Tuesday, July 9, 1968 q . THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Five For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 Monday through Friday, 12-2:30 TWO ON TOP: Gymnasts shine in second Olympic trial FOR RENT The Ann Arbor Fair Housing Ordi- nance and the University of Mich-. igan Regents bylaws prohibit dis- crimination in the University com- munity. Questions should be direct- ed to Off-Campus Housing. 764-7400. SINGLE ROOM 1 block from campus, available now to August 25th. Call Barry, 761-3889, 665-4480. C38 824 PACKARD FALL OCCUPANCY Fireplace and screened-in porch high- light this modern 2-bedroomT furn- ished apartment that includes wall- to-wall carpeting, separate kitchen, laundry, parking and storage facili- ties. CAMPUS MANAGEMENT, INC. 337 East Huron Days: 662-7787 Eves: 761-1498. C40 1 GIRL FOR FALL. Super large mod- ern apt. 3 min. from campus. 909 Church No. 1 or call 769-0042. C42 BEAUTIFUL FURNISHED 2-bdrm. apt. and 1 single room with kitchen fa- cilities. Call after 6 p.m. NO 2-0480 or 533-1993. C20 1346 GEDDES. Large newly furnished, carpeted rooms for men. No cooking. $50-65. NO 8-6906. C37 GIRL NEEDED for 3 man, 3 bdrm. apt. 769-1235. C36 ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL AREA-three- man, air-cond., two man apt. in new building. Call 665-0154. C34 QUIET, CONSERVATIVE JR. seeks congenial roommates to share apt. Fal. Call Rita, 662-0881, after 6 C39 WANTED: Female roommate for mod. bi-level, 3-man apt. w/dishwasher. Located near IM Bldg. Call 769-2056. C41 1221 S. STATE. Spacious 2 bdrm. fur- nished apt. $18/m. includes utili- ties. 2 or 3 grads. Year lease Phne 761-6866. C32 ROOMS FOR RENT. Price varies, 917 E Huron in back of Rackham Build- ing. Inquire at Apt. 1 after 5 p.m. C37 For Fall THE WALDEN MANAGEMENT CO. Has apartments in the campus' area for 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 persons, with the choice of an 8 or 12- month lease. FOR INFORMATION AND AN APPOINTMENT FOR SHOWING CALL 769-2345 C31 1700 Geddes For Fall 4-man, bi-level with dishwasher, 1a baths, 2 air-conditioners, very large rooms, all masonry construction as- sures privacy, beautifully furnished and located on the right side of the campus. Call 665-8825. Charter Realty " 1335 5 S University C23 FALL RENTALS, efficiencies, 2 bedroom units. Call NO 2-7730 C211 FEMALE GRAD STUDENT needs room- mate(s) with or without apt. for_ fall. Call Sandy, 769-0630 after 6. t 022 FOR RENT 315 S. Division On campus - Large furnished studio two man apartments. Managed by Walden Management Co. 769-2345 C30E 2 BDRM. modern, 1 block from Bus. Ad. or law school. Air-cond., park- ing provided. $220 per ma. 101 N. Ingalls, near Frieze and Rackham Buildings. Apt. 1, open 1-5 daily. 2 bdrm., large, modern, and nicely furnished, for 3 or 4. Parking provided. Available . Aug. 20. Days: 761-5159, eves. 665-2398 or 662-5469. C28 UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES LINES 1 day 2 .65 3 .85 4 1.05 5 1.20 6 1.40 7 1.55 8 1.70 9 1.85 10 2.00 INCHES 1 2.00 2 3.75 3 5.35 4 6.85 5 8.25 2 day 1.25 1.65 2.00 2.30 2.60 2.90 3.20 3.50 3.80 7.30 10.40 13.35 16.25 3 day 1.80 2.40 2.90 3.35 3.80 4.25 4.70 5.10 5.50 5.50 10.60 15.20 19.65 24.15 4 day 2.30 3.10 3.75 4.35 4.95 5.55 6.15 6.70 7.15 7.15 13.75 19.60 25.75 31.85 5 day 2.80 3.75 4.55 5.30 6.05 6.80 7.50 8.20 8.75 8.75 16.75 23.95 31.50 39.35 6 day 3.25 4.35 5.30 6.20 7.10 8.00 8.80 9.60 10.25 10.25 19.55 28.20 37.15 10.55 add. .45 .60 .75 .90 1.00 1.10 1.2C 1.30 1.40 1.40 1.40 1.40 1.40 1.40 Campus-1 Block 418 E. Washington near Frieze & Angell Hall Clean modern building, beautiful furniture, balcony. air-conditioning, sound-proof, laundry, storage, large study hall. 1 Bedroom for 2 or 3 For information and appointments call NO 8-6906 or 761 -2943 C24 1016 OAKLAND 1 and 2 bedroom apts. for 2-5 people. Fully furnished, air-conditioned, bal- conies. parking, close to campus. Rents start at $60 per person. For this and other fine campus apts. call Summit Associates, 761-8055. C25 FALL RENTAL STATE STREET MANOR 1111 S. State St. (Across from Yost Field House) Modern, furnished, 3 - 4 man, air- conditioned, newly furnished, bal- conies, ample parking, garbage dis- posals, LOW RENT, owner operated. CALL 761-5692 or 1-864-3852 C18 410 OBSERVATORY. Fall occupancy. Modern 4 man 2 bedroom apt. with wall to wall carpeting throughout, new furnishings, air-cond., covered parking, modern kitchen and laun- dry facilities. Days: 662-7787. Eves: 761 -1498. 033 THE BEST CAMPUS APTS. FALL 1'968 NEW, FURNISHED, A I R COND., CLOSE, IN STUDENT APARTMENTS DAH LMAN N APARTMENTS Additional costs per day after six days. Ads that are of 1 1/2, 21/2, 31h, etc. inch size will be billed at the overage of the lower and higher inch rote. Special To The Daily QUEBEC-A trio of Michigan gymnasts was the sensation of the second Canadian Olympic trial meet here over the weekend, with the Wolverines gaining three of eight places in the training camp which preceeds the final trial. Gil Larose, captain of the 1963 Michigan gym squad, finished the trial in first place with 108 points in all-around competition - three more than the total accumulated by Sid Jensen, sophomore star of the '68 team. The final spot on the eight-man Canadian squad-which reports to Ottawa for a 15-day training camp later this month-was taken by Fred Rodney, who returns as a senior this fall. Larose was the NCAA all-around champion in his senior year, win- ning both the high bar and vault- ing titles on his way to the crown. Second-placer Jensen is a past Canadian national junior champ, took second in the Big Ten paral- lel bar competition and went on to third in nationals. Of the eight men who take part in the training session at Ottawa, six will be selected by the Can- adian Olympic Committee to rep- resent the country in Mexico City in October. The selection will be completed after the third and final trial meet, scheduled for Toronto on August 17 and 18. SUMMER SUBLET ROOMMATE NEEDED in beautiful, furnished apt, on campus. 769-2119. U44 SUMMER HALF. Terrific air-cond. apt. Very cheap. Call 769-5525. U8 1 GIRL NEEDED for Aug. sublet. 3 man 3 bdrm. apt. $45. 769-1235, U15 1 MAN WANTED for modern apt. Have own bdrm. 2 air-cond., 2 bal- conies, stereo, TV. Cheap! 761-8418. U24 1 OR 2 MEN NEEDED to share 4 man. TV, balcony, own bdrm. 1 block from campus. Cheap. 769-1608. U24 HAVE YOUR own room in 4 bdrm. house. $40/mo. Call Nemo, 769-1247. U23 MODERN 2-MAN. air-cond., parking. close, cheap. 769-3827. U20 HELP WANTED COLLEGE MEN. Earn up to $3,000 this summer as a management trainee. Start immediately. Call 483-7511 2-6 p.m. Wednesday only. H3 WARM, CREATIVE, intelligent, sitter companion wanted for warm, crea- tive, intelligent kids, aged 7, 9, and 12. Mornings, afternoons or both, one to four days/week. $1.10/hr. Prf. Ezekiel, NO 5-5449. B15 MUSIC STUDENTS: Listen and earn! Paid auditory experiments. Call 763- 1143. Hl COLLEGE GIRL to accompany profes- sor's family to Europe as babysitter. Aug. 1968-July 1969. 665-0886 eves. H12 FREE DINNERS to student girl who loves to cook my dinners. For details call Mrs. Mole at NO 2-9541 between 10 a.m. and 7 p.m. H11 NEED MONEY? Be a les representative fora socio- pl itico-satirical new poster line. Ideal for individuals and organiza- tions. Write for complete poster profit kit: GROSS NATIONAL PRO- DUCT, Box 427, Wayzata, Mn. 55391. H8 FREE ROOM in exchange for some babysitting, mostly ees. Private room, bath and entrance. In cooly air-cond. home. Phone 663-3958. H32 NURSE. R.N. or L.P.N. for about 2 hours each morning to assist partial- ly disabled gentleman. Prepare self for day. Box 162, c/o Michigan Daily. H6 FOR SALE GOYA 12 STRING-Good condition. Case included. Goes to best offer over $130.00. Inquire at 723 Church. 8-9 p.m. Ask for Bill. B41 2 JENSEN spealers, Jarrard changers, Paco amplifiers, $95. Must sell, leav- ing town.769-3318 between 1 and 2 or 7 and 8 p.m. B40 HEAVY DUTY tarp-covered trailer 4x8x6%. Must sell, leaving town. Call between 1 and 2 or 7 and 8 p.m. 769-3318. B39 1957 LAMBRETTA, 125 cc, not run- ning, $25. KLH FM portable stereo,. $43. Zenith FM Radio. 769-0449 per- sistently. B37 ELECTRIC GUITAR (beginners), new. Only $27.00 with books. Call 971-3450. LOST AND FOUND LOST-ENOCH, golden brown German Shepherd-St. Bernard around Hill and Tappan area. Call 769-3918. A17 TRANSPORTATION E WANTED: person to share a ride from Detroit to Ann Arbor N. Campus area, Mon.-Fri. Call 764-3488. G31 DRIVE MY 1965 VW to San Francisco or Los Angeles anytime between now and end of Aug. I will pay for your gas. 663-5576 or 764-7200. Ask for Dr. Bowen. G32 PERSONAL CUSTOM SANDALS 37 styles to choose from. Only $15.00 S Lloyd's 218 E. Washington 663-9410 1:30-9 p.m. F46 Office: 545 Church 761-7600 days C2! FOUR-MAN, al-conditioned, furnished apt. for fall between campus and U Hospital, covered parking. NO 2- 7787, after 7 p.m. 761-1498. 03 A NURSE and two physical therapy students needs a fourth roommate for the fail. Modern apartment, close to hospitals and campus. Call 665- 0889 for information. CD 318 E. WILLIAM. Fall occupancy. Com- pletely redecorated 1 bedroom apt. with new furnishings, drapes, wall to wall carpeting. Includes separate kitchen and back porch. $160/mo. plus electricity. Days: 662-7787. Eves.: 761-1498. C34 PERSONAL BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $7.50 Rh positive. $10 and $12 Rh negative. Mon., Tues., Thurs ;Fri., 9-4: Wed., 1-7. 18-21 years old need parent's permission. 483-1894 404 W Michigan. Ypsilanti Michigan Community Blood Center WHY MESS with erasing carbon cop- ies? Why ruin your papers with smudges? Why not? Because you can now Xerox your original at only 8c per copy during business hours, or only 6c per copy on overnight serv- ice S. Univ. right next to U. Towers. 769-0560. F18 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). P BUSINESS SERVICES TENNIS INSTRUCTION: Group and private lessons available through Uni- versity. Call 763-0163 or 79-5013. J13 DON'T1.TSK IT . TASK ITI Typing-theses and term papers our specialty; IBM typewriters; exective type and justified copy available. Transcription - Medical, technical, business, conferences Printing - Mimeograph, offset, Photocopying. Compositiongand Art Work Stuffing, mailing and addressing Resumes Telephone answering (Pick-up and delivery) ANN ARBOR TASK, INC. 1900 West Stadium Blvd. ' Ann Arbor, Michigan AC 313 761-4146 eves. 665-3531, 761-1187, 662-8495 Marilyn L. Keith, Director J EXPERIENCED COLLEGE students to do exterior and interior house paint- ing. Reasonable rates. Call 665-8322. J12 PAPERS, ESSAYS. REPORTS, THESES: Perfect copies now only 6c on over- night service. Use correct-o-tape or unlimited erasures on your original and yet be assured of copies that even look better than the original trom the new Xerox 2400 duplicator. We supply 20 wgt. copy paper free. Overnight service only 6c per page (stored in office safe for complete safety of documents). Immediate service during business hours only 8c per page. S. Univ. right next to U. Towers. 769-0560. JJ MUSICAL MDSE.' RADIOS, REPAIRS HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Custom and personally made instruments, electric, acoustic. 209 S. State. 665-8001. X BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan A-1 New and Used Instruments PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington ROOM AND BOARD PHI ALPHA KAPPA, 1010 E. Ann near medical complex is now serving meals 5 days a wk. through Aug. 22. Board- ers desired. Lunches 90c, dinners $1.65. If interested please call Dick Hui- bregtse 761-5491. E12 BIKES AND SCOOTERS KAWASAKI SAMURI 250 extras. Must sell. Phone 665-0470. Z44 1967 B.S.A. 650 cc, only 4200 miles, A-1 cond. $895. Motorcycle cover, $6, 3 cycle helmets. Must sell, leaving town. Call between 1 and 2 or 7 and 8 p.m. 769-3318. B38 HONDA 305 Scrambler, 1966. $475. Phone 663-0391. Z42 HONDA S90. 1965, $225. Call 453-8031. Z43 '67 HONDA 90, Step-through w/super 90 engine. Like new, Only 460 miles. Must sell immediately. Best offer gets it. Call 769-1729 persistently. Z46 1966 HONDA CB160. Excellent cond. 3500 miles. Best offer around $300. 769-0927 or 1-646-3947. Z35 MISCELLANEOUS FREE PUPPY to good home. Call 665- 2181 after 5. M50 FEMALE College student desires typ- ing, key punch, coding or clerical work. Full or part time. 665-8022 8,9 a.m. and after 5. M48 LEARN TO SAIL. Enroll now for les- sons in beginning or advanced tech- niques. Phone 761-1208 evenings. M29 USED CARS 1961 CORVETTE. Excellent cond. Best offer. Call 665-8330 after 5:30 p.m. N2 SUNBEAM ALPINE '66 Convertible, 4- speed. fir. shift. Br. racing green. ra- 1317 Wilmot Furnished two bedroom apartments now being leased for fall occu- pancy. Excellent campus location. Easily accommodates four at $62.50 a man. For an appointment to see call Walden Management Co. 769-2345 C29 MEDICAL CENTER ST. JOE'S FRIEZE BUILDING 2 bedroom apts. for fall. New build- ings. From $200. Call Summit Asso- ciates 761-8055. C19 2 BEDROOM, 2 MAN Modern apt. on campus, with all the inquires. From $180 per month. Call Summit Associates at 761-8055. C18 SUBLET III-B-Modern, air-cond., 2- man. Cloes to campus, soundproof. Call 769-4066. U15 CAMPUS APTS., Ambassador Co., 761- 7982 1-5 daily. C15 BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store Has Genuine LEVI'S Galore For GALS and GUYS -JUST ARRIVED- LEVI'SFOR GALS! NEW STYLES AND COLORS GALORE! BUTTON FLY LEVI'S $5.29 (Guaranteed to shrink) SUPER SLIM DEMINS $5.50 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S $6.98 WHITE LEVI'S $4.98 4 Colors and Pure White WOOL CPO SH I RTS PHILADELPHIA (P) - Press conferences will be held simul- taneously in Los Angeles and Philadelphia today to announce what has been known for days- the trade of basketball stardWilt Chamberlain, the Associated Press learned yesterday. The Associated Press reported last Friday that the 7-foot-1 cen- ter had been dealt to the Los Angeles Lakers by the Philadel- phia 76ers for three players- Darrell Imhoff, Archie Clark and Jerry Chambers-and cash. Although the National Basket- ball Association trade was con- summated as early as last week- if not earlier-the announcement was held up because of the dif- ficulty of signing some of the players. Jack Ramsay, the 76ers man- ager for three years who is to replace the resigned Alex Han- num as coach, will be at the Phi- ladelphia press conference. However, it was learned the announcement of Ramsay's ap- pointment will be held up a while to give the Chamberlain deal maximum news coverage. Chamberlain will probably be at the Los Angeles conference with Laker officials. It was learned that the Lakers had difficulty in putting the big center's signature on a pact. He made a salary in the neighbor-I hood of $250,000 last year. Clark, an outstanding player who averaged 20 points a game last year and could be the swiftest guard in the NBA, was said to be holding out for a bundle of cash too. Clark made huge salary de- mands on the Lakers last year- reportedly asking for $60,000- and apparently was seeking a raise from his new owners. The Philadelphia conference is set for 1 p.m. at the Spectrum sports arena, where the 76ers play their home games. The trade is one of the biggest in NBA history. Chamberlain, the league's greatest offensive player, fashioned the dunk shot into modern-day sports legend. His play revolutionized the game and his astonomical salary has boosted the pay of other players. Clark was on the West All-Star team last year. Imhoff is a stand- out defensive center, though not a high scorer, and Chambers, a forward in his second year, is known for his good eye from the field and foul line. Reds' Rose sidelined by hand injury CINCINNATI (P) -Pete Rose, Cincinnati's leading batter, was placed on the disabled list yester- day for a fractured thumb and will not return to the line-up- for at least 21 days, the Reds an- nounced. Rose, who is batting .329 and led the league in batting early in the season, injured his left thumb as he dove for a ball in Cincin- nati's game Saturday night with *C * * * AFL support seen for NFL strike By The Associated Pressa CHICAGO - Negotiations be- t een t h e National Football1 League's owners and Players' As- sociation broke down yesterday with a threat of strike apparently still up in the air.r A statement was to be read later but the Associated Press learned that the owners and play- ers' representatives disbandedi day-long sessions without reach- ing an agreement. In Escondido, Calif., a poll of 17 San Diego Charger veterans shows that members of the American Football League team might support any strike by players in the National League. Eight players contacted by a newsman Sunday from the Char- ger training camp here said they would support a strike. Four said they would not and five were undecided. NFL players threaten a strike daily sports- NIGHT EDITOR: PHIL BROWN All-Star battle pits Drysdale,. Tiant under Houston's dome HAR ITON HOUSE 721-723 E. Kingsley. Offers for fall. Hospital and campus location. Air- conditioned, balconies. sound condi- tioned, recreation room, private stor- age, laundry room, carpeting, private parking. Let's just say they are SPACIOUS, QUIET, AND ELEGANT. Four man apartment $62 per man. $248 per apartment. Call days 663- 9373, eves. 6-10 p.m. only 665-0063. C41 MICHIGAN GYMNASTICS Coach Newt Loken is surrounded by three of his star pupils-past anid present--after the second Canadian Olympic trial meet in Quebec Sunday. From left to right are Gil Larose, 1963 captain and the leader in the trials; Loken; Sid Jensen, runnerup to Larose; and Fred Rodney, who took the eighth and final place on the squad that begins preparation soon for the final trial in August. Lakers get Wilt in. major trade * FALL APTS. FOR 2-6 PEOPLE (1, 2, & 3 BDRMS.) CALL Summit Associates HOUSTON (M)-It will be San Francisco's Willie Mays leading off and in the familiar center field spot when the National League All-Stars face the Ameri- can League at the Astrodome to- night. About the only thing more fa- miliar than Mays in center field would be Don Drysdale as the NL's starting pitcher, and the Americans will see that too. Drysdale, the Los Angeles Dodgers' strong - armed right- hander, will be making his fifth All-Star start, tying the record set by Robin Roberts of the Phila- delphia Phillies and Lefty Gomez of the New York Yankees. Drysdale, 10-5, with a 1.37 earned run average, set a record with 58% consecutive scoreless innings earlier this season. He's the most rested man on the NL staff, having last worked Friday night. Mays, who has led off in four All-Star games before and opened the 1965 classic with a home run, moved into the starting line-up when Cincinnati's Pete Rose suf- fered a broken right thumb. Rose's spot on the team was filled by Billy Williams of the Chicago Cubs, Schoendienst had planned to start his own Curt Flood in center field but that changed when Rose got hurt. Schoendienst said he was un- sure who would follow Drysdale but that both his own Bob Gibson and San Francisco's Juan Mari- chal would likely see action. Boston's Dick Williams, man- ager of the American League team, chose right-hander Luis Tiant of Cleveland as his starter. Tiant, making his first All-StarI appearance, will be working with just one day of rest. He pitched 6/3 innings Sunday.' Tiant, 14-5, with a 1.24 ERA, has a statistical edge on Drysdale and will be facing a line-up dominated by right-handed batters. Williams said he felt Tiant could come back strong in spite of the short rest. "A pitcher nor- *C The NL has won nine of the last 10 games and holds a 20-17 over-all edge after trailing at one time 12-5. The starting lineups, batting av- erages, and pitching records for the starters in tonights' game: NATIONAL LEAGUE Mays, San Francisco, cf, .271 Flood, St. Louis, If, .316 McCovey, San Francisco, lb,,.293 Aaron, Atlanta, rf, .247 Santo, Chicago, 3b, .247 Helms, Cincinnati, 2b, .302 Grote, New York, c, .291 Kessinger, Chicago, ss, .252 Drysdale, Los Angeles, p, 10-5 AMERICAN LEAGUE Fregosi, California, ss, .273 Carew, Minnesota, 2b, .286 Yastrzemski, Boston, ef, .301 Howard, Washington, rf, .282 Horton, Detroit, If, .285 Killebrew, Minnesota, lb, .204 Freehan, Detroit, c, .270 Robinson, Baltimore, 3b, .243 Tiant, Cleveland, p, 14-5 over a deadlock with team own- ers on pension benefits. Players seek $100,000 from each club for the pension fund. AFL player representatives are scheduled to meet Friday in San Diego to discuss whether they will support their NFL brothren. One of the older Charger ve- terans said, "I don't eliminate a strike for our own benefit, but I do eliminate a strike for the NFL's benefit." The 'same player-noted that most NFL teams make more money than AFL clubs, The two leagues, he said, "should get to- gether and figure out to what extent it is fair for the AFL own- ers to meet the participation of NFL owners." Some of the undecided players said they would abide by the de- cision of Lanve Alworth, Carger player representative. While the NFL teams have postponed the start of training camps pending an aggreement, most AFL clubs have begun prac- ticing for the 1968 season. Char- ger rookies came to camp last Friday and most veterans are due this Friday. Only veterans are members of the Players' As- sociation. In Chicago, negotiating com- mittees of the National Football League owners and players met yesterday trying to solve differ- ences that could avert a strike, Both groups were meeting sep- arately in the same motel on the outskirts of the city but were ex- pected to have a joint session later. At midafternoon, Art Modell, owner of the Cleveland Browns and president of the NFL, told the Associated Press that "we are meeting right now among our- selves and possibly later we will meet with the players group." The Green Bay Packer train- ing camp in Menasha will not open tomorrow unless there is pro- gress in talks between National Football League owners and players, Packer General Manager Vince Lombardi said last night. "And there was no progress in our meeting in Chicago , today," Lombardi added during a news conference in Menasha. "The All-Star game will have to be delayed or canceled if there is no settlement," Lombardi said, re- ferring to the College All-Star and Packer game in Chicago Aug. 2. "We've always put great em- phasis on physical conditioning with the Packers, and we are not going to put a team on the field without it being in prime phy- sical condition," he said. "It would take at least three weeks to get the team ready to play," Packer Coah Phil Bengt- son said, but did not comment on a charity intrasquad game scheduled in Green Bay July 25. The coach said that when he left Green Bay earlier in the day, he saw a "fine representation of our team" on the practice field. Lombardi said he had great hope the player dispute will be resolved. "The owners are ready to ne- gotiate, and the players are ready to negotiate," he said. Lombardi said most issues be- an n uca.r rnd ownrs ar 761-8055 MICHIGAN ARTISTS C42 WANTED TO RENT WANTED: two or three bdrm. home for family of five, in or near Ann Arbor. Needed by student for two school years beginning middle of Aug. Write air mail: Verne Tollefson, 121 E. 26th St., Bemidji, Minnesota 56601 or call 218-751-5766. L30 QUIET, MATURE grad student seeks quiet 1 bdrm., furnished apt. for Aug. 1. Call 769-1199. L29 FEMALE GRAD STUDENT seeks quiet, sunny, furn. apt. (single or efficiency) w/parking. 665-4035 eves. L31 We will display and sell your paint- ings, etc. for you. Sometimes we buy. THE ATTIC 204 N. 4th Ave. Ann Arbor 761-8550 F31 SINCE ALMOST all gem diamonds come from Africa, a brand label for a ring mounting does not guarantee the quality of the major diamond in the ring. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. Univ. 663-7151. F GIRL(S) TO COOK sumptuous repast once or twice/wk. wanted by 4 male grads of invincible incompetence in culinary arts. Good dinner with good DON DRYSDALE aM ,fi . ,,,. v ;