THE MICHIGAN DAILY'
rrTTVQInAV lt&A*V Otr Indir
THE MIC~tTGA~V flA~lY r., ur~ . le~ L
:1ll Y, MAY 25, 1965
Goes One-for-Four in
Title Quest
Diamondmen Split with
Hoosiers, Finish Second
Netmen Capture Crown
I
Ohio State rolled over Michigan
State twice Saturday to capture
the Big Ten baseball crown, but a
split with Indiana gave, Michigan
its second straight second-place
finish in conference play.
The Buckeyes clinched the title
by defeating the two top contend-
ers in last weekend's action. On
Friday they edged the Wolverines
4-3 on a home run in the 16th
Newton Wains
Golf Cro-wn
Spearheaded by Bill Newton's
meet-low 287, Michigan finished
a solid second in the Big Ten golf
meet last Friday and Saturday.
Coach Bert Katzenmeyer's squad
finished the 72-hole tournament
with 1,486, 14 strokes behind home
team Purdue's 1,472. Newton fired
rounds of 73, 67, 74 and 73 to
beat Minnesota's Dave Gumlia for
medalist hopors. Gumlia had a 290
and has now been runner-up three
straight years.
Frosty Evashevski (298), Jim
Evashevski (302), Marc Yahn
(303), Captain Pete Passink (303)
and Bob Barclay (306) also con-
tributed to the Wolverines' best
finish since 1959. They last won
the title in 1952.
A former Ann Arbor High golf
captain and the 1964 Ann Arbor
men's city champion, Newtonf
needed only 118 putts in his quest
of the individual championship.
He used 31 putts the first round,
only 27 the second, and 30 in i
each Saturday.
The Wolverine captain-elect had
two birdies, 12 pars, three bogies
and one double bogie his first
round Saturday, and came back
with a birdie, 14 pars and three
bogies on the final 18 holes to
capture the title.
inning. Saturday they took two
from Michigan State, 13-10 and
2=0.
Michigan dropped its third con.
ference game in a row Saturday
before ending the season success-
fully by whipping Indiana 7-4 in
the second half of a doubleheader
at Bloomington.
Early Lead
Indiana took an early lead with
three runs in the first inning, but'
the Wolverines came back with
three tallies in the third and two
in the fourth to take a lead which
was never threatened. Michigan
starter Clyde Barnhart allowed
only one more Hoosier run; it
came in the final inning.
The Michigan hitting attack
was led by Ted Sizemore and Dick
Schryer. Sizemore went two-for-
three and drove in three runs
while Schryer stroked two hits in
four at bats and picked up two
runs-batted-in, upping his league
average to .365.
In the opening game of the
doubleheader, Inidiana outslugged
the Wolverines and rackedup an
11-7 victory. The Hoosiers rapped
out 17 hits to Michigan's 11.
Five-Run First
The Wolverines opened the
game with five runs in the first
inning and added to their lead
with one score in each of the next
two frames.
But Michigan was held scoreless
after the third inning while In-
diana came to life with one run in
the fourth and five each in the
fifth and sixth innings.
The winning pitcher for the
Hoosiers was Erv Inniger. He gave
up only one run after relieving
starter Ron Keller in the second.
Sophomore Bill Zepp took the loss
for Michigan. He was bombed for
four runs while retiring only one
man.
After the doubleheader in which
he pounded out four hits and
scored four runs, senior-to-be Bob
Gilhooley was elected captain of
the 1966 squad by riis teammates.
BOB GILHOOLEY
KEEP AHEAD
OF YOUR HAIR!!
i NO WAITING
* 5'BARBERS
AiR-CONDITIONED
U-M BARBERS
Near Kresge's
I-
Big Ten Standings
-t
Ohio State
MICHIGAN
Michigan State
Iowa
Illinois
Indiana
Minnesota
Purdue
Wisconsin
Northwestern
W L Pet.
11 2 .846
10 5 .667
9 6 .600
7 5 .583
8 6 .571
6 7 .462
5 7 .417
5 7 .417
6 9 .400
1 14 .067
:Lis ton, Clay'
Meet Today,
By The Associated Press
LEWISTON, Maine-It's the ex-
trovert against theintrovert to-
night for the heavyweight cham-
pionship-and boxing hasn't seen
anything like it since John L.
Sullivan caved in Jake Kirlrain's
ribs on a Mississippi River barge
back in 1889.
Fiction writers would scoff at
it as too ludicrous for words.
The extrovert is Cassius Mar -
cellus Claydhandsome, 23-year-
old descendent of a Kentucky
slave; loud, boastful, flamboyant.
The introvert is Sonny Liston,
dour, growling, with a jail record
and a history of clashes with the
law. He keeps to himself, talks
little.
In Stride
Although Clay says the fightj
will be "the greatest in history,"
the conservative little New Eng-
land mill town of Lewiston is,
taking it all in stride.
The Central Maine Youth Cen-
ter, the site of the fight, has no
sign on the outside announcing
the world championship match.
The arena is principally a skating
hall for high school hockey teams.
The arena' will seat 5,403 paying
customers for the fight which will
start at 9:30 p.m. Ann Arbor time.
The fight figures to be a pick
'em affair. The odds favoring
chailenger Liston have fallen
rapidly from 2-1 to 61% -5 re-
cently.
Favor Clay
The lastest count of the news-
men of the world covering the
event favors Clay, 64-48-1.
Clay has won all his 20 pro,
fights, 16 by knockout. Liston's
record is 35-2 and includes 25
knockouts.
DEPENDABLE
IMPORT SERVICE
We have the MECHANICS
and the PARTS.
NEW CAR DEALER
Triurnph--Volvo-
Fiat---Checker
We lease cars
$4.50 per 24 hr. day
HERB ESTES
AUTOMART
319 W. Huron 665-3688
From Favored Indiana
Never losing against opponents SINGLES.
they had beaten during the regu- 6-4, 6-3; McNerney (nd) def. Flood,
lar season and pulling a couple of 4-6, 6-3, 6-2; Fraser (M) def. Kaie,
major upsets as well, Wolverine 3-6, 7-. 6-2; Stewart (M) def.
netmen went all the way to win ,Fichter, 6-1, 6-4; Lowe (M) def.
the Big Ten tennis crown at Baer, 6-3, 6-4.
Bloomington, Ind., last weekend. . DOUBLES
Power-McNerney (Ind) def. Hed-
Michigan had four singles and. rick-Stewart, 6-3, 6-3; Fraser-Lowe
two doubles champions, most of (M) def. Phillips-Dhooge, 8-6, 6-2;
them coming from victories' over Flood-Swift (M) def. Fichter-Wham,
favored Indiana in the finals. I '-5-3
John Fraser, Jerry Stewart, Hal
Lowe and George Russell were i
dividual champions, while FraserCin er-m en
and Lowe won number two doubles,
and Flood and Jim Swift took " ,
number three. IM iss Tite
Northwestern's Clark Graebner
won the number one singles title
as expected, defeating Indiana's Wolverine thinclads parlayed
Dave Powers. Hoosier Rod Mc- three individual championships'
Nerney beat Brian Flood of Mich- and' exceptional performances by
igan for the number two singles several members of the squad to
championship, though the match a second-place, finish behind
was closer than the season tilt Michigan State in the Big Ten
between the two. Flood won the outdoor track championship at
first set 4-6, but McNerney came Iowa City last weekend.'
back strong to take two sets in a The most spectacular of the
row. Wolverine victories was George
However, Russell unexpectedly Canamare's record-breaking 15'
beat Tom Baer of Indiana in num- 9%" pole vault. The vault broke
ber six singles, 6-3, 6-4, after los- both the varsity and Big Ten rec-
ing to him only a week ago, 6-2, ord of 15'%" set by Wolverine
6-2, to give Michigan a comfort- Rod Denhart in 1962.
able winning cushion. The record jump was 21 inches
"We played much better than I higher than Canamare's highest
thought we could," Coach Bill jump in competition before this1
Murphy said. He cited Flood's year. His previous high this year
victory over top-seeded Tim Shee- was 15"54". After the meet Can-
han of Northwestern and Hedrick amare was elected captain of the
and Stewart's number one doubles 1966 squad.
victory over Northwestern's two-. Bernard Wins
seeded Graebner and Rice in Fri- Captain Kent Bernard success-
day's semifinals as well as Rus- fully defended his 440 title by win-'
sell's win Saturday as "matches I n ng in a time of :46.6. He fin-_
didn't expect to win."
Michigan totalled 142 points, 15
more than runner-up Indiana. The
rest of the pack was far behind,
with Northwestern's 84 the next
closest. The title is Michigan's
eleventh in the 32-year history of
the Big Ten championship, and
is the eighth Murphy has brought"
here in 16 years as head coach.1
Major League
I StaiidintgsA{,
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
W L Pct. GB Y
Chicago 24 12 .667 -
Minnesota 21 13 .618 2
Baltimore 21 17 .553 4
Detroit 210 [7 .541 n! .;;d::;
Los Angeles 20 18 .526 5
Cleveland 17 17 .500 6
Boston 17 18 .486 61~
New York 17 21 .447 8
Washington 15 24 .385 104
Kansas City 9 24 .273 13
YE'TRDAY'S RESULTS
I'Detroit 8, Chicago 3 s
Baltimore 2, Washington 1
New York 15. Cleveland a
Only games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
Detroit at Chicago (n)
Cleveland at New York
Kansas City at Baltimore (n)
Minnesota at Boston (n)
Los Angeles at Washigton (2, t-n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
HOUSES FOR SALE
HOMES FOR SALE by owners, listed
with The Clearing House 662-6574.
9 a.m.-9 p.m. every day. Y
FOR RENT
APT., 3 RM.. private bath, unfurn.,
$85 mo., East Univ. NO 2-4684. C27
HOUSE close to campus, furn., for 4_
students, $200 per month plus utili-
ties. Call 3-1014 after 3. C26
3
IIEDS&~
LAW SCHOOL AREA-Furn. Ist floor
apt. Call 668-6537 after 5 p.m. C25
NO LEASE REQUIRED
Large studio, unfurn., $70/mo., includes
all utilities. Also spacious 1 bdrm.
apt., unfurn., $95/mo. Includes al
utilities. 663-7268. C4
815 E. ANNE
1 & 2 man furnished apts. available
immediately and for fall. One block
to campus and St. Joseph Hospital.
1 10 N. THAYER
2, 3, & 4 man, modern furnished
apts. for fall. Disposals, wall-to-wall
carpeting, etc. Less than one block
to campus.
Campus Management
662-7787 eves. & Sun. 663-9064
C22
Apartments Galore
FOR FALL: Married, 2, 3, or 4 person
apts. from $95 to $240. Campus loca-
tion, new and used buildings. Cheap
summer sublets also avail.
PATRICK J. PULTE. INC.
214 E. Huron
NO 5-9405
after 5 p.m., NO 3-1121
C
AVAILABLE AUG. 15 & FOR SUMMER
SUBLET-Large 3 or 4 person apts.
Also large furn. rooms. NO 2-2197 or
NO 8-8601. C17
ATTRACTIVE, 2 bdrm., large furn.
apt. Pia~no, garage. Near campus,
Heat, water included. Grad women
students, married couples preferred.
$150 mo. Call NO 5-4740 or see 1523
_. Univ. C
FURN. 3 bdrm house, ceramic bath,
i
fneplace, newly decorated. Hill-
Division area. Summer $180 mo. Fall
$220 mo. Call NO 3-6b28. C3
ROOMS FOR MEN
$20 per month
TV Lounge, Air conditioned
Complete Snack Kitchen
Call 8-9593
C1
418 E. WASHINGTON
On Campus-Half Block from Frieze
WASH I NGTON
MANOR
NOW LEASING
FOR FAIL, 1965
Apts. for 2 and 3 Men
ONE BEDROOM & STUDIO APART-
MENTS, LUXURIOUSLY FURNISHED,
AIR - CONDITIONED, BALCONIES,
SOUND-PROOF CONSTRUCTION.
i
t al
Doc
662-9116
pid frame replacement
tors Prescriptions filled
9-5:30, Sat. 9-2
665-8184
BDRM FURN House small back yard.
726 S. Division. Rent-$200 or best
offer. 662-7384. C24
PERSONAL
MR. & MRS. STONEHILL-Thanks for
everything. Congratulations to Jim
S.-the chamhpion dancer of Shaker
Heights. P. F27
FREE KITTENS. Call NO 2-0833. F
AUSTIN DIAMOND-"The best vuy on
an Engagement ring in Ann Arbor."
1209 S. University, 663-7151.
NEED A TUTOR for statistics (Soc.,
Econ., Bus. Ad, Math)? Call 665-2378.
F23
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-
AGAN. TELEPHONE ANSWERING
SERVICE, 665-8871 (24 hours), F42
Meet the Right Person
The purpose of our organization, using
established techniques of personality
appraisal and an IBM syst m, is to
introduce unmarried persons to others
with compatible backgrounds, inter-
ests and ideals. Interviews by ap-
pointment. Phone 662-4867.
MTCHIGAN SCIENTIFIC
INTRODUCTION SERVICE
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .70 1.95 3,45
3 .85 2.40 4.20
4 1.00 2.85 4.95
Figure 5 overage words to a line.
Classified deadline, 2:30 doily.
Phone 764-0557
* i
I FREE-,DELIVERY
/ r
* I
* I
THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT
Phone 761-0001
on large
one item pizza
PICKED UP OR DELIVERY ONLY a
/ Coupon Good Monday Thru Thursday, May 24-27 /
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
occasionally on Saturday, you con maintain your studies and still enjoy
a part-time job doing special interview work, that will bring an average
weekly income of $67,
If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call 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.
Read ana &se Daily Classifieds
BUSINESS SERVICES FOR SALE
ANY MOTH HOLES, tears, or burns in VEGA-S String Banjo, Seeger model
your clothes? We'll reweave them with case and Scruggs tuner, very
like new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP. 224 good cond. Call George, 662-6671. B7
Arcade. ________
- FOR SALE - 1965 Austin-Healey 3000
REWEAVING-Burns, tears, etc. Hahn's MKIII All extras. 10.000 miles, $3300
Reweaving, 313 S. State, 665-0800. or best offer, will sell immediately.
- - ---- - - Call 66;-2378 between 5:30-6:00. B5
CAMPUS OPTICIANS BUY AND SELL THROUGH
located at 240 Nickels Arcade The Clearing House
F~oniA YThe C neatng Hn use
W L Pet.
x-Los Angeles 24 13 .649
Cincinnati 22 14 .611
x-St. Louis 21 15 .583
San Francisco 21 18 .538
Milwaukee 17 16 .515
Chicago 18 19 .486
Philadelphia 17 21 .447
Houston 18 23 .439
New York 15 23 .395
Pittsburgh 13 24 .351
x-Late game not included.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Milwaukee 4, San Francisco 3
Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 4
Cincinnati 5, Houston 2
New York 6-4, Philadelphia 2-1
St. Louis at Los Angeles (inc)
TODAY'S GAMES
Chicago at Pittsburgh (n)
New York at Philadelphia (n)
St. Louis at Los Angeles (n)
Cincinnati at Houston (n)
Milwaukee at San Francisco (n)
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-ConTact lenses in wchite case.
Call 665-3323 after 5. AS
LOST Wed, on c ampw -Pair of men's
;lasses. Please call 665-8403. A4
HELP WANTED
SOME HOUSEHOLD help) and baby-
sitnin exchange for room aind
board, pleasant home, walking dis-
tance from campus. Call NO 2-5831.
H21
JOIN THE DAILY--See Judy Warren
at Student Publications Bldg., 420
Maynard St.
DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED, Garden
City, 25 mum. from campus, full or
part-time in pleasant office, 472-
5760. H22
JOBS-Professional, technical, clerical,
restaurant, etc. Full and part-time.
Listed with The Clearing House, 662-
6574, 9 a.m.-9 p.m. every day. HO
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER for real
time digital system. 764-4228. H
STUDENTS--Choose your own hours!
Scholarship offered! Call 761-2779
8-11 a.m. 117
rWO STUDENTS-Room in exchange
for 7 hours work per week. Call NO
3-4740 and ask for Peggy. H12
WAITRESS, must be neat, efficient,
at least 18. Experience preferred but
not necessary. Contact ManagerPin
Room, Colonial Lanes, 1950 S. In-
dustrial Highway. NO 2-3808. H18
BLOOD DONORS
URGENTLY NEEDED
$6 for Rh positive; $7 and $10 for Rh
negative. Hours: Mon., 9-4; Tues.,
9-4; FrL, 1-7, 18-21 yrs. old need
parent's permission. Detroit Blood
Service, new location, 404 W. Mich-
igan, Ypsilanti, Mich, H29
4
GB
1w
2i/
4
5
6
75 i
8
11
GEORGE CANAMARE
ished more than five yards ahead
of second-place Daswell Campbell
of Michigan State.
Michigan's third winner was
Dorie Reid. He took the 100-yard
dash with a time, of :10.0 against
an eight-to-twelve mile wind.
Coach Don Canham was very
pleased with the results of the
meet and said afterwards that the
Wolverines 'did much better than
I thought they would."
Special Praise
Canham singled out the per-
formances of Fred Grove, who
finished second in the 660-yard
run, and Brian Kelly, who placed
fourth in the mile, as especially
pleasing.
Michigan scored a total of 43
points in the meet while Michigan
State tallied 56. State had five
individual winners.
Wisconsin placed third with 37
points, followed by Iowa and Min-
nesota with 28, Northwestern with
13, Illinois 9, Ohio State and Pur-
due 6, and Indiana with 5.
w
F
ALL EUROPEAN CARS
Tax-fre
delivery
in Europe'
PURCHASE 0 LEASE
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Total services: Registration, Insur-
ance, Reduced Return Shipment
Rates. Exclusively yours through
EUROPEAN CAR
DELIVERIES CORP.
MARTHA COLLIER, 816 Hill St.
NO 3-5540 Ann Arbor
FOR APPOINTMENT
CALL NO 8-6906
C6
WANTED TO RENT
GARAGE WANTED - To rent, near
Plymouth Rd. and Broadway, for one
car. Write Box 8, Michigan Daily, 420
Maynard St Li
DUTCH Psychologist and family wants
to exchange homes with family in or
near Ann Arbor, going to live in Hol-
land during 1 year (Aug. '65-July '66).
Please write: Dr. J. Vastenhouw,
Kamperfoeliestraat 11, Bussum, Hol-
land. Li
SUMMER SUBLET
S M E SU ETSUMMER SUBLET IIIB-Girl roommate,
815US. State, air-cond., after 5:00 call
663-1745. U29
3 BDRM. HOME for rent starting June
14 for 3 months. Call NO 5-7675. U130
ARTIST'S STUDIO, $25 month for sum-
mer. Call 665-5297. U31
MAYNARD HOUSE ON CAMPUS, air-
cond., 1 bdrm., May 26-Aug. 26. Call
663-3276 or 665-4406. U26
521 WALNUT-Large 2 rm. studio, furn.,
summer, $65/mo.; fall $75/mo. Also
single furn. rooms for rent. Call NO
8-6906. U25
FURN. APT., convenient, 1 man, June
1-Aug. 24. Sacrifice, $55 mo. Call Dick,
764-4285 days; 665-7637 5-7 p.m. U17
ONE ROOMMATE OPENING in air-
conditioned, modern, two-bedroom
apartment near campus. Has own
balcony. Good price for term IIIB or
now. Call 662-6934. U23
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for IIIB.
5-man, Forvm Apt. Call after 5:00
weekdays, 663-2085. U28
FURNISHED APT. for two avail, for
July and Aug. Reasonable rent. Very
close to campus. Call 662-4044 after
noon. U24
Your Number FOR QUICK, ACCIJR-
ATEAND 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.
BIKES AND SCOOTERS
1964 LAMBRETTA, excellent condition.
Call 668-8213 after 5:00. Z6
1961 BMW R69S, excellent cond., spe-
cial paint. Call Lippincott, NO 3-
3395. Z5
'61 LAMBRETTA Li 150. Ex. mech. cond.
Call Ken, 665-0477. Z2
BMW 250 cc. 1959, 34,000 miles. $400.
Call Jeff days 764-9300 or dinner
time 663-4086. Z4
JOIN the fun world of HONDA. Econo-
my performance and dependability
from $253. See them at HONDA OF
ANN ARBOR, 3000 Packard Rd., 665-
9281. Z
1964 DUCATI '150, $200. Call 663-7045
or 663-7055. Zi
SEE IT NOW-The '65 Yamaha with
the revolutionary new oil injection
system. No more fuss or muss.
NICHOLSON MOTOR SALES
223 S. First
MISCELLANEOUS
NOTHING in the house to eat?
Too tired to cook? There's plenty to
eat, from barbequed meats to frozen
cakes at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Open every night till 12
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
RENT A TRUCK
Pickups, panels, stakes, and vans.
59 Ecorse Rd., Ypsilanti, Mich.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDERS WANTED to Chicago, leaving
early Sat. morning. Call Scott, 663-
7241 after 5 p.m. G9
RIDE WANTED to Gary, Ind., leaving
Friday aft. or later. Share expenses.
Call Gail, 764-0557, 12-3 p.m. After 7,
764-5868. G8
RIDERS WANTED to LA or points West,
leaving June 1. Call Earl, 663-4495. G7
RIDERS WANTED to San Francisco,
leaving end of May. Call 663-9685
evenings. G6
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GU1'IARS, AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington
ROOM AND BOARD
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. Coatact intter-Cooper-
ative Council, 2546 SAB. Call 668--
6872. El
A listing service for privately
owned articles.
Autos, motorcycles, bikes, T.V.,
Hi-Fl's, furniture, cameras, etc.
PHONE 662-6574, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
USED CARS
SUNBEAM 1960 convertible. $700. Call
NO 2-1778 after 6. N16
3 CAR Family selling 2 cars, both excel.
cond., red '63 TR3B, white '61 Re-
nault. 483-5296 after 5:00. N13
TRIUMPH TR3, red w/white top,
Michelin X tires, very good cond.
Great summer car. 662-6111 btwn. 5-8.
TR 3, 1960, SHINY black, 38,000 miles.
$1095. CALL NO 2-8895. N9
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
ALPHA-1963 Sprint Speciale. One own-
er. Mint condition. Best offer. 3150
Morgan Road. N1
MGB 1964
AM-FM radio. NO 5-4620. N7
MGB '63. Blue Roadster, wire wheels,
luggace rack, radio. 665-5620. N8
'59 OLDS. 4 door station wagon. Call
NO 3-3547. N2
NEW CARS
WOULD YOU PREFER A NEW CAR?
-But you think you can't afford one?
How about a brand new 1965 General
Motors OPEL demonstrator carrying
the full G.M. warranty for 2 yrs.
24,000 miles? These brand new
OPELS sell below list, at lower prices
than you'll pay for many second-
hand cars! These remarkable new
G.M. cars give at least 30 miles per
gallon, plenty of room even for tall
6-footers, and never need chassis
lube. Everything you need (except
radio) is standard equipment. We
cannot advertise demo prices, but if
you will phone Mr. Ehnis at NO 2-
6576, Ann ArborBuick, he will pro-
vide full courteous information at
absolutely no obligation to you for
calling. V3
EUROPEAN CARS, INC.
NEW CARS AND- SERVICE
506 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti
HU 2-2175
Woshtenaw County's only
authorized V.W. Dealer
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
.4
a
RENT YOUR TV
From
NEJAC TV Rentals
WANTED-One roommate (female) to
move into cool, interesting type
apartment located across the street
from lfast Quad. Call NO 2-8257 after,
6:30 p m. and ask for Barb, Doree or
Rosalie. People who don't like kittens
need not apply. U22
Rent this 19"
,.. aw .. %
I ",-,
WASHTENAW-SOUTH U.
3 bedroom apts. avail. immediately
iI
11
3
i_