I PAGE FOUR T HE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. MAY 8. 1985 ......,,.............,..,......... a .:, ,. . .. r i v v a Flw MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Sox Rap Tigers Twice For Direct Classified Ad Service, Plone 764-0557 from 1:00 to 2:30 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 10:00 'til 11:30 A.M. By The Associated Press John Buzhardt and Joel Horlen each pitched a four-hitter, lead- ing the Chicago White Sox to 4-0 and 4-1 victories over the Detroit Tigers in a twi-night doublehead- er last night. The only run scored by the Ti- gers was an inside-the-park home run by Dick McAuliffe off Hor- len in the sixth inning of the nightcap. The White Sox bounced back and chased Detroit starter Dave Wickersham with a four-run ral- ly in the seventh. Load Bases Chicago loaded the bases on a walk, Bill Skowron's double and an intentional walk. Pinch hitter Smokey Burgess singled, driving in two runs, and the others came in on, a balk and a wild pitch, both by reliever Larry Sherry.' Buzhardt struck out 11 and al- lowed just one runner to reach third base in the opener. Skowron gave Buzhardt all the support he needed with a solo homer in the second inning. Skow- ron doubled and scored Chicago's second run in the fourth. Homer Ron Hansen drove in the other runs with a sacrifice fly and ninth-inning homer. The Tigers did not get a hit off Buzhardt until the fifth when Gates Brown led off with a dou- ble. The victories extended Chica- go's winning streak to four games. The Tigers have lost five straight. Good Pitching Jim Bunning fired a four-hitter and produced the only run of the game with a sixth inning homer as the Philadelphia Phillies blank- PISTONS TO GET BUNTIN: NBA Holds Draft Today; Bradley Still Says 'No' ed the New York Mets 1-0 last night. Bunning's job was one of several outstanding pitching ef- forts. Former Yankee Ralph Terry shut out his ex-teammates 4-0 as Cleveland scored all its runs in the first inning. Fred Whitfield tagged a three-run homer and Leon Wagner a solo shot off New York starter Whitey Ford. Edge Houston Eddie Mathews' double delivered Mack Jones with the winning win in the 14th inning as Milwaukee edged the Houston Astros 2-1. Wade Blasingame went the dis- tance for the Braves, allowing just five hits. Sandy Koufax ptched the Los Angeles Dodgers into first place in the NL by defeating Cincinnati 4-2, helped by homers by Dick Tracewski and Ron Fairly. Koufax got out of a jam in the sixth by striking out Deron Johnson and Tony Perez with the bases loaded. Willie Mays' eighth homer of the season tied the score at 5-5 in the eighth and San Francisco exploded for five runs in the 10th to whip St. Louis 10-5. Jim Dav- enport's fourth straight hit and two errors by Phil Gagliano trig- gered the Giants' uprising. Three -Hitter Bob Buhl twirled a three-hitter for the Chicago Cubs and a 3-1 victory over Pittsburgh in a day game. Jim Pagliaroni's eighth inning homer averted a shutout for the Pirates. Ziolo Versalles drove in four runs with four hits to back up Camilo Pascual's six-hit pitching as the Minnesota Twins walloped Baltimore 9-2. Kansas City and Washington were not scheduled. - The Los Angeles Angels defeat- ed Boston 6-4 in their night game on the West Coast. Major Leagre Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE PERSONAL RENT YOUR TV from NEJAC GE and Zenith portables for only $10 per month. FREE service and de- livery. Phone 662-5671 NOW. F WAKE UP SERVICE - Have your phone ring at any designated time- day or night-LOW RATES, DON'T BE LATE FOR CLASS OR WORK- AGAIN. TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE, 665-8871 (24 hours). F42 AUSTIN DIAMOND-"The best buy on an Engagement ring in Ann Arbor." 1209 5. University, 663-7151. SEE MARK RICHMAN Prestige Party Favors for the most unusual lineof party favors ever assembled by one company. Office and Show Room at 1103 S. University. NO 2-6362. F MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington USED CARS TRIUMPH TR-4, 1964 roadster. Clean. 14,500 miles. Never raced. Four on the floor, wire wheels, radio, heater, windshield washer. Green, black top. Racing stripes, seat belts. One owner. $2500. Can be seen at 523 Neff Road, Grosse Point. Call TU 2-8535 for appointment. N3 MISCELLANEOUS What's your choice? Lox and bagels,E toasted English muffins with melted butter, cold cuts? You name it, chances are we'll have it. - * RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard open every night 'til 12 FOR SALE FOR THE FINEST in Dance Music-It's Johnny Harberd Art Bartner Ray Louis Maximillian Peter Clements Wadye Gallant Contact The Bud-Mor Agency 1103 S. University NO 2-6362 Meet the Right Person The purpose of our organization, using established techniques of personality appraisal and an IBM system, is to introduce unmarried persons to others with compatible backgrounds, inter- ests and ideals. Interviews by ap- pointment. Phone 662-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC! INTRODUCTION SERVICE HELP! I'M BORED! Want someone to play bridge with me. If game, call Judy at 764-0554 during the day. F1 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIESI BUY AND SELL THROUGHI The Clearing House A listing service for privately owned articles. Autos, motorcycles, bikes, T.V., Hi-Fi's, furniture, cameras, etc. PHONE 662-6574, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. BIKES AND SCQOTERS HONDA NOW! Buy, reserve, or lay- away before the spring rush. 24 hr. delivery on all 12 popular 1965 mod- els. 30 or more to choose from. See them at HONDA OF ANN ARBOR, 1906 Packard Rd., 665-9281. Z SEE IT NOW-The '65 Yamaha with the revolutionary new oil injection system. No more fuss or muss. NICHOLSON MOTOR SALES. 223 . First FOR RENT ROOMS FOR MEN $20 per month - 59 OLDS. 4 door station wagon. Call NO 3-3547. N2 NEW CARS EUROPEAN CARS, INC. NEW CARS AND SERVICE 506 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti HU 2-2175 Washtenaw County's only authorized V.W. Dealer V HELP WANTED BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $6 for Rh positive; $7 and $10 for Rh negative. Hours: Mon., 9-4; Tues., 9-4; Fri., 1-7, 18-21 yrs. old need parent's permission. Detroit Blood Service, new location, 404 W. Mich- igan, Ypsilanti, Mich. H29 STUDENTS-Choose your own hours! Scholarship offered! Call 761-2779 _8-11 a.m. H7 WANTED - Lively editor-adman for summer page in weekly covering beautiful Walloon Lake. Write quali- fications to Gregg Smith, Boyne Cit- izen, Boyne City, Michigan. Hi GRADUATES If you want to go to work for a well rated firm, at good pay, with good benefits and lots of chance to ad- vance, come in or write. B & B PERSONNEL S2-3227 David Stott Bldg. SUMMER SUBLET 725 HAVEN. 2-3 man furn. apt. Wall- to-wall carpeting, disposal, prkng. Will bargain. Call 761-0434. U2 WANTED-2 girls to share luxury apt. Close to campus. Call 665-2805 after 6:00. U4 FOR GRAD. man or teacher, 2 rm unit furn. Sub-lease sacrifice. Move in today. Inquire at 917 Mary St. Phone 2-0521. U4 2ND SESSION, for 2, 3 or 4, new air cond. apt. Bargain summer rates. Call 668-8723, 665-8330 or 665-2689. U3 2GIRLS tovcomplete 4 man apt., air- con'd., swimming pool, lounge, ne- gotiable. Call 761-0776. U3j SMALE ROOMATE for air con'd. apt. Call 2-1477 evenings. U2 SUMMER SUBLET: Air-con'd., 1 bdrm apt. June 20-Aug. 20. $100-$125/mo. Purcell, 247A Bay, Santa Monica, Cal. 4 PEOPLE to sublease apt. May 5 to pt. 1. Furn and air cond. Call HU3-6100, ext. 3960, US BUSINESS SERVICES CAMPUS OPTICIANS located at 240 Nickels Arcade Rapid frame replacement Doctors Prescriptions filled 662-9116 9-5:30, Sat. 9-2 ANY MOTH HOLES, tears, or burns in your clothes? Wel reweave them like new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224 Arcade. REWEAVING-Burns, tears, etc. Hahn's Reweaving, 313 S. State, 665-0800. 665-8184 Your Number FOR QUICK, ACCUR- ATE AND EXPERIENCED manuscript and thesis typing, transcription- medical, legal and technical confer- ences; mimeographing; offset; ditto; lithography; varityping and compo- sition. AA PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ASSOCIATES. INC. 334 Catherine St. 'I SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Full Time & Evening Employment 18-35 If you are free from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. four evenings each week end occosionally on Saturday, you con maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring an overage weekly income of $67. If you ore neat appearing and a hard worker coil Mr. Jones at 761- 1488 from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. Monday-Friday. No other times. We are also interested in full-time employment. MA NEW YORK (JP)-The National Basketball Association is set to go on its annual fishing expedition for talent-but the prize catch won't be available, regardless of the bait. The nine-team pro league holds its player draft Thursday at a midtown hotel, with a new wrinkle designed to bolster the have- leasts. However, the man most likely to succeed in the NBA from among the crop of eligibles-Princeton's inimitable Bill Bradley-has rul- ed himself a non-prospect. The 6'5" All-American won a Rhodes Scholarship and intends to spend the next two years at Oxford. Afterwards, he plans to study law. The big loser in Bradley's case is the New York Knickerbockers, who would get first crack at him since Princeton Is within their territorial sphere of influence. New York has two first-round picks under the NBA's new draft- ing system to help the divisional tail-enders, and might use one of them for Bradley on the off- chance he will be available some day. After Bradley, the list of pros- pects is comparatively unimpres- sive. NBA people agree it's a lean year for talent as they prepare for their draft, which has no set number of rounds. Leading possibilities, in order of height, seem to be: Fred Hetzel of Davidson, Ollie Johnson of San Francisco and Toby Kimbell of Connecticut, 6-8; Rick Barry of SPORTS SHORTS By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Elston Howard, New York Yankee catcher, under- went a successful operation yes- terday for removal of bone chips from his right elbow. Dr. Sidney Gayner, team physi- cian who performed the surgery, said two chips were taken out of the joint-one the size of a pea and the other smaller. "The operation appears a suc- cess," the physician said. "If every- thing goes according to schedule, Howard should be able to start exercising in three weeks." DARLINGTON, S.C.-Fred Lor- enben won his fifth straight pole position for the Rebel 300 stock car race yesterday and knocked down two Darlington Internation- al Raceway records in the proc- ess. The blond bachelor from Elm- hurst, Ill., leading money winner on the NASCAR circuit, toured the 1 3-8 mile asphalt oval for four laps at 138.133 miles per hour in a 1965 Ford. His fastest lap was 138.461 m.p.h., also a track rec- ord. EAST LANSING-The Michigan State University basketball office reports it has signed one of the most sought-after prep stars in the state. A signed tender has been re- turned by Tom Lick of Gaylord, a 6'11" center who will be entering MSU as a freshman next fall. Miami of Florida, Bill Buntin of Michigan, Dave Stallworth of Wichita and Jim Washington of Villanova, 6-7; Bill Cunningham of North- Carolina and Jerry Sloan of Evansville, 6-5; and Gail Good- rich of UCLA and Flynn Robinson of Wyoming, 6-1. Goodrich is likely to be a ter- ritorial choice of the Los Angeles Lakers, Buntin of the Detroit Pis- tons, Johnson of the San Fran- cisco Warriors and Washington of the Philadelphia 76ers. T To Halt Title Fight BOSTON OP)-An injunction was sought Wednesday by Suffolk County Dist. Atty. Garrett H. Byrne to block the heavyweight title fight May 25 between cham- pion Cassius Clay and challenger Sonny Liston. Byrne contended there was le- gal technicalities which had been ignored by promoters of the ti- tle bout set for Boston Garden. Judge Felix Forte in Suffolk Superior Court said he would hear arguments on Byrne's request for an injunction at 11 a.m. today. Ignore Debate While the legal arguments went on, both Clay and Liston sweated through their training routines, taking no notice of the techni- calities involved in getting a title fight under way. The legal tussle developed when Byrne told the court Sam Silver- man of Boston was listed as pro- moter of the title bout but actual- ly the real promoter is Intercon- tinental Promotions, Inc., of Penn- sylvania. Byrne contended Silverman was getting $15,000 fee plus $5000 ex- penses for appearing as promoter. Defendants Besides Silverman and Inter- continental, the petition named Clay and Liston, the Boston Gar- den-Arena Corp., lessee of the Bos- ton Garden where the bout is scheduled, and the Boston & Maine Railroad ,owner of the Gar- den. All negotiations with the box- ers, the Garden, and radio and television representatives have been conducted by Intercontinen- tal, Byrne said. He also contended Interconti- nental had failed to file certain documents required of out-of-state corporations doing business with- in Massachusetts. I TV Lounge, Air conditioned Complete Snack Kitchen Call 8-9593 Chicago Minnesota Los Angeles Cleveland Baltimore Detroit Boston New York Washington Kansas City W L 13 5 11 5 11 s 8 7 9 9 99 7 9 8 10 7 13 4 12 Pct. .722 .688 .579 .533 .500 .500 .437 .444 .350 .250 GB 1 2 31x 4 4 5 5 7 8 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4-4, Detroit 0.1 Cleveland 4, New York 0 Minnesota 9, Baltimore 2 Los Angeles 6, Boston 4 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at .Minnesota New York at Cleveland (n) Kansas City at Los Angeles (n) Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE RENT A TRUCK Pickups, panels, stakes, and vans. 59 Ecorse Rd., Ypsilanti, Mich. BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI'S Galore! LEVI'S SLIM-FITS-$4.25 "White," and 5 Colors For "Guys and Gals" Cord. SLIM-FITS-$5.98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asst'd. Colors-$6.98 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S For Gals and Guys "White" and Colors-$5.98 LEVI JACKETS Blue Denim-$5.49 "White"-$5.98 LEVI'S Superslim's-$4.98 LEVI'S Dungarees-$4.49 TURTLENECKS-$1.69 (15 Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nites SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington Cl_ FURN. new 1 & 2 bdrms, town house air-cond., balconies, on campus. Rent starting at $152.50. Avail Aug. 1. Call 761-2480, eves 662-5140. C2 616 MILLER-Furnished 2 room apt., private bath. Call 663-7040 for ap- pointment. C3 REDUCED CAMPUS HOSPITAL 1 bdrm apt, with study. Very attrac- tive, modern furn. Avail now and fall. $80 mo. Call NO 5-0925 or NOI 2-7992, C2 FURN. 3 bdrm house, ceramic bath, fireplace, newly decorated. Hill-1 Division area. Summer $180 mo. Fall $220 ma. Call NO 3-6528, C3; ROOM AND BOARD I CO-OPS are a good place to eat this summer. Board $11 per wk. Room & board $17 per week. Join for 1 or,[ both terms. Contact Intter-Cooper- ative Council, 2546 SAB. Call 668-- 6872. El SUBJECTS WANTED for PAID PsychologicaI Experiments Col 764-2583 ._ _.__._..__ _ ___.... .___.__. _._ __.. _..._..._.... _.,_a,__. il i 'I _i Los Angeles Cincinnati Houston Milwaukee Chicago San Francisco Philadelphia St. Louis Pittsburgh New York WV L 13 6 12 7 12 9 9 8 9 9 10 11 9 10 9 10 7 13 7 14 Pct. .684 .632 .571 .529 .500 .476 .474 .474 .350 .333 GB 1 2 31> 4 4 4 7 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 3, Pittsburgh 1 Philadelphia 1, New York 0 Los Angeles 4, Cincinnati 2 Milwaukee 2, Houston 1 (14 inn) San Francisco 10, St. Louis 5 (10 inn) TODAY'S GAMES Pittsburgh at Chicago Los Angeles at Cincinnati (2, t-n) Only games scheduled Don't Nmalke.me, laugh. You mean to say, I could have bought that big, beautiful, luxurious Dodge Polara, and I would have gotten a 383 cu. in. V8, carpeting, padded dash, foam seats, and all those other things at no extra cost? Who's laughing? r The University, MuiaSoet announces the 1965 SUMMER CONCERT SERIES Four Recitals in Rackham Auditorium GARY GRAFFMAN, Pianist ..............Wednesday, July 7 Program: Two Songs Without Words (Mendelssohn); Sonata in A-flat, Op. 110 (Beethoven); Variations on a Theme of Handel (Brahms); Carnaval, Op. 9 (Schumann). SIDNEY HARTH, Violinist................Tuesday, July 13 Program: Sonata in D major (Nardini); Sonate Op. 27, No. 3 (Ysaye); Sonata (Ernest Bloch); Sonata, Op. 13 (Faure); Recitativoe Arioso (Luto- slawski) ; Zigeunerweisen (Sarasate). PHILIPPE ENTREMONT, Pianist ...........Tuesday, July 20 Program: Five Sonatas (Scarlatti); Sonata in G, K. 283 (Mozart); Etudes '44 A 1E / I