Saturday, July 13, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PrTmp ;:IV,* rage ive ]or Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 Monday through Friday, 12-2:30 OPEN TENNIS: Style consciousness replaces upset fever 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. UNFURNISHED, large, 1 and 2 bdrms. Available immed. and/or fall. NO 8- 6900. - C4 1506 PACKARD For Fall Furnished, . rm., spacious apt. reasonable rent. Call 761-5692 or 1-864-3852 Very C3 NEAR LAW SCHOOL, large 2 bdrm., air-conid. apt, with l? baths and' * dishwasher. Call 665-0154. C1 NEED THIRD MAN for fall. 2-bedroom 3-man. Modern building, quiet neigh- borhood, on campus, double vanity, fully carpeted, large closets. 8-month University lease, 4-month summer op- tion. Friendly landlord. Call Windsor (519) 252-2086. C46 FOR AUGUST 1--Single room in 3-girl apartment. Close to campus and downtown. 12-month lease. $58 per month. Call 663-9259 after 5. C49 1 GIRL* FOR FALL. Super large mod- ern apt. 3 min. from campus. 909 Church No. 1I or call 769-0042. C42 CAMPUS-Spacious 2 bdrm., furn., 2 or 3 grads. $180/mo. includes utilities. 1 year lease. '761-2939. C44 824 PACKA R D FALL OCCUPANCY Fireplace and screened-in porch high- light. this modern 2-bedroom furn- t ished apartment that includes wall- to-wall carpeting, separate kitchen, laundry, parking and storage facili- ties.s CAMPUS MANAGEMENT, INC. 337 East Huron Days: 662-7787 Eves: 761-1498 C40, FOR RENT WANTED: Female roommate for mod. bi-level, 3-man apt. w/dishwasher. Located near IM Bldg. Call 769-2056. C41 For Fall THE WALDEN MANAGEMENT CO. Has apartments in the campus area for 2, 1 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 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 FALL RENTALS, efficiencies, 2 bedroom units. Call NO 2-7730. C21 1700 Geddes For Fall 4-man, bi-level with dishwasher, 11 baths, 2 air-conditioners, very large rooms, all masonary construction as- sures privacy, beautifully furnished and located on the right side of the campus. Call 665-8825. Charter Realty 1335 S. University C50 SUBLET III-B-Modern, air-cond., 2- man. Cloes to campus, soundproof. Call 769-4066. U15 THE BRIDGE HOUSE 1035 WALL ST. M4edical or North Campus area. New, all conveniences, dishwashers, un- dercover parking. '2 bdrm., 4-man apts. for fall. Call 761-5692 or 1-864-3852 C2 SUMMER SUBLET 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 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Dark green-white polka dot trench coat with glasses in pocket. Vicinity of City Center Bldg. and Hill St. (Diag). Call 761-7435 or re- turn to lost and found office, A20 LOST-Tortoise shell glasses in brown case. Reward offered to finder. Call Brian at 761-2631. A18 PERSONAL PASS McCARTHY petitions. 663-6588. F47 AUTO-ROKUNAR 28mm/2.8 wideangle for NIKON F with meter coupling. Only used a month. Case, lenshood and caps.d$60 cash, Call Richard Lee, 665-3838 or 764-0562. FB 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 STROBE LIGHTS-761-0195 F A NURSE and two physical therapy studentR needs a fourth roommate for the fal. Modern apartment, close to hospitals and campus. Cali 665- 0889 for information. FD DON'T LEND HIM YOUR NOTES; he might lose the whole set. Xerox them instead, and save hours and hours of copying by hand. Only 8c per page. 5, Univ. right next to U. Tow- ers. 769-0560. D N R1 inn n0- VK1()P"D (N By GEOFFREY MILLER Associated Press Sports Writer (Editor's Note: Geoffrey Miller has covered the world's first open tennis tournaments in England and France, including the Wimble- don classic. Here is his assessment of the innovation and its future-P.B.) LONDON - The barriers between pro- fessional and amateur tennis players are collapsing so fast that already the fans don't know which is which. That's the impression one has after go- ing the rounds of the world's first open tournaments - at Bournemouth, England, then Paris, London's Queen's Club and Wimbledon. The ordinary spectator, who pays to see good tennis, couldn't care less whether the players he is watching are amateurs who compete unashamedly for prize money, with official approval, or pros who go for prize money but get beaten and fail to win it. For the fans, it's still good . tennis that counts - and the fundamental divisions between one type of player and another. They want to know who are the grass court specialists who can slam the ball hard enough to challenge Rod Laver or Dennis Ralston, and who are the touch artists who might offer a stiff fight to Manuel Santana or Ken Rosewall on the slow hard courts. In women's play, they divide up the stars between baseline sluggers such as Nancy Richey and the volleying experts such as Billie Jean King. You could almost see the public's atti- tude to open tennis changing from tour- nament to tournament. At first, everybody wanted to see the pros tumbled by amateurs. When Mark Cox, British Davis Cup player who had never competed for prize money in his life, knocked those high-salaried stars Pancho Gonzales and Roy Emerson out of the British Hard Courts Championships at Bournemouth, he was the tennis world's hero. Since then so many amateurs have de- feated pros that such results are no longer sensational. The fans have gone back to thinking in terms of basic tennis values. If they show favoritism, it's for their local players rather than for amateurs. At the Roland Garros Stadium in Paris during the French Championships, the big- gest crowds on the outer courts were al- ways for matches involving the French stars. It didn't matter whether it was Pierre Darmon, amateur Davis Cup hero, or Francoise Durr, the quaint, bespectacled Parisienne who is under contract to Amer- ican promoter George MacCall. At Wimbledon, there was as much weep- ing when Britain's Roger Taylor, of the Handsome Eight Professional troupe, was beaten as when amateur hope Virginia Wade was eliminated from the women's singles. All this is just as British tennis officials wanted it to be. When they launched open tennis - evens though at that time it meant flouting international rules - they said they were going to forget all about the words professional and amateur. All com- petitors were to be styled players. Strangely enough, it's British tennis of- ficials who are now embarrassed by the "pro" and "amateur" labels. Behind the scenes, they have to bargain with the pro- moters to get the professional stars to play in open tournaments. Already MacCall has said that tlhe prize money at Wimbledon must be increased next year to make the tournament an eco- nomic proposition for his professional stars. Smaller British tournaments may have to persuade sponsors to pour in more money, to lure the pros. Nevertheless, British tournament organ- izers believe they are well on their way toward their ultimate dream - a tennis world where nobody talks about profes- sionals and amateurs any more. John Eaton Griffith, Britain's long- serving delegate to the International Lawn Tennis Federation who led the fight for open tennis, sticks to his prophecy., "In five years' time, every tournament will be open and the world will have for- gotten that professionals were once a sep- arate body," he said. HELP WAI PAID SUBJECTS WANT \English as native la good knowledge of Ge 0430, 9-5. TYPIST NEEDED, 6-8h until Dec. Call Tom 769-1040 after 5 p.m. Systronics Join the leader ii moble video termi Ann Arbor's rapidly e ufacturer of progra terminal systems see individual to fill an< following area: PATENT DIVISION-L. (part time Part time position f desiring to concentr procedures and app more than 20 hoursp Reply by resur R. L. Hole Systronics I 117 N. FirstI Ann Arbor, Michig KITED TED. Must have anguaz and a erman. Call 764- lH21 URGENTLY NEEDED hours/week now $7.50 Rh positive. $10 and $12 Rh D. or Larry at negative. Mon., Tues.. Thurs.. Fri., H20 9-4: Wed.. 1-7. 18-21 years old need parent's permission. 483-1894 nfC. 404 W. Michigan. Ypsilanti S Michigan Community Blood Center n program- I_.__ nal systems! MASSAGE. By appointment. Private and community sauna rooms. Ann xpanding man- Arbor Gymkhana. 662-9200. F ammable video ks a qualified WHY MESS with erasing carbon cop- opening in the les?, why ruin your papers with smudges? Why not? Because you can EGAL ASPECT now Xerox your original at only 8c e) sperdcopy during business hours, or 'or law student only 6c per copy on overnight serv- ate in patent ice S. Univ. right next to U. Towers, plications. Not 769-0560. F18 per week. WAKE-UP SERVICE-Have your phone ne to: ring at any designated time day or ey night-LOW RATES. DON'T BEdLATE nc. FOR CLASS OR WORK - AGAIN. St. TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE. gan 48108 665-8871 (24 hours). F *EY? BUSINESS SERVICES ve for a socio- TENNIS INSTRUCTION: Group and Sposter line, private lessons available through Uni- mplete poster versity. Call 763-0163 or 769-5013. J13 ATIONAL PRO- EXPERIENCED COLLEGE students to H8 do exterior and interior house paint- _ _ _ ing. Reasonable rates. Call 665-322. LE J12 CAMPUS APTS., Ambassador Co., 761- 7982 1-5 daily. 015 TWO SISTERS looking for an apt, for fall With one or two other girls. Call Pat at -MICHIGAN 4-2422. C48 Furs fi nov FALL RENTAL pan STATE STREET Exce MANOR F 1111 S. State St. ' W (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 2 bed 1317 Wilmot nished two bedroom apartments w being leased for fall otcu- ncy. llent campus location. Easily commodates four at $62.50 a an. or an appointment to see call olden Management Co. 769-2345 MEDICAL CENTER ST. JOE'S FRIEZE BUILDING C29 NEED MON Be a sales representati politico-satirical new Ideal for individuals tions. Write for cc profit kit:, GROSS NA DUCT, Box 427, WayzE FOR SAL SAUNA Membership fo Includes excerise rm., rm., sauna, etc. 769-12 information. GARAGE SALE--Two hi ing. Sofa, bed, piano, ing, canoe, etc. 1700 A Arbor. AVAILABLE NOW and share furn, five room other. Centrally locate 3-0797, after 5. SEALPOINT Siamese ki old. Males and females $15 each. Call 769-2814 Chisox CHICAGO (4P) - Eddy Stanky resigned yesterday as manager1 of the Chicago White Sox. Les Moss was to lead the team in last night's and today's games.c Al Lopez will take over begin- ning tomorrow for the rest of thei season and for all next season, a White Sox spokesman said. Stanky, 50, succeeded Lopez atl the start of the 1966 season. He originally signed a three-yearI contract which last year was torn' up and extended for another year, presumably through the 1970 sea- son. FIERY COMPETITOR During an 11-year major league playing career, the native Phila- delphian played with the Chicago Cubs, the Brooklyn Dodgers, the New York Giants, the Boston- Braves and the St. Louis Cardi- pilot Stanky resigns Lopez guided the White Sox to the American Leaguo pennant in 1959. In 1954, he piloted the. Cleveland Indians to the pennant only to see the Tribe lose four straight to the New York Giants in the World Series. His 1959 White Sox lost the World Series to the Los Angeles Dodgers in six games. In 15 years as a major league manager, Lopez' teams finished second nine times. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: Coach Grover Resinger an- nounced his resignation late yes- terday in order to "allow the new manager to appoint anyone he desires." Resinger and all the other members of the coaching staff were given an opportunity to re- main with the club. The others, including Moss, were Kerby Far- rell and Marv Grisson. Under Stanky, the White Sox led the AL last year in a tight pennant race through the end of July. However, although they re- mained in contention, they slump- ed in the final week and finished in fourth place, three games be- hind the winner, Boston. Stanky is the second big league manager to be replaced in the past three days. On Wednesday, Hank Bauer of Baltimore was fired and his successor, coach Earl Weaver, was named Thurs- Iday. Ings.- clate: droom apts, for fall. New build- From $200. Call Summit Asso- s 761-8055. C19 r sale. $15/mo. whirlpool, sun 235 for further B43 ouseholds mov- , dishes, cloth- bbott St., Ann B44 FALL-Girl to apt. with one ed. $75/mo. NO 045 ttens, 8 weeks . House-broken. 4. B42I 410 OBSERVATORY. Fall occupancy. Modern 4 man 2 bedroom apt. with wail to wall carpeting throughout. new furnishings, air-pond., covered parking, modern kitchen and laun- dry facilities. Days: 662-7787. Eves: A 761-1498. C33 HARJTON 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,&partment $62 per man. $248 per apartment. Call days 663- 9373, eves. 6-10 p.m. only 665-0063. C41 FALL APTS. FOR 2-6 PEOPLE (1, 2, & 3 BDRM$.) CALL Summit' Associates 76!i-8055 042 FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for Sept. Prefer working girl. 1 bedroom, 2' man apt., air conditioned. $80. 524 Packard, No. 1. 769-4774. 05 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. 037 GIRL NEEDED for 3 man, 3 bdrm. apt. 769-1235. 036. BARGAIN CORNER 2 BEDROOM, 2 MAN Modern apt. on campus, with all the inquiries. From $190 per month. Call Summit.Associates at 761-8055. C18 315 S. Division On campus - Large furnished studio two man apartments. Managed by Walden Management Co. 769-2345 C30 2 BDRM. modern, 1 block from Bus. Ad. or law school. Air-cond., park- ing provided. $220 per mo. 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 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. B41I ELECTRIC GUITAR (beginners), new. Only $27.00 with books. Call 971-3450. AUTO-ROKUNAR 28mm/2.8 wideangle for NIKON F with meter coupling. Only been used a month. Case. lenshood and case. $60 cash. Call1 Richard Lee, 665-3838 or 764-0562. B BIKES AND SCOOTERS 1967 KAWASAKI 250, Extras. Call663-! 0470 persistently. Z4 YAMAHA 100-Twin. $200 or best offer. Good condition-Must sell. 761-8570. #sk for Paul, Zi '65 YAMAHA 80. $145. 7300 miles. Lock 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 from the new Xerox 2400 duplicator. We supplg 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.7. Univ. right next to U. Towers. 769-0560. 33J DON'T TSK IT TASK IT' Typing-theses and term papers our specialty; IBM typewriters; executive type and justified copy available. Transcription - Medical, technical, business, conferences Printing - Mimeograph, offset, Photocopying, Compositionand 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 313 761-4146J eves. 665-3531, 761-1187, 662-8495 Marilyn L. Keith, Director nals, PHIL BROWN Only 5'8", 160 pounds, Stanky left his mark as a fiery compe- titor and a great second baseman who played In three World Series BRITISH OPEN: with three different teams-the AL LOPEZ Lodgers, the Biraves ana Giants. Stanky's first experience; major league manager was the St. Louis Cardinals, a as a Casper slips, maintainslead with swi By The Associated Press ---I ' Campus-1 Block 418 E. Washington near Frieze & Angell Hall Clean modern building, beautiful furniture, balcony, air-conditioning, sound-proof, laundry, storage, j large study hall, argr 1 Bedroom for 2 or 3 For information and appointments call NO 8-6906 or 761-2943 024 FOUR-MAN, air-conditioned, furnished apt. for fall between campus and U Hospital, covered parking. NO 2- 7787, after 7 p.m. 761-1498. C3 A NURSE and two physical therapy students needs a fourth roommate for the fall. Modern apartment, close to hospitals and campus. Call 665- 0889 for information. CD 1337 WILMOT 1 and 2 bedroom apts. for 2-5 people, Fully furnished, air-conditioned, bal- conies. parking, close to campus. Rents start at $65 per person. For this and other fine campus apts. call Summit Associates, 761-8055. C25 . .1YC11 O , +L . f 111G . , chain, basket. 665-9678. Z2 1966 YAMAHA, 100 cc, 2 cylinder dual ROOM AND BOARD exhaust. A-1 condition. $295. 453-9374 (local). Z3 FREE ROOM and BOARD in exchange _____________________ -- for evening babysitting. One 10 yr. '66 HONDA 90 step through. $235. Just old. 971-0149 after 5 p.m. E13 tuned. 761-1308 11-1 or 4-7. Z48 BULLETIN DETROIT OP) -The Detroit Lions of the National Football League last night signed South- ern California hurdler Earl McCullouch to a contract. He was a first-round draft pick of the Lions this year. Terms of the contract were nod disclosed. which ended in his fourth season in 1955. Stanky then went into front office work with the Cardi- nals and the New York Mets be- tween turns as a major league coach. HE COULD WIN Perhaps the best description of stanky, was coined by the late Branch Rickey, who said, "Stan- ky can't field, can't hit, can't run -all he can do is beat you." Motorcycle Poker Run Sunday, July 14, 12:30 p.m. North Campus Commons Sponsor: Ann Arbor Motorcycle Assoc. food-trophies Z49! '67 SUZUKI 55 cc, step through, low mileage, just tuned. $165. 769-3149. Z45 FOR SALE - 1965 BMW R65S. Excel. cond. Call 663-7273 or collect 1-881- 1350. Z46 1966 HONDA CB160. Excellent cond. 3500 miles. Best offer around $300. 769-0927 or 1-646-3947. Z35 USED CARS 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 MISCELLANEOUS ARTISTS! Here is an opportunity to sell your art work to the public. Phone 482- 5159 between 9 a.m. and 1 pm. and eves. after 7 p.m. M2 FREE PUPPY to good home. Call 665- 2181. after 5. M50 LEARN TO SAIL. Enroll now for les- sons in beginning or advanced tech- niques. Phone 761-1208 evenings. M29 PHOTO SUPPLIES Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit Baltimore xClevelan d xBoston Minnesota xCalifornia xOakland New York Chicago Washington W 56 45 47 42 40 40 40 38 34 30 L 29 37 40 39 43 43 43 43 46 49 Pot. GB .659 - .549 91/2 .540 10 .519 12 .482 15 .482 15 .482 15 .469 16 .425 19 .380 23 CARNOUSTIE, Scotland - Bill Casper stumbled to a two-over- par 74 yesterday for 214 and held a precarious one-stroke lead over New Zealander Bob Charles after 54 holes in the British Open Golf Championship. The left-handed Charles shot a 71 for 215. Casper began the third round over the wind-whipped, 7,252- yard Carnoustie course with 140 and a four-stroke lead over Char- les and two young British pros, Brian Barnes and Tony Jacklin. Charles, who won this event in 1963, missed a nine-foot putt on the final hole which would have thrown him into a tie. Gary Player of South Africa finished with a tremendous shot from the rough, almost stiff, to the 18th pin for a birdie and a 37-34-71 which put him on 216, level par for the route. America's other two major threats-Jack Nicklaus and Ar- nold Palmer-remained in strong contention but failed to cut too deeply 'into the space separating them from the top. Palmer, starting the day eight No prors seen In NFL strike talks By The Associated Press New talks aimed at settling the differences b e t w e e n National Football League players and own- ers appeared in the offing yester- day but just when and where was not known. Arthur Modell, president of the NFL, said in Cleveland he had not yet received a telegram from John Gordy, president of the NFL Players Association, calling for new negotiations, but said "of course we'll sit down and continue our talks." Gordy, a Detroit offensive guard, at a Los Angeles news con- ference, accused club owners of attempting to break up the play- er's group and said he had sent a telegram to Modell requesting I I shots off the pace, fired an even par 72, and Nicklaus, five shots bacl, came in with a 73 as most of the gallery of 12,000 swarmed onto the course to watch the four- way battle for the lead. Nicklaus had to close with a rousing birdie for his one-over-par round which gave him a 54-hole total of 218 and the temporary lead. Palmer was two shots far- ther back at 220. A total of seven Americans man- aged to survive the third round cut which saw the field slashed to the low 45 shooters and ties, but most were out of contention. Beside Casper, Nicklaus and Palmer, they were Gay Brewer of Dallas, the 1967 U.S. Open cham- pion; Doug Sanders of Ojai, Cal.; Bert Yancey, the former West Pointer from Tallahassee; and Hubby Habjan, a 36-year-old club pro from Chicago. "It's anybody's guess who is going to win," said Casper, after his frustratinground. "The cham- pionship has, really hotted up. I wouldn't like to suggest a win- ner." A Casper said he felt his round yesterday was as good as his record 68 the day before except on the greens. "The big differ- ence was the putts-I couldn't get them to drop," he said. He took 33. PARTTIME JANITOR' Early Mornings apply to Mr. K. L. Chatters First Floor Student Publications Bldg. 420 Maynard St. Sam's Store Has Genuine LEVI'S Galore For GALS and GUYSI --JUST ARRIVED- LEVI'S FOR 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 SHIRTS THE BEST CAMPUS APTS. FALL 1968 NEW, FURNISHED, AIR COND., CLOSE IN STUDENT APARTMENTS DAHLMANN APARTMENTS ner.. rAr i"a - T AUTO-ROKUNAR 28mm/2.8 wideangle TRIUMPH TR4A, 1967, 7000 miles, wire for NIKON F with meter coupling. wheels. Must sell, going abroad. Call OnIKenusdamth.Ceulens. S665-9345. N6 Only been used a month. Case, lens- hood and caps. $60 cash. Call Richard VW-excel. cond., '63. Call 761-0826, Lee, 665-3838 or 764-0562. DB after 6 p.m.N7 ~~~ -_ ~-_~~__ _._......MUSICA L MDSE., '61 RAMBLER. Best offer. Call 761- MUSICAL MDS. 5406. N8 RADIOS, REPAIRS '65 CORVAIR. $500 and it's yours. Call GUILD & ESTRADA 12 string guitars. after 5:00 p.m., 769-2006, N5 Imported Indian Sitar. Best offer. 971-3595. X5 1959 MERCEDES 220. AM/FM radio, leather upholstery. 761-9801, N4 HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO Instruments and accessories, new and 1961 CORVETTE. Excellent cond. Best used. Lessons, repairs. 209 S. State. offer. Call 665-8330 after 5:30 p.m. 665-8001. 10 a.m.-7 p.m X N2 N2__ BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS SUNBEAM ALPINE '66 Convertible, 4- Rental Purchase Plan speed, fir. shift, Br. racing green,.ra- A-1 New and Used Instruments dio, wire wheels, whitewall tires, too- PAUL' S MUS IAL EPAIR nau cover, 3 yr. waranty. Excell. cond. ___ _ W._Washington Yesterday's Results Baltimore 3, Washington 2 New York 2, Chicago 1 Detroit 5, Minnesota 1 Cleveland at Oakland, inc. Boston at California, inc. Today's Games Cleveland at Oakland Boston at California Detroit at Minnesota New York atChicago Washington at Baltimore Tomorrow's Games Boston at Oakland Detroit at California Cleveland at Minnesota Washington at Chicago, 2 New York ft Baltimore, twilight NATIONAL LEAGUE SYSTRONICS, INC. JOIN THE LEADER IN PROGRAMMABLE VIDEO TERMINAL SYSTEMS!! Ann Arbor's rapidly expanding manufacturer of programmable video terminal systems seeks qualified individuals to fill openings in the following areas: PROGRAMMING-DIGITAL SYSTEMS ENGINEERING PROGRAMMER - EXPERIENCED Qualified programmer experienced in assembler language or ma- chine language for small or medium-sized computers. Must be inteested in shortwave development (Executive Routines, Inter- facing, Compilers) for communications terminals-;experience In microprogramming associated with small processors for terminal control also desired. EXECUTIVE PROGRAMMER Message switching applications--expeienced in data communica- tions, store and forward switching centers and digital data trans- mission. DIGITAL SYSTEMS ENGINEER-EXPERIENCED 19,500 miles. Going abroad. Must sell. $1295. 663-1489. N3 MGA-1600. Black w/red. Mech. good, body fair. $550. 665-3135. N1 '64 ALPHA RED SPIDER. Leaving for California. Must sell, best offer. 8-5 call 764-9494, after 5:30 call 761-5887, 1t,,,nn. N48,, WANTED TO RENT WANTED-2 man apt. from Aug. 25 to Dec. 25 by 2 grad students. Call 769- 2434. L34 VISITING BRITISH scholar needs 3-4 bedroom house near campus and ele- mentary school, Please call 764- 285 St. Louis Atlanta San Francisco Philadelphia Cincinnati New York Pittsburgh Los Angeles Chicago W 56 45 44 41. 42 41 40 41 40 L 31 40 42 40 41 44 44 46 47 Pct. GB .640 - .529 9Y2 .512 11 .506 11Y2 .506 11Y2 .482 13i/2 .476 14 .476 14 .460 15Y2 _4O190 I I