Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, May 21, 1969 Daily Classifieds UNCONTRACTED CLASSIFIED RATES 1 The Texas Wedge Kraft to bow out this weekend LINES 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 INCHES 1 2.60 2 4.90 3 6.95 4 8.90 5 10.70 2 days 1.60 2.15 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. .60 .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 tiy after six days. Ads that are 11/,, 21, 3 , etc. inch size will be billed at the average of the lower and higher inch rate. (Continued from Page 3) PERSONAL I WILL BUY your ticket to Europe. Call Fred, 662-2282. 21F12 WANT to be a SWINGER- Ex erienced tennis instructor looking for begin- ners, guaranteed improvement!; Cal GerrK 665-4258. 6F13 Yes !! IFC Sing Records Are HERE.' Song chairmen call 761-7306 for information. 18F12 PERSONABLE male grad, age 23. would like to meet warm, intelligent, at- tractive girl with a sense of humor. Send particulars to Box 1,000, c/o The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard. 20F16 IF you have a PIANO it probably needs tuning. Expert tuner ,and technician for Grinneis-U-M student. Discount with this ad. Call Kim, 769-5651. 19F16 LEARN' THE FACTS before you buy- there is more to a diamond than meets the' eye. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University, 663-7151. F DRIVING TO ALASKA Riders Wanted Leave June 12, return July 15 Call Bob, 769-3480, 609 Hill St.' 17F12 WHY, NOT HAVE a sandwich delivered. 35c delivery charge. Orders $3.50 and over free delivery. Whistle Stop, 662- 2270. 15F17 BUT WE don't own light green ban- danas, and one of us was out of town! FC Creative Photography WEDDINGS and portraits.. Professional quality at student rates. Call John Evans at 769-0868 or 761-3690 after 6 p.m. for appointment to see portfolio. F EXPERT TYPING of all kinds of papers. Call Kathy Kohn at the iMchigan Daily, 764-0562 or at home, 769-3566. 7 17 EARLY BIRD Special. 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. ,,..Eggs, bacon, toast and coffee, 69c Whistle Stop, 611 S. Forest. 19F17 FIELD TRIP to USSR (three weeks, two hours updergraduate chedit op- tional) is being offered by the Uni- versity's Dearborn Campus, July 4-25. The group, limited to fifteen per- sons, will visit places of interest in Russia, the Ukraine, Georgia, Armenia, the Caucasus, and on the Black Sea. They will also meet with representa- tives of government and student so- cieties. For further information con- tact: Prof. Dennis Papazian, U-M Dearborn Campus, 4901 Evergreen Rd., Dearborn, Mich. 48128. Call 271-2300, ext. 243. 10F17 BUSINESS SERVICES FLOWER CHILD babysitting service-. Mon.-Fri., 8-5. Call 663-4555 after 6 p.m. 3J12 STENCILS, THESIS, and term papers typed in my home. 769-5441. Jl EXPERIENCED SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing, etc. IBM electric. Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 48Jtc TRANSPORTATION I NEED A RIDE to the Washington, D.C., area. Call Fred, 662-2282. 6G,12 WANTED TO BUY SOFA BED and elec. dishwasher. 769- 4765., 1K8 BARGAIN CORNER USED CARS ' '59 FORD Station Wagon. Clean, reli- able. $75. Call 663-9885. 15N12 '64 VW, EX. mech. cond., body rough. $500. Call 761-0782. 14N12 '33 PLYMOUTH coupe, very good cond., Chevy powered with rumble seat. Must sell. $600, Call 434-1320. 16N16 1968 VW-Dark blue, AM-FM radio. Call 663-5585 after 7 p.m. 17N12 TRIUMPH TR3, 1961. New engine, steer- ing, tires. Beautiful. $450. 663-0256. 11N12 '64 VW-GOOD condition, new tires. Make an offer. 662-4049. N13 AUSTIN-HEALEY Sprite, '66. 22,000 miles; radio, good cond. $800. 769-4339. 12N13 1964 PONTIAC GTO. $895. Good cond. Call 761-2916 betw. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. 13N14 OPEN 24 HOURS! Whistle Stop, 611 S. Forest. Good Food. 14F17 PHOTO SUPPLIES BAUER SUPER-8 movie camera. Excel- lent'condition. $85. Call 761-6167. 2D13 WANT A real wide wide-angle? How about a Nikkor 21mm f4 lens formall you lucky Nikon F or Nikkormat users. Including viewfinder it lists for $226, yours for a mere $110 for this gem of a lens. Call Richard Lee, 764- 6755 or 764-0553. Di AUTO-NIKKER 200 mm fM telephoto lens for Nikon F, Nikkormat, Includ- ing case for only $165. Call Richard Lee, 764-6755, 764-0553. D17 BRAND NEW, including guarantee - BRAUN EF-300 electronic flash with Nicad batteries, very powerful. Lists at $199.50, yours for $150. Call Richard, .764-6755. D FOR SALE-Nikkor 24mm lens f 2.8 Wide Angle lens for Nikkormat, Nik- kerrex, or Nikon F, FTN, etc. 1 month old, still under warranty, in original box - Heretofore unavailable in the area-$185. Call Andy, 761- 0273, 761-9092. D6 FOR SALE CHEAP WINDOW FANS, couch, dress- er, bookcase, ironing, extra long bed, kitchen table and chairs. 665-0867. 13B14 RUMMAGE SALE - Sweaters, books, records, old china, sound equipment and other good stuff cheap. Thurs. and Fri., May 22-23, after 6 p.m. Garage of 916 Church. NO 3-4086. B13 MOVING, must sell king size matress, box springs and frame, new. $317. Used 4 months, $225 or best offer. Call 971-0531. 14B11 EASY CHAIR, bookcase, b&w TV, mis- cellaneous. Best offers. 663-3787 p.m. 15B13 1 ROLE of tweed CARPETING. 11x20. Good condition. $50. Call 971-3309. 12B11 1960 CHEVY panel truck, runs well, best offer over $300. Call 453-3452. TWO CHARTER FLIGHT tickets. June 28TPrice' negotiable. Call 665-6976 after 5 p.m. l1Bl1 OSCILLOSCOPE. Signal generators and power supplies. $150 for lot. Call 971- 1335. 9B17 ROOM AND BOARD ROOM & BOARD in private home. Your "home away from home." 1 single, 1 to share suite. Graduates (males) preferred. Call Mrs. Mills, 668- 9085. 1E16 MALE GRAD WANTED to, share 1 bdrm. apt. for fall and/or now. Call 769-5238. 44C14 AVAILABLE FOR FALL Occupancy-4 man apt., 2 blocks from business school, 3 blocks from law school. Call 769-2608. '28Ctc Hawthorne Vally Blues' By DREW BOGEMA I once had a double-eagle. Really A double-eagle, for those of you who have wisely ignored the silly language of golf, is, to be modest, rare in the annals of golf history. Birdies are commonplace. A pro, say on the level of Nicklaus, Casper, or Palmer, will card several a round. An eagle is less frequent, and generaly occurs on par fives when one has hit the green in two and has sunk a long putt. A double-eagle is phenomenal, and must, almost by definition take place on a par five, since it would represent a score of zero on a par-three, or a one on a par four. This is going nowhere. Conscience is getting pissed off at all this verbal claptrap that's under this column. "This is nothing but foolish boasting," it vehemently charged. "With all of the new forms that are being brought into our stale, rotting Western culture, you're going to fool around with dry memories of suburban escapism in bland Hawthorne Valley?" it cried. "YES," I replied, "for, as most psychologist would tell you, one is shaped in their very early years. Rather than go through the silly process of attempting to write editorials depicting the horrors of world political struggle, or righteous exposes of the dreadful flaws and cracks within our culture, which would only be giving the reader a portrait of a personality through words, I will be more direct, pointing my words right at the substance revealed through writing. Hawthorne Valley was where it was once at." "Honkie bullshit," conscience replied. "Well," I continued, growing ever more defensive, "you can just shove it. I'm no Jack Kerouac, Phillip Roth, or Allen Gins- berg ..." "Christ," muttered conscience, "you can sure say that again." "You should talk? What are you anyway? Just a piece of flabby Calvinist tissue, which, forged under the evangelical fervancy of suburban religion (about as zesty as milky Wheaties), rapidly meldted when confronted with the burning atheism of Ann Arbor. Hell, you didn't even come out against the War until 1966. Remember that SDS convention in Ann Arbor that summer? Where you made me passionately defend Lyndon Jhn- son's action against North Vietnamese aggression? Where Buckley tagged me with that label of being a 'wishy-washy liberal'? "You can't blame your bland personality on me," con- science charged, growjng a bit edgy though. "THE HELL I CAN'T, You're as responsive to change as that bourgeois clique of fascists that run the nation. You never even joined a subevrsive organization. Where's your politics man? Ten to one, when the chips are down, yo 'll drop this individual conscience-civil disobedinece thing ad march off with the rest of the drones to kill gooks, collect ears, and juggle casualty figures. You're nothing but petty bourgeoisie, no, just 1 petty." Conscience dejectly walked back to the locker room, throw- in his portable Goodman on the bench, his pocket Mailer to the ground. "Jesus," he told himself, "maybe you're a Puritan after all." But to continue ... Now although the scorecard measured the hole at five- hundred-and-forty yards, and rated it a par five, in reality the distance was closer to four-hundred-and-fifty, making it no more than a tough four. And it was late fall, when the ground hardens, giving your drive an extra twenty to thirty yards on the roll. And there was a stiff breeze at my back, Hell, it was a gale.. I stepped up to the tee, after taking a disastrous seven on the hole imediately before, as my ball landed in someone's rain trough. Quit screwing around, I told myself, and, for a change, really crank one. SHAA-ZAAMI The ball flew off the head of the driver with terrific speed, headed at a forty-five degree angle to the ground. Seconds later it cleared the mammoth bunker that occupied the middel of the fairway and landed near' row of trees on the right side of the hole near the river, two hundred-and-seventy- five yards out. I walked to the ball In a state of nervous expectation. If I coud place a four-iron shot on the green, close enough to the pin, there was an outside chance I could grab an eagle. An eagle would mean I would be one over par at the turn. With a birdie on the easy sixth or ninth, combined with pars on seven and eight, a par round would be in the offing. I pulled out my trusty J. C. Higgens 1937 Bobby Jones modeled four-iron, with its aluminum head and yellow wooden shaft. Its grip had been lost over the winter, and I developed fierce blisters from the slivers that would stick in my hand as I gripped the club. But this was nothing. My father, I was told, had walked five miles to school every morning in the midst of the Depression. I tried to concentrate and slow down my swing, lest my brand-new Titlist duck-hook into the river. I struck the ball. No divot; nothing. Expecting one, I didn't follows the line of my shot as it headed for the green. Then I caught it, as it bounced ten yards in front of the fringe, and continued straight for the pin. KEEP GOING, I CRIED. Closer, closer, a little more and I'l have an eagle for sure. Only a three-foot putt. It didn't stop at three feet. It kept rolling right for the pin, hit it, and fell right into the hole. I ran home, threw my clubs into the garage, and converged on my father, who was sitting in the living room reading the lpaper. Dad, I just had a double-eagle!" I told him. "Sure. Why the hell didn't you cut the grass yesterday? No allowance for the rest of the month." Discouraged, I ran into the kitchen to tell my mother. "What's a double-eagle?" she replied. Before I could get in a word, she said, "Your father is really angry with you for not cutting the grass. Go cut it now before the neighbors get home and see how shabby it looks." They didn't believe me, no, they didn't care.. Screw the over- thirties. What is grass to a golf pro on the make? I By DAVE SCOTT When Michigan meets Minne- sota later this week, the Gop- hers will be attempting to wrap up its second straight Big Ten title. To do so, however, they will have to stop John Kraft, the Wolverines' slugging left- fielder. Kraft has been Michigan's top hitter throughout t h e current season, batting well o v e r the .300 mark. Kraft, a catcher by trade, was shifted to left field this season when Pete Titone landed t h e daily sports NIGHT EDITOR* BILL DINNER top receiving spot. "I don't think Moby (Michigan coach Moby Benedict) trusts my field- ing yet, he looks kind of ner- vous whenever a ball is hit my way," he says. Though Kraft has only one error in 26 games, he feels his defense needs a lot of work. "I try to catch every- thing that comes my way, and sometimes the ball gets by me." Would he prefer catching? "Definitely, I love to catch and to call the game. I like being in on every pitch," Kraft com- mented. John got started catching when he was seven in his home- town of Franklin, Michigan. "It was a nine year old's league, but I was the only one willing to catch," he commented. "Besides, my mother was t h e manager. She and Dad have been my number one and two fans ever since," Kraft continued his journey into baseball via Little League, American Legion League, a n d most any league t ha t would have him; few turned him away. At North Farmington High School he developed into an All Conference catcher. Colleges took notice. "I could have gone to Eastern on a full ride, but I wanted to play in the Big Ten." Though lacking a scholarship, Kraft joined the Wolverines. "When I wasn't playing much I had some second thoughts, but now that I'm a starter, I'm sure Michigan was the right choice," the slugger observed.d John Kraft's~arrival at Michi- gan was marked by a .393 aver- age as a sophomore, though he played only half the games due to defensive weaknesses. Th'is y e a r, as a regular, he holds not only Michigan's top batting average, but also heads the list in extra base hits and has figured among the Big Ten's top sluggers. When asked about this, he replied, "I swing as hard as I can at every pitch. People tell me to hold back sometimes, but I don't do well that way." Kraft's hard swinging had helped keep Michigan in con- Chicago to reinstate football; Van Breda Koif Piston coachI By The Associated Press 0 CHICAGO-Varsity football, dormant since 1939 at the Uni- versity of Chicago after a glorious run under Amos Alonzo Stagg, is being revived this fall, it was announced yesterday. The Maroons, once the scourge of the Big Ten, have played in- formal games and have had football classes since 1963. Now varsity letters will be awarded. Chicago, a member of the Big Ten since 1896, withdrew from football after the 1939 season. It left the Big Ten in 1946, unable to field representative teams in any sport. * * * *. @ DETROIT-Nearly the entire professional basketball world knows Bill van Breda Kolff is the new unofficial head coach of the National Bosketball Association Detroit Pistons. But the poorly kept secret was expected to be made official at a news conference phis morning. "We don't want it announced before 9:30 a.m., although it's really no secret at this stage," said a Piston's spokesman Tuesday. S PHILADELPHIA-In a sweeping reorganization, the. Phila- delphia Flyers of the National Hockey League named Vic Stasiuk head coach Keith Allen upstairs into the front office. Flyers' excutives said it was fulfillment of a plan made three years ago, but until last week, Allen was headed for at least another year as coach and Stasiuk was a fixture at Quebec in the American Hockey League. FIFE DISASTER: Wolverine basmen split tention ini the Big Ten baseball race, but the: team's play has been marked by inconsistancy, particularly on the mound and in the field. When it was suggested that the difference between perform- ance in conference a n d non- conference p 1 a y might be at- tributed to inferior t e a m s. Kraft retorted, "The Big Ten is one of the toughest leagues in the country, but we had a lot of games to prepare for Big Ten play and besides, it's only nat- 4 ural to be up f o r conference games." Only a few conference games remain for John Kraft, a sen- ior, and soon he. and his wife Joan will leave Michigan. As a possible alternative to the pros, Kraft, a physical edu- cation major, showed interest in coaching. "If I could teach a high school team w i t h every- thing Moby taught us they'd be untouchable," the left fielder mused. The thought seemed to fascinate him- I Major League Standings ........:.:::.......,.%.M..'. . .....::4:4 ..:4..'::: .: .:::... . a~wiik.Trl,.T T~l " TYNT IOAL TLEAGUE. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pet. GB tx Baltimore 27 13 .675 Boston 21 -13 .618 Detroit 18 16 .526 Washington 20 20 .500 New York 18 21 .462 Cleveland 8 23 .258 West Division Oakland 21 13 .618 Minnesota 20 13 .606 Chicago 15 16 .484 Kansas City 16 20 .439 Seattie 15 20 .429 California 11 22 .333 Yesterday's Results Detroit 7, Chicago 6 Cleveland 4, Kansas City 1 Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2 Washington 6, Seattle 5 New York 2,' Oakland 1 California at Boston, ppd., rain Today's Games Detroit at Chicago, night Kansas City at Cleveland, night Minnesota at Baltimore, night Seattle at Washington, night Oakland at New York, night California at Boston, night GB 3 6 7 get 14 , 4 6 6T: 91 i, * xChicago New York xPittsburgh xSt. Louis Philadelphia Montreal Wes' Atlanta xLos Angeles xSannFrancisco Cincinnati xSan Diego Houston 24 13 17 18 16 17 15 19 11 22 t Division 24 10 21 13 20 15 16 19 16 23 16 24 .649 .486 .457 .441 .333 .706 .618 .571 .457 .410 .400 1 3 84T 10'-: 11i: x-late game not included Yesterday's Results Cincinnati 4, Philadelphia 0 Houston 5, Montreal 0 Pittsburgh at San Diego, inc. Chicago at Los Angeles, inc. St. Louis at San Francisco, inc. Today's Games New York at Atlanta, night Philadelphia at Cincinnati, night Montreal at Houston, night Pittsburgh at San Diego, night Chicago at Los Angeles, night St. Louis at San Francisco Special To The Daily MT. PLEASANT-The Michigan baseball team split a double- header with Central Michigan yes- terday, winning the first game in 11 innings 7-5, and losing the second 5-2 on a disastrous first inning pitching by Dan Fife. In the first game, a three and a half hour marathon, Central Michigan jumped out to a quick 4 run lead in the first inning. Mich- igan's John Ritter then settled{ down and yielded only one more run in the fifth when he was re- lieved by the eventual winner, I Gerry Christman. In the second game the Wol- verines just couldn't get started and were abetted by Dan Fife who would have had a hard time hit- ting the side of a barn. Fife gave up five walks, hit two batters, and threw two wild pitches before be- ing lifted with two men on and no one out in the second. 41 CM FIRST GAME 002 102 000 02-7 8 2 400 010 000 00-5 13 4 SECOND GAME 002 000 002-2 7 2 320 000 OOx-5 5 1 '4- 1 Cm DAILY OFFICIAL --- BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) Manager, degree in Indust. Rel/Per- sonnel, exper. Asst. to Vice Pres for Sales, degree and proven record in sales and sales mgmt. Controller, degree and strong exper in controls, auditing exper pref. Cost Syst, Mgr, degree and exper in all areas of cost. ITT Data Services, Paramus, N. J.'- Data Processing Sales Representatives, degree and 2 years in DP Sales, good bckrnd in DP service applications. State of Oregon, Park Lands Super- visor, degree and 4 years tech. exper in admin., dev. of parks a n d recreation plans, design of utilities, and park fa- cilities. State of Wisconsin - Lndscpe. Arch. Libr. Tech, Office Machine Operator. Conservation Wardin. Curator, Fid. and ResearchArcheologist. Public Utility Rate Anal. and other career candidate positions for college graduates. State of North Carolina - Artist Ill- ustrator. Puppeteer with State Board of Health, college work in drama. Research and Statistics positions. Community Services Assistants and Consultants. IResearch and Training Center in Vo- cational Rehabilitation, West Virginia- Associate Director of Training, PhD or Ed. D. and exper in areas of educ., trng. ed. admin., couns, rehab., guid,, ed. psych. § SUCCESSFUL § MEDITATION § is an Art-one that YOU can § master. However, you must have the proper atmosphere, and follow the correct proced- § ure. You must be shielded from § outside magnetic influences by §your own Personal Meditation § Robe. § LOBSANG § § RAMPA § Tibetan Lama and Famous Author § s the Man Who Knows. Let Dr. Rampa instruct you in the Art of Meditation. Gain the inestimable benefits . ... Peace, Tranquility, Inner Harmony, Knowledge . . . that § can be yours so easily. "MEDITATION FOR THE MILLIONS" § LOBSANG RAMPA MEDITATION AIDS § Meditation Robe (made espe- S cially for YOU; indicate S, M, L ... $25.00§ S"Meditation," a 33V3 rpm § F § LP Phono disc (instructions by Dr. Rampa himself) 4.95 Meditating Figure .......5.00 Rampa Meditation Incense § & t.ihPof nst.... ....3.0 § TEACHER PLACEMENT Overseas "Teaching Positions - The following schools have listed teaching vacancies for September, 1969. Dominican Republic - Carol Morgan Schools, Santo Domingo. Music (Grades 1-12), Biology/Earth Science, Interme- diate Science (Grades' 5,6), Elem. (Grade 1). Vietiane Laos - American School of Vientiane. English (prin. Jr. High), Jr. High M a th, Biology/Gen. Science, French (sec. & Intermed. grades) Span- ish (sec. & intermed. grades), Girls PE, Elementary (intermed.), Elem. (Grades 1 thru 4 located in branch school in Pakse). Japan - Tokyo, Nagoya & Osaka. The Nikko Shoji Co. is interested in hiring teachers of English as a Foreign Lan- guage for its employees. 30 hours per week, 2 year contract to begin imme- diately. F aor additional information contact Mrs. Flynn, 3200 SAB, 764-7462. AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32 Trips/Day If you are a full-time GRAD STUDENT FACING INDUCTION but have not received an undergraduate Il-S since June 30, 1967, please see the DRAFT COUNSELING CENTER immediately I 502 E. Huron, 769-4414 NOTICE- Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics FREE Graduate Workshop For Graduates of Reading Dynamics Only Wednesday, May 28-1 .M 1o. P.M NORTH CAMPUS COMMONS Valley Room FOR RESERVATION CALL 353-5111 or Mail Note to Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics 17320 W. 8 Mile Rd. Southfield, Mich. 48075 -F Vii.. 0 Sam's Store LEVI'S Galore For Gals and Guys! LEVI DEN IMS: Button Fly.... 5.9 (Guaranteed to Shrink) Super Slims ......$6.00 Pre-Shrunk Dungarees.......$6.50 Now Levi Denims for Gals ........$6,00 Immediate Occupancy One Bedroom $145/mo. $50 damage deposit, carpet- ing, drapes, appliances, carport, all utilities except electricity. Married 'or grad. only. 971-8488. 37Ttc BIKES AND SCOOTERS HONDA 50. Reasonable. Good cond. 764- 2560. 812 Honda of Ann Arbor 3000 Packard at Platt-971-4500 serving U of M since 1963 9Ztc 305 CC HONDA, 1966-Great shape. Call Paul at 761-7060. 7Z11 LOST AND FOUND FOUND on Walnut St. Sat. night-1 man's watch. Call P. R. Muck, 761- 9167. Ala LOST-Glasses in black and white case. Betw. Hosp. and S. Division. 761-9801. 2A1 1 FOUND-Gold Bulova girl's watch in front of LSA Bldg. Either call or come in at The Daily. A14 HELP! LOST in Er Packard area - Brownish-grey tom cat; long-haired; wearing collar and tag; named Kosh- iscoun1t records, inc. 300S. Stae-1235 S. University NOW IN STOCK! FROM UNITED ARTISTS LEVI'S STA PREST: "White" Levis (5 Colors) Nuvo Hopsack "Stitches" ..... . S-T-R-E-T-C-H. "White"sLevis . (5 Colors) $6.98 $8.00 .$6.98 $4.98 A4 rAlf --- WANTED BELL BOTTOM LEVI'S NOW IN STOCK, Personnelfor UAC Summer Committees' - ; I