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June 18, 1969 - Image 4

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Michigan Daily, 1969-06-18

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Page Fout

THE MICHIGAN GAILY

Wednesday, June 1$, 1969

Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 18, 1969

Netters fade fast innational tourney

IEISr

4,

By BILL DI ER
Special To The Daily
PRINCETON, N. J. - The Wol-
verine contingent dwindled to
three players yesterday at the 85th
annual NCAA Tennis Champion-
ships.
For the second consecutive day
all the twenty seeded singles play-
ers and the ten doubles teams ad-
vanced untouched to the next?
round.
. Inthe team competition USC.
and UCLA were tied for the lead
both with 16 points. Next in line
was Trinity with 15 then Rice and
Florida with 13.
Meanwhile, Michigan fell from
13th to a three way tie for 15th
with seven points.
Bob Lutz, number one seed from
USC, continued to roll on as he
slaughtered John Riggs of Pep-
perdine College, 6-0, 6-1. As the
number five ranking amateur in
the country, Lutz has had little1
opposition thus far in the tourna-
ment. With an impressive service
and tremendous power he has an
excellent shot at the title.
Lutz's main competitor, Roy
Barth of UCLA, w h o is ranked
13th' nationally, took three sets
before downing Tom Danielson of
FloridadState, 6-2, 2-6, 6-1.
Brian Marcus was the first on
the court for the Wolverines and
he handily whipped Billy Drake of,
Minnesota 6-4, 6-1."
Marcus, who has had three
barely decent matches is looking
forward to today's contest with
Jeff Borowiak who is seeded 13th
from UCLA.
Pete Fishbach had the roughest
time on the courts as he lost to
an old foe, Mike Estep of Rice. Es-1
tep, seeded tenth, has the habit'
of giving away at least one point1
a game but he ran away with the
first set from a disappointed Fish-

{ daily
sports
NIGHT EDITOR:
JIM FORRESTER
bach, 6-2. However, Fishbach was
far from through as he c a m e
sailing back with a driving fore-
hand and great net play to grab
the second set 6-0.
Then, In one of the m o st
rugged sets of the day, both play-
ers outserviced for two games,,
with Estep breaking through in
the fifth. Although, the rest of
the team thought that Fishbach
was through, he came back to
break service and even the set at
three games apiece. But Estep
smashed three backhands and one
passing volley to finish off Fish-
bach, 6-3.
In doubles Fishbach and Marcus
downed Bill Baxter and Jim Yel-
lin of Georgia Tech 8-6, 6-3. Even
though the score was close, Fish-
bach and. Marcus were never in
any trouble except for t a k I n g
too much relaxitation. After their
sloopy but crowd pleasing match,
Marcus and Fishbach agreed that,
"We had our most difficult game
against lousy opponents."I
In the other doubles match, Joe
Ross, who filled. in for the ab-
sent Marc Conti and John Hain-
line lost to Tom Scheinman and,
Paul Cooder of Virginia, 6-1, 6-4.
Ross and Hainline were not able
to get warmed up until the end
of the second set. But by then it
was too late.

*

*

*

*

*

*

Tigersitrounce Yankees twice

UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES

By The Associated Press With two out in the seventh,
NEW YORK - Ike Brown's Lolich walked. Mickey Stanley
first major league homer and a singled and McAuliffe followed
three-run blast by Dick McAuliffe with a shot into the right field
carried the Detroit Tigers past the bullpen.
New York Yankees 6-3 last night, Lolich blanked the Yanks on
completing a doubleheader sweep four hits until the eighth, when
and stretching their winning they knocked him out on a walk
streak to seven games. and doubles by rookie Ron Woods,
The Tigers took the opener 8-0 Roy White and Bill Robinson.
behind the six-hit pitching of left- In the opener, Hiller, 2-2, struck
hander John Hiller.
Southpaw Mickey Lolich posted out seven on the way to his first
his seventh triumph against one complete game of the year.
loss in the night cap, but needed Ex-Yank Tom Tresh, making
eighth inning relief help f r o m dhis first appearance for Detroit,
Don McMahon after the Yankees drew a walk in the first inning
rallied for three runs. and McAuliffe sent the Tigers
Brown, called up from the Ti- ahead to stay with a triple off Mel
gers' Toledo farm club Monday, Stottlemyer, 9-6.
drilled a two-run homer off Mike Two more walks and Horton's
Kekich, 0-3, in the fourth for two-run double boosted the lead to
his first major league hit. 3-0 in the third. Bill Freehan.
He had reached base on a first homered in the fourth, Tresh
inning error and scored on Jim doubled in the seventh and scored
Price's double, giving the Tigers a on two Yankee errors and Mickey
1-0 lead. Stanley unloaded a three-run
MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE

homer off reliever Al Downing in
!the eighth.
, ,*,
Nats gnashed
WASHINGTON - Mike Cuellar'
pitched a four-hitter last night
as the rampaging Baltimore Or-f
ioles defeated the Washington
Senators 5-1 for their fifth
straight victory.
Cuellar picked up his .seventh
victory against five losses and
Baltimore's 11th in 13 outings.
Baltimore jumped quickly on
Jim Shellenback when Don Bu-
ford opened the game with a
single and scored on Paul Blair's
double.

LINES 1 day
2 1.00
3 1.10
4 1.35
5 1.55
6 1,80
7 2.00
8 2.20
9 2.40
10 2.60
INCH ES
1 2.60
2 4.90
3 6.95
4 8.90
5 10.70

2 days
1.60
215
2.60
3.00
3.40
3.75
4:15
4 55.
4.95
4.95
9.50
13.50
17.35
21.10

3 days
2.35
3.10
3.75
4.35
4.95
5.50
6.10
6.65
7.15
7.15
13.80
19.75
25.55
31.40

4 days
3.00
4.05
4.05
4.65
6.35
7.20
7.90
9.70
10.30
10.30
17.85
25.50
33.45
41.40

5 days
3.65 .
4.85
5.90
6.90
7.85
8.85
9.75
10.65
11.35
11.35
21.75
31.15
40.95
51.15

6 days
4.20
5.65
6.90
8.05
9.25
10.40
11.45'
12.60
13.30
13.30
25.40
36.65
48.30
60.50

odd.
.b0
.80
.95
1.15
1.30
1.45
1.55
1 70
1.80
1.80
1.80
1.80
1.80
1.80

Additional costs per day after six days.
Ads that are 11A, 2/, 312, etc. inch size will be billed at the
average of the lower and higher inch rate.

i

Frank Robinson walked

and

Boog Powell reached

base onI

(Continued from Page 3)
FOR RENT
5 MAN
Available Fall

Frank Howard's error, with Blair
scoring. Brooks Robinson drove in
Frank Robinson with a single.
Hank Allen's double scored
pinch-hitter Gary Holman, who
walked in the eighth, for Wash-
ington's run.
* * *

761-7600

26CtcI

Pirates sweep

Baltimore
Boston
Detroit
Washington
New York
Cleveland
Oakland
Minnesota
Seattle
Chicago
Kansas City
California

East
45
37
34
31
30
21
West
31
32
26
24
25
20

L
17
23
23
33
35
36
26
27
32
32
35
37

Pet.
.726
.617
.596
.484
.462
.368
.544
.542
.448
.429
.417
.351

GB
7
812
15
16Y2
2171
5 2
6
712,
11

Chicago
New York
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Philadelphia
Montreal

East
w
40
31
33
30
24
15
West

L
22
27
30
31
33
43

Pct.
.645
.534
.524
.492
.421'
.259

GB
9Y2~
1312
23

PITTSBURGH - Richie Heb-
ner singled in the only run in the
first game and then singled in the
winning run with the bases loaded
and one out in the ninth inning
of the nightcap as Pittsburgh
swept in a twi-night doubleheader
from the Chicago Cubs 1-0 and
4-3 yesterday.
r AIRPORTI

NCAA may bar John Carlos
frolm track championships

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (P) - The
question of the eligibility of John
Carlos, San Jose State sprinter
and Olympic gold medal winner,
to compete in the NCAA t r a c k
championships was under study
yesterday.
Walter Byers, NCAA executive
secretary, said the question of
Carlos's eligibility to run in the
NCAA meet opening here .Thurs-
day was raised because Carlos
competed over the weekend in a
meet that was not certified by the
NCAA.
Carlos and San Jose teammate
Sam Caruthers, a 16-6 pole vault-
er, participated in, the Orange
County Calif., invitation m e e t.
The meet was sanctioned by the
United States Track and Field,
Federation (USTFF), but it was
not certified by the NCAA.
"I cannot make a statement un-
til after I meet with the N C A A
rules committee," Byers said. "My
hands are tied, any decision'will
have to be made at the meeting."
Carlos, who recently ran a wind-
aided, 9-second 100 dash and was
the 100-meter gold medal winner
at the Mexico Olympics last fall,
said, "I'm not concerned with the
eligibility debate."'
"It'll all work out," the b i g
sprinter said before a workout on
the University of Tennessee all-
weather track. "There's no hang-
up with me. Some people are just
trying to get me out of the races.
"I'm worth 20 or 30 points in
this meet and all this talk will'
Just help me get ready to run
better."
San Jose State coach L1o y d
"Bud" Winter said he allowed his
star athletes to compete. in t h e
r ORGANIZATION OF,

Orange County meet only after he
had established that it was "Fed-
eration sanctioned." He referred
to the USTFF as an arm of the
NCAA.
"We are very meticulous about
this," Winter said. "We checked
it out with Carl Cooper; head of
the Federation."
Along with host Tennessee, San
Jose State is one of the top favor-
ites in the meet.
"You have to rate Kansas and
San Jose State as the favorites,"
said Southern Cal's Verne Wolfe,
coach of the defending champions.
But Jim Bush of UCLA feels
differently-his choice is Tennes-
see.
"They have some fine athletes
and in addition they'll be on their
home track and the humidity
there will be rugged for people
coming in from other parts of the
country."
"If they have a good day, I
don't see how they can lose and
I think 50 points will win t h e
meet."
Bush feels his own mile relay
team of John Smith, Len V a n1
Hofwegen, A n d y Young and
Wayne Collett is the best in the
world today.\
The foursome ran a 3:05.9 at.
the Coliseum-Compton meet, the
first time they had run in that;
order.
Pole vaulter Dick Railsback of!
UCLA, won his event at 17% ati
Orange, said he thought he had
cleared 18 feet by six or eight in-
ches but hit the bar with hisi
hands. He missed three times at
17-10%.
ARAB STUDENTS

Yesterday's Results
Baltimore 5, Washington 1
Cleveland 4, Boston 2
Detroit 8, New York 0, 1st game
Detroit 6, New York 3, 2nd game
California 13, Minnesota 1
Oakland at Kansas City, ppd.
Seattle at Chicago, ppd.
Today's Games
Oakland at Kansas City, night
Boston at Cleveland, night
Detroit at New York, night
California at Minnesota, night
Seattle at Chicago, night
Baltimore at Washington, night

Atlanta 37 24 .607 -
xLos Angeles 34 26 .567 2Y2
xSan Francisco 33 26 .559 3
xCincinnati 30 25 .545 4
Houston 29 36 .446 10
xSan Diego' 26 39 .400 13,
x-Late game not included
Yesterday's Results
Pittsburgh 1, Chicago 0, 1st game
Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3, 2nd game
St. Louis 2, Montreal 0
New York 1, Philadelphia 0, 1st game
Philadelphia 7, New York 3, 2nd game
Cincinnati at San Francisco, inc.
Atlanta 6, Houston 5
Los Angeles 7, San Diego 3, 1st game
San Diego at Los Angeles, 2nd, inc.
Today's Games
New York at Philadelphia, night
Cincinnati at San Francisco
San Diego at Los Angeles, night
Houston at Atlanta, night
Montreal at St. Louis, night
Chicago at Pittsburgh, night

LIMOUSINES
for information call
971-3700
Tickets are available
at Travel Bureaus or
the Michigan Union
32 Trips,/Day
{h

NOW RENTING
FOR FALL
Choice Apartments
0 Foxcroft, 815 S. State
0 Packard Plaza, 917 Packard
0 University Plaza, 608 Monroe {
0 Bel-Air, 815 S. Main
0 Oak Terrace, 908 Oakland
0 Athena, 508 S. Division
Ann Arbor Trust Co.
Property Management Division }
106 S. Main 769-2800
C28
SUMMER SUBLET
YOUR OWN LARGE, AIRY ROOM!I
Share appealing house w. 2 women,
July 1-Aug. 31. Large backyard. Cali
Nancy, 761-3280 or 663-4086. U34
lSUMMER SUBLET, charming furnished
1-2 man apt., 2 blocks from campus.
Avail. June 26. 73 U31
1 GIRL NEEDED for a large 2-man
June 28-Aug. 25. Own room., Close to
campus. 665-6976. 74 U31
GIRL'S ROOM w/access to kitchen,
laundry facilities. On Catherine. 761-
7235. 75 U32
SUBLET-1 girl needed IIIB air cond.
Share room. 665-6949. U33
SUMMER SUBLET: 2 bedroom, near
campus, with air conditioner. and
dishwasher for summer half-term at
$120 per mo. Call 665-2673 or 761-5816.
71 U34

SUMMER SUBLET
LUXURY LIVING for summer. walk to
campus. Air-cond., furn., carport, en-
closed patio, 2 bdrm. 761-1523 eve-1
nings. 63 Utc
SUMMER SUBLETS
Come in and check our listings at:
737 Packard
1-5 p.m. 761-8063 U25
NEED TWO GIRLS to sublet for sum-
mer half. Modern air-conditioned apt.
Rent negotiable. Call 761-0933. U29
BIKES AND SCOOTERS
'67 HONDA 305 Scrambler. $450 or best
offer. 761-7235. 37 Z33
196 HONDA S-65, 2000 mi. Helmet in-
cluded. Reasonable. 665-0488 after 6
p.m. 33Z31
MOTOR SCOOTER-(Vespa via Sears)
exc. cond. $160. Call 663-1359 after 6
p.m. 34Z33
'64 YAMAHA 80, 7,000 :mi $100or best
offer. Call 662-5354 after 6 p.m.
35232
1969 DUCATI, 250 cc. Monza, 2100 mi.
$500 or best offer. 769-0821. 36Z33
TRIUMPH, 1967 500 cc. TIOOR, excel-
lent cond. 761-2963, 761-8282. 31 Z29
1966 NORTON SCRAMBLER, 750 cc,
good condition, nobby tires. NO 3-
5092 after 6. Z31
NICHOLSON'S MOTORCYCLE SALES
224 S. First, AA
Triumph Yamaha
BMW Tawasaki
ZTC
1969 HONDA CL 175, warranty, 1,500
mi, extras, $550 neg. Call 761-2330.
Z3C

HELP WANTED
MATH TUTOR 3 weeks: 2 hrs/day; 5
days wk. $100 High school level; B
student. Call Bruce, 769-2857 after 4
p.m. 58 H2
WANTED: Creative male student elgi-
ble for financial aid. Interested in
art and sports program run accord-
ing to "free school" principles for
Willow Run Junior High students.
Call' 763-3549 or come to room 2547
SAB. 57H31
UNDERGRAD MALE to assist professor
(in wheel chair) in return for room
and board. 761-9034 after 5. 56 H30
,GIRLS WANTED to sell cosmetics.
Work own hours. Fun, rewarding, 761-
4974, 7-9 p.m. 55 H34
COLLEGE MEN - Looking for summer
work? Call 662-9726. 10tc
COLLEGE STUDENTS
We have several summer obs avail -
1able for college and university stu-
dents. For information call Com-
pany Student Placement Manager,
861-1883 in Detroit. H34
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
BENJAMIN MIRACHORD 50 automat-
Ic turntable w/dustcover & base. Or-
tofon 515? cartrdge. 761-2061. 10 X0
HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO
Acoustic, electric instruments, acces-
sores.David lessons-repairs. Gion
H arny. 209 S. Sta# e. 6565-8001.
10-7 'pin x
WANTED TO RENT
GRAD STUDENT interested in sharing
1 bdrm apt. with someone who can
cook. Call 761-6978 or 1-215-473-2293..
f 18 L34
YOU CAN'T take Keegoout of Foman,
but you can help take Foxman out
of Keego. Wanted for remainder of
summer, sublet modern one bedroom
apt. Call 1-682-2810 betw. 5-10 p.m.
17 L3I
UNIV. INSTRUCTOR wants to rent w/
or w/o option to buy. 2 or 3 bdrm.
house, 2 children, approx. $200 mo.
769-0943 after 2 p.m. 1 L29
FOR SALE
BICYCLE FOR SALE: SCHWINN CON-
TINENTAL IN GOOD CONDITION.
$55 OR BEST OFFER. CALL RICH,
761-5201. B28
RELAX-A-CISOR. Barely used. Value
at $360; selling for $150 or best offer.
769-6761. 28 B32
a
110 LB SET BARBELLS $15, 34" k 60"
steel desk with swivel chair $45, 26"
girl's Schwinn- middleweight $10, car
top carrier (camrshell) $35, 1'7 Honda'
305 Scrambler $450 or best offer. 71-
7235. 29 B32
GUITAR: $90 new. Best offer. 761-5741.
0 B32
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-BROWN, WHITE DOG. Medium
size, with white tipped plumed, tail.
Wore harness when lost May 20.RE-
WARD fr return or information
leading, to return. 764-1299 (days),
Miss Cherry. 769-5177 night. 8 A29
LOST-small spaniel puppy, white with
light brown markings. Reward. Call
769-0029. , A25
FOUND-6 wk. old black male kitten in
Law Quad. Call 662-0050. A9
TRANSPORTATION
FOR SALE: Charter ticket, London-De-
troit. Aug. 25. Dave. 662-1687. 15 027
NEED RIDE to Phila. by June 2. Share
expenses. Call collect 1-358-1523.
14 G30
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING OF DISSERTATIONS, theses.
papers, etc. Expertly done at home on
IBM Selectric typewriter. 761-3139.J
10 J31

.4.

Honda of Ann Arbor
3000 Packard at Platt-971-4500
serving U of M since 1963

9Ztc

PERSONAL

FEMALE-% Ig.,
fortable house.
kit., yd., park,
2914.

bdrm in quiet com-
Liv. rm., dining rm.
now-Aug. $47.50. 761-
72 U29

{
f

SUB
Need one roommate. Sex?
Large apt. In old house.
Own bedroom, few closet
and paint. Reduced rent.
331 Catherine. 662-2290.
69 U31

ARE YOU A COUPLE looking for a
cheap, unhasseled place to live to-
gether? 665-6353. $33 ea. or sgl. $40.
57 F32
DAVID awarded $150 vacation pay plus
costs against Peter Wyman of Centi-
core. 58 031
NICE, QUIET female grad, little time
for social life, very lonely. Becky,,
write Box 53, Michigan Daily, 420
Maynard. 59 P33
DIAL POETRY, 761-2697. 56F34
'63 TRIUMPH TR-4. Good condition,
new top, good tires, body solid-no
rust, fine mechanical shape. $900 or
best offer. Tom, 7161-3812. FA'

1 I

FEMALE GRAD or working girl for
summer half in modern 4-man, bi-
level close to campus. 665-3179. 64 U30
MODERN 2-MAN furnished apt. for
summer sublet anytime after June 15.
Air cond., dishwasher. Call 761-5983.
65 U29
FREE AIR CONDITIONING in spacious
4 girl apt. Need 1 or more for July-j
,Aug. Call Kay or Pat, 769-0118. 66 U30'
1 MAN NEEDED for 2-man sublet for
remainder of summer. You'll have
the place to yourself while I'm in
Europe for 5 weeks. Rent negotiable.
665-8767. UTC
LARGE, FURN. 1 bdrm. apt. June 15-_
Sept, 1. Very near campus. 769-4931
or 763-2225. U20
JUNE-AUG. SUBLET-1 or 2 girls for
modern air conditioned bi-level. Call
761-5531 after 6 p.m. 27U17
SUMMER SUBLET'
Furnished and unfurnished, air condi-
tioned, 2 bedroom apartments, park-
ing. Call 663-6052 or 769-1258. 28Utc

SPEEDREADING!

DO-IT-YOURSELF COURSE
No classes to attend!
HALF-PRICE
THRU JULY 1 ONLY
Money-back guarantee. Complete
course now only $20. Send cash,
check, or money order to:
Speedread, International
212 'Prudential Plaza
Chicago, Ill. 60601
F30

invites you to spend 30 minutes with the
PALESTINIAN REVOLUTION
"A British Broadcasting Corporation Release"
on'
Wednesday, 18 June at .8:30 p.m.
in the Undergraduate Library, Multipurpose Rm.

We Don't Understand You-
But We Do Understand Your
Readng Problem
And that problem is simply that there is just too darn much to read in order to
keep up with your homework and what is happening today?
What can you do about it? Just this. Learn to read faster with greater compre-
hension and recall.
Where can you learn this amazing skill. Right here, this summer at the world
famous Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Institution.
Who has taken the course? More than 400,000 people from all walks of life,
including the staff of the late President Kennedy, and his brother Senator Ed-
ward Kennedy.
Can you do it? Of course you can. In fact, we offer you a money back guar-
antee if you do not at least triple your reading rate with equal or better com-
prehension.
ATTEND A FREE MINI LESSON
" You will learn what your reading speed is " You will discover various study methods
" You will actually participate in techniques that will improve your reading speed and

I

F

"Safety belts? Not if
I'm just going down to
the supermarket."
-Kathleen Farrell
(1943-1968)
"Safety belts? They
just make me nervous.
Besides, they wrinkle
your clothes."
--Louis Claypool
(1931-1968)
"Who can ever
remember to use the
darned things?"
-Gordon Fenton
(1921-1968)
What's yourexcuse ?

IF YOU HAVE a darkroom or know
someone who has one that I can
use,' please call Nancy, 761-7718. Wil-
ling to pay if necessary. F20
EXPERT TYPING of all kinds of
papers. Call Kathy Kohn at the
iMchigan Daily, 764-0562 or at home,
769-3566. F17
COUPLE SEEKS other couple to swing
with. Write .Box 69. 31F25
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.
Michigan Community Blood Center l
404 W. Michigan, Ypsilanti
483-1894
Creative Photography
WEDDINGS and portraits. Professional
quality at student rates. Call Johni
Evans at 769-0868 or 761-3690 after 6
p.m. for appointment to see portfolio.1

PROFESSIONAL TYPIST, reasonable
rates, rapid service. Call 434-1121.
9J32
XEROX COPIES
PAPERS, ESSAYS, REPORTS, THE-
SES. Perfect copies now only 7c on
overnight service, use correct-o-tape
or unlimited erasures and yet be as-
sured of copies that even look better
than the original from the new Xerox
2400. We supply 20 weight copy paper
free. Documents stored in office safe
for complete safety on request. Im-
mediate service during business hours
9c "per page. Discount Photocopy Ser-
vice, 1217 S. University. 769-0560.
8JTC
EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires
:work in her home. Thesis, technical
typing, stuffing, etc. IBM electric.
Cali Jeanette, 971-2463. 48Jtc
ROOM AND BOARD
ROOM AND BOARD for student in fall
in exchange for babysitting. Private
room and bath. Call 761-0009. 3E29
MAPLE KITCHEN TABLE with 4 chairs,
$20. Enameled steel kitchen cabinet,
$15. White chest of drawers, $15. Crib,
$10. 663-6368. 27B31
USED CARS
1962 PONTIAC Starchief. Mechanically
sound. Body in good condition. AsI
$325. 761-5723. 53 N33

I

I

Il

THIS IS NO JOKE! Save $75-$500 the
day you buy her diamond unless you
don't care how excessive the cost.
Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University,
663-7151.
PETS AND SUPPLIES
FREE KITTEN. 663-2256. 10 T31
FREE KITTENS to good homes. 8 wks.
Litter trained. 662-1152. 5 T28

Advertising contributed;
for the public good.

the mini ad
1965 SUPER HAWK. $300, well taken
care of miles. wil sell to highest
offer by Nov. 1. Andy-761-5930. Z2

1964 BUICK LESABRE, power steering,
brakes. Radio, excellent condition.
665-7672. 54 N29
MERCEDES-BENZ yellow convertible,
excellent condition. Call Joe, 769-3195
after 6 p.m. 55 N34
CHEVELLE STATION WAGON, 1968.
Leaving for Europe, make offer. 761-
4034. 42N29
1966 YELLOW MUSTANG convertible,
V-8, power steering & brakes, low
mileage. 665-0258. 50 Ntc
1965 RED TRIUMPH SPITFIRE. Ex.
cond. throughout. Abarth exhaust.
Leather steering wheel, extra gauges,
new top, $900. Call A. Golub, 764-4225
days, 971-5337 nights. 51 N29
68 MERCURY CYCLONE GT. Sharp.
$2095. 663-5284. 47 N31

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