off Chicago's Fer- guson Jenkins in the sixth inning for the only scores until the 15th. The longest previous All-Star game went 14 innings at Chica- go's Comiskey Park in 1950 and it, too, was broken up by a hom- er. Red Schoendienst, now man- ager of the St. Louis Cardinals, was the slugging hero of that game of 17 summers ago. This was the fifth extra-in- ning game of the 38 game series. The National has won all five and holds a 20-17-1 edge in a competition once dominated by the American League. Used 7 Pitchers Walter Alston, the National League manager from Los Ange- les, used seven of his eight pitch- ers and came up with a winner from his own staff in Don Drys- dale. Claude Osteen, the other Dodger on the team, was the only man who didn't crack the Nation- al lineup. To put the icing on the cake, Alston brought in Tom Seaver of the New York Mets to pitch the last inning. The rookie walked a man but ended with a flourish by striking out pinch hitter Ken Ber- ry of the Chicago White Sox after three hours and 41 minutes of play. . The first All-Star game played in this handsome triple-decked $24 million stadium was completely dominated by the pitching, except for those three home run blasts, all by third basemen, Willie Mays of San Francisco, a sixth-inning pinch batter went hitless in four trips in his first S NOW DUCATI Only the best for the nicest people Honda of Ann Arbor 3000.Packard at Platt 665-9281 Z18 HONDA 150 bored to 160 cc. Like new. See and make offer. 668-7846. Z32 DOWNTOWN HONDA CAMPUS LOCATION "WE Service What We Sell" (AND OTHERS TOO) FIRST IN A LONG STRING of pitchers to take the mound in yesterday's 2-1 National League All-Star victory are starting pitchers Dean Chance (left) of the Minnesota Twins and Juan Mar- ichal of the San Francisco Giants non-starting role since 1956. Mic- key Mantle of the New York Yan- kees, received a tremendous stand- ing ovation when he pinch hit in the fifth but he too was called out on strikes. Hunter, permitted to work more than the standard three innings when the game went into overtime, was in his fifth inning when Perez's blast tagged him with the defeat. Roberto Clemete of Pittsburgh, one of the finest hitters in all baseball, set a record by striking' out four straight times after open- ing with a single. Several players had wiffed three times in an All- Star game but Roberto topped them all. Fielding Plays Tony Coniglitro of the Boston Red Sox contributed the two spec- tacular fielding plays of the long day, He ran into right center to make a one-handed stab on Or- lando Cepeda of St, Louis in the 10th and raced back to the wall to grab Cepeda's long drive in the 15th, a few seconds before Perez ruined the day for the American League fans. Drysdale, a star of the rival Dodgers, was booed by the An- aheim fans when he came into the YOU CAN PURCHASE a cycle any- where, but the combination of cycle sales at competitive prices and CONVENIENTLY lo ca te d service is hard to beat. WE FEATURE OUR SERVICE DE- PARTMENT. This department is headed by a man with 13 years experience as an engine research mechanic. OUR PARTS DEPARTMENT is one of the largest in the area. TO OBTAIN ONE DAY SERVICE phone in advance for an appoint- ment. P.S. We carry the full line of HONDA exclusively, to serve you better. CAMPUS MANAGEMENT INC. 335 East Huron FOR FALL ALBERT TERRACE 1700 GEDDES -Beautifully Furnished -2 Air-Conditioners --Dishwasher -Fully Carpeted -1% -Baths -Elevator -All-Masonary Construction -4 and 5 Man Units Charter Realty c WANTED-MALE HELP Waiters, dishwashers, pots and pans and cook's helper needed for break- fasts and noon dinners from July 23 to Aug. 18. Alpha Chi Omega House. Small group of about 30 men. Served buffet style. Please contact at once. Write Box S4, c/o The Michigan Daily. H14 FREE ROOM AND BOARD, Fall and Winter terms for 1 student room- mates. Mother helping. 15 hours per week. Contact Prof. Mann, 764-7548. Hul FREE ROOM AND BOARD for student mother helper. 15-20 hours weekly. Starting Summer or Fall. Call Prof. Mann, 764-7548. H12 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED game. The announcement that he was the winning pitcher brought more catcalls from the customers. Allen, the Phillies' third base- man, rode a 1-1 pitch by Chance about 400 feet into the bleachers in right center in the second. Marichal, Jenkins Star Juan Marichal of San Fran- cisco and Jenkins had been mak- ing the American Leagues roll over and play dead until Robin- son connected for his 366-foot homer off Jenkins in the sixth. Jenkins, incidently, tied a rec- ord with six strikeouts in his three-inning stint. The old record for total strikeouts in a game was 20 in 1955 in 12 innings. There were no errors in the game. The closest call caine when Hank Aaron started late and tried for a shoestring catch on Carl Yastrzemski in the fifth. It was ruled a double, the first of three hits for the Red Sox left fielder. Perfect Innings Almost lost in the shuffle were the three perfect innings .pitched by Chicago's Gary Peters for the American from the sixth through the eighth. Manager Hank Bauer of Balti- more, the American League skip- per, said, "They had some good, pitching thrown at them. Perez Just caught the ball-boom. Conig- liaro's catches were great and maybe saved the game at the time." "When I hit it I knew it was out," said Perez, whose wife and 14-month-old son, Victor, were in the stands. Best Pitching Alston commented, "Possibly it was overall the best pitching in any All-Star game I've seen. You'd have a hard time picking the best one today.", Brooks Robinson lined a foul ball down the left field line in the 13th that some press box ob- servers thought was ticked by third baseman Perez in fair ter- ritory but on-the-scene observers said there was no argument. "I thought it might have flick- ed off his glove," said Robinson. l 1 a l l 2 ,, Scores NATIONAL ab r It bi po a Brock if 2 00 0 2 0 Mays pf-ef 4 0 0 0 3 0 Clemente rf 6 0 1 0 6 0 Aaron cf-I 6 0 1 0 2 0 Cepeda Ib 6 00 400 Allen 3b 4 1 1 1 0 2 Perez lb 2 1 1 1 0 3 Torre c 2 00 0 41 Hallerc 100070 Banks ph 1 0 1 0 0 0 McCarverc 2 0 2 0 7 1 Mazeroskj 2b 4 00 0 7 1 Drysdale p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Helms ph 1 0 00 0 0 Seaver p 00 0 0 00 Alley ss 5 00 01 3 Maricha lp 100 000 Jenkins p 1 0 0 0 0 0 Gibson p O 0 0 0 0 1 Wynnph 1 0 10 00 Shortp 0 0 000 1 Staub ph 1 0 110 0 0 Cuellarp 0 0 0 000 Ross ph-2b -1 0 0 0 1 0 Totals 52 2 9 2 45 13 AMERICAN ab r hbt po a B. Robinson 3b 6 1 1 1 0 6 Carew 2b 3 0 0 0 2 2 McAuliffe 2b 3 0 0 0 3 2 Oliva cf 6 02 04 0 Killebrewib 6 0 0 0 15 1 Conigliaro rf 6 0 0 0 4 0 Yastrzemski if 4 0 3 0 2 0 Freehan o 5 0 0 13 0 Petrocelli ss 1 0 0 0 0 1~ McGlothlin p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Mantle ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 ePters p 00 0~00 1 Mincherph 1 0 1 0 0 0 Agee pr 0 0 0 0 0 0 Downing p 10 0o 0 0 Alvis ph 100000 Hunter p 1 00 00 0 Berry ph 1 0 0 0 0 0 Chance p 0 0 0 0 0 0 Fregosi ph-ss 4 0 1 0- 2 3 Total~s 49 1 a 1~45 16 National 010 000 000 000 001-2 9 0 American 000 001 000 000) 000-148 0 E-None. DP-Robinson, Carew, Killebrew, McAuliffe, Killebrew. LOB-National 5, American 7. 2B- Yastrzemski, McCarver. 3B-None. HR-Allen, B. Rpbinsn, Perez. SB -Aaron.FS-Fregosi, Freehan, Mas- eroski. SF-None, .... PITCHING SUMMARY 1210W. Stadium Blvd. 1000 sq. ft. Unfurnished Apt. includes- , -2 bedrooms -dining room plus kitchen with separate eating area -air conditioning and private balcony -$155 per month includes all utilities except electricity -wall to wallcarpeting is available 761-C7600 DOWNTOWN HONDA 310 E. Washington phone 665-8637 Ann Arbor USED CARSr 1960 VOLVO, A-1 cond. Rebuilt engine. ;;, $000. 761-3227. N15 '62TANMOZA artop auotras. $7.50 FOR Rh positive. $10, $12 for 62 TAN MONZA hardtop, auto. trans Rh negative. Hours: Mon., Tues., new brakes, exhaust, battery, shocks, Thurs., Fri. 9-4; Weds. 1-7. 18-21 etc. 665-3418 or 662-0050 nights. N13 years old need parental permission. VOLVO 122S, 1966, 2-door, 8000 miles. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY perfect cond. 663-8200 after 5. N14 ; BLOOD CENTER PRICE!! LOCATION Chance McGlothlin Peters Downing Hunter (L) Marichal Jenkins Gibson Short Cuellar Drysdale (W) Seaver T-3:41. A-46,309. P HRER BB SO 32 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 0 0 2 3 00 02 4 2 2 0 00 2 5 4 1 1 0 4 3 1 0 '0 0 3 3 3 1 1 0 6 2 1 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 1 ii' 665-8825 1335 8, University C25 AUSTIN HEALEY 3000, 1965, Green: and 1961 Red. Call 449-4370. N12 '65 VW SEDAN. Excellent running con- dition. Must sell immediately. Call 662-9153 evenings. NA 1 404 W. Michigan Ypsilanti Phone 483-1894 H BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! For "Guars and Gats" LEVI'S SLIM-FITS-$4.98 Pure White and 4, Colors Cord. SLIM-FITS-$5.98, LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing-$7 STA-PREST Slim-Fits $6.50 LEVI JACKETS "White" or Denim-$7.50 LEV'S Supersl ims-$4.98 LEV I's Dungrees-$5.25 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI"S "White" & Colors-$6.50 COTTON TURTLENECKS-,--$1.79 (Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nights SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington and a beautiful 4-man apartment all rolled into one. A luxurious, new building, located on Sybil near Hill. 5 MINUTES FROM CAMPUS Call 761-8055 C SUMMER SUBLET , 4TH GIRL WANTED for 5 man apt. Modern, air-cond., quiet, private patio, near campu inexpensive. Mary, 781-1368. U43 HAVE YOUR own room. All facilities and conveniences. Very cheap. From now until August 20. Close to cam- pus. Air-conditioned. 761-6201. U31 4TH GIRL WANTED - July, August. Modern apt. near campus. Usuals- air-cond. Call 665-7391. U42 SUMMER SUBLET-$100. New, furnish- ed, pool. Call 971-0667 after 5. U38 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING-Experienced. Call Judy, 429- 7795, Saline, J20 TYPING-Experienced. Theses, papers. Mrs. Newcomb. 663-0436. J19 COLLINS TAILORING * AND ALTERATIONS SHOP 225 E. Liberty St. 665-8195 PETS AND SUPPLIES ADORABLE KITTENS. Free-Siamese mother. 665-5301. T8 TRANSPORTATION U.M. JET CHARTER, Paris-N.Y., Aug. 19; $110. 665-2357 or 764-4303. G25 DRIVING N.Y.C. July 17. Returning about Aug. 6. Wish someone to share driving or riding either way. 662- 0086, Gutworith. G24 WANTED-2-3 small size households moving to Los Angeles to share ex- pense of large U-Haul van. Leaving end of August. NO 3-6797. G23 LOST AND FOUND LOST - Silver Siberian Huskie; full grown male. Reward. Call 761-2704. A20 LOST-Orange kitten-S. Univ. and E. Univ. area. Sunday. Call 761-0626 or 764-9507. A19 MISCELLANEOUS PO RTHOSE interested, "OVERFLOW" accepts, 663-2348 or 665-215. ME Enjoy Yourself WANTED TO RENT APT. OR HOUSE wanted for Fall, for 2 female grads and 1 friendly quiet dog. Distance no object. Call 665- 2162. L26 FEMALE STUDENT and 4 children ages 8 to 15, need 3-bedroom house or apt. in immediate AA area. Will buy, rent or lease. Call Flint, collect, 742-1133 or 787-2645. L27 FEMALE transfer student, Junior, wishtes apt. with 1, 2, or 3 girls. Call Pontiac 338-4547. 1041 James K. Blvd., Pontiac, Mich. L23 2 GIRLS for apartment for Fall. Will- ing to share. Call 663-6047. L24 1 GIRL LOOKING for another to share apt. this fall in Hosp. area. Call 665-9368 after 6 p.m. L25 MARRIED COUPLE looking for 1 bdrm. apt. in Campus-Hosp. area, for Aug. 20. Phone 662-6200. L21 FEM.LE JUNIOR transfer student wants to share apt. with others. Fall term. Write Ellen, 825 Field Ave., Plainfield, N.J. 07060. L22 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS ,SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DAVID KNOKE ========= 1~ NATIONAL LEAGUE ALL-STARS pose prior to taking the field against the American League team. Tony Perez's 'home run in the 15th inning, the longest All-Star game in history, decided the contest after 32 hours of play. J Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB St. Louis 49 32 .605 - Chicago 46 36 .561 3/ San Francisco 45 38 542 5 Cincinnati 46 39 .541 5 Atlanta 42 39 .519 7 Pittsburgh 40 38 .513 71j Philadelphia 40 40 .500 8% Los Angeles 34 47.420 15 Houston 33 50 .398 17 New York 31 47 .397 16'/ TODAY'S GAME Pittsburgh at St. Louis AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Chicago 47 33 .588 - Detroit 45 35 .563 2 Minnesota= 45 36 .556 2/2 California . 45 40 .529 4% Boston 41 39 .513 6 Cleveland 40 42 .488 8 Baltimore 39 43 A476 9 New York 36 45 .444 111/ Washington 36 47 .434 12Y2 Kansas City 35 49 .417 14 TODAY'S GAME Chicago at Cleveland VU~~~iRR~M J2 BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan A-1 New and Used Instruments PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington Join The Daily StaffI I 9 111 Citizens for New Politics WILL DEBATE THE IMPLICATIONS OF AN INDEPENDENT ) NATIONAL POLITICAL CAMPAIGN IN 1968 Iy, * rwrr ir ' m AAffipwm a You save more than money with U.S. Savings Bonds SUMMER LECTURE SERIES Wednesday, July 12, at 8:15 P.M. Wednesday-Saturday, 8 P.M. Sunday, 7 P.M. i PROFESSOR HILLEL 1. SHUVAL A . . I. r r rf . .-- - - --s 1 = I a INI [I