TUESDAY; APRIL 28, 1964 PAGE SI. THE MICHIGAN DAILY .. ....'...:Y RAGE SiX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1964 I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 5) for next yr. as a Panel Member of Mad. Mag., Campus Marketing Program. The girl selected as panel member will be sent portfolio containing 3-6 assign- ments to complete-distributing samples or conducting surveys-No selling. Use- ful training for fashioning, marketing, merchandising, soc., careers. Applica- tions available at Bureau of Appoint- ments. For further information, please call General Div., Bureau of Appointments. 3200 ,SAB, Ext. 3544. SUMMER PLACEMENT: 212 SAB- Camp Nahelu, Ortonville, Mich.-Mr. Michaels will interview male & female counselors on Wed., April 29 from 1 p.m. ,ยข on for coed camp. Seeking sailing coun- selors and riding counselor (man or woman) and female archery counselor; also a nurse. ANNOUNCEMENT: N.Y. State Division of Employment seeking Employment Interviewers for its professional staff, N.Y. City. Grad- uating seniors or recent grads interested in career in personnel, men or women, please call Bureau of Appointments, Ext. 3544 to sign up for Civil Service Exam., to be held on campus. 'Slow Response' Causes Golf Practice Revision NBA Champions 'Best fEver' 00MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION YOU CAN READ 150-200 PAGES AN HDUR using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to read DOWN the page comprehending at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excellent. 6Aany students comprehend at over 2,000 words a minute. This is not a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You con apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual mate- rial, as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. No machines or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading rapidly. A SUMMER CLASS in ACCELERATED READING will be held in Ann Arbor near the U of M campus on Tuesday evenings beginning on June 23. It's very advantageous to be able to read a book in one sitting and see it as a whole.. Be our, guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING method on THURSDAY, April 30 at 7:30 P.M. and on WEDNESDAY, May 6 at 7:30 P.M. BRING A BOOK! Demonstrations will be held at the MICHIGAN STUDENT UNION. (Check bulletin board for room location.) NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, Inc. By BOB CARNEY A break' in the Big Ten schedule, this past weekend gave coach Bert Katzenmeyer's golf squad a chance to hold their annual intra-squad tournament. The results? "We've got a long way to go," said Katzenmeyer yesterday. "The weather was nice, but it was a rough day golf-wise." In what was nearly a repeat of last week's last-place finish at Ohio State, junior Pete Passink took first place with' scores of 77-76-74, followed by Gary M-ouw and Bill Newton who were tied for second and Frosty and Jim Evashevski knotted at fourth place. "Pete did a fine job," said Katzenmeyer, "but most of the scores were too high to tell any- thing." Tom Clark, who3 led the Wol- verine linksmen with 73 at Colum- bus on the 17th, was described as "wayback in the field" by Katzenmeyer. "The whole team has just been hitting too many bad shots. We've got good potential, but we're very slow in responding this year." Earlier in the season Katzen- meyer cited putting as the team's major weakness. Yesterday he had no particulars. "What's one man's weakness is another's strength. As far as put- ting goes, we've been sporadic. As a team, we need work in all departments." The fact that the present prob- lems have affected the whole team are shown in Katzenmeyer's decision to leave the line-up as is. "No, I won't make any line-up changes," he said, "but our prac- tice routine will be changed con- siderably. I expect to increase the intensity of the present setup, and make it more regular. That means more time on the 'practice tee and less on the course." Katzenmeyer's n e w methods will get their first test this week- end when the Wolverines travel to Lansing for a pentangular meet. Also in the meet will be North western, Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan State. Extend Series .Pay NEW YORK P-) - The major league baseball players have voted by an overwhelming 478-58 margin to cut in the fifth-place teams on the World Series' player pool. Previously only the first four teams had shared the Series cash. BOSTON (P) - Now that the< Boston Celtics have won an un- precedented sixth straight Na- t i o n a l Basketball Association championship, what do they do for an encore? Easy, says owner Walter Brown. Make it seven in a row. The wonder of the 1964 Celtics is that they turned supposed weaknesses-loss of Bob Cousy old age-into strengths. The Celtics made history Sun- day night by defeating San Fran- cisco 105-99 and wrapping up the final series. Never before had a professional team won more than five consecutive playoff titles. Wilt Chamberlain dominated the individual columns, as he had during the regular season. Cham- berlain led in total points, 416, per-game average, 34.7, field goal percentage, .543, and rebounds, 502 throughout the playoffs. Sam Jones topped Boston scor- ers with' a 23.2 average. "I think this is the best team we've ever had," Brown said Mon- day. "The thing that tickles me is that everyone said we wouldn't be nearly as good without Cousy and then we wind up with a bet- ter team. "Now with Frank Ramsey and Jim Loscutoff retiring, they'll probably say the same thing next year. But I think our club will be just as good. f ,,. 0I i, SAM JONES WILT CHAMBERLAIN "Don't forget that I'm the guy who never wanted to see Cousy grow old, and I still wish he nev- er did. Even if Ramsey couldn't play, you'd still want him around your team for his spirit. And while people thought we were crazy drafting Loscutoff No. 1 out of col- lege, we never regretted it." Other Celtics undecided about 507 Fifth Avenue New York 17, N.Y. 1 He's Sitting Pretty Because He Signed Up To Se ll Michigan Dailies Next Fa ll MAKE 25 Cents on every subscription you sell! CALL JUDY-' at 2-3241 X 32 SIGN UP NOW!. This Week in Sports TODAY BASEBALL-Notre Dame at Ferry Field, 3:30 p.m. TENNIS-Michigan at Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind. FRIDAY / BASEBALL-Purdue at Ferry Field, 3:30 p.m. TENNIS-Quadrangular meet: Michigan, Minnesota, Purdue and Northwestern at Evanston SATURDAY SWIMMING FEDERATION: World Marks Approved; Nine Nations Suspended their playing futures are Clyde Lovollette, Willie Naulls and John- ny McCarthy. The Boston team, whose 8-2 blitz through Cincinnati and the Warriors was its fastest playoff spurt since 1961, isbasically the "seven old men of basketball" plus Johnny Havlicek, the backcourt spark plug wise beyond his years. "This team has the most guts of any," Tommy Heinsohn said. "In fact, not having Cousy may have been our biggest asset. His retirement gave us added incen- tive to meet the extra challenges. "We weren't as explosive as some of our past teams. But we played better defense. And that took a lot of desire. "And the fact we are old pros helped tremendously. We have played together so long every- body knows instinctively what his teammate is going to do. This is essential to good defense." Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE BASEBALL-Illinois at Ferry Field, 3:30 p.m. TENNIS-Conclusion of quadrangular meet at Evanston TRACK-Michigan at Penn State, State College, Pa. GOLF-Michigan, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Indiana Michigan State at Lansing FOOTBALL-Scrimmage at Ferry Field, 2:00 p.m. TOKYO (/)-The International Swimming Federationapprove& 10 world records, including one by Donna de Varona of Santa Clara, Calif., yesterday and bar- red 45 swimmers of nine coun- tries from the 1964 Olympic Games at Tokyo. The suspensions were based on mers who competed in the Gamer, of the New Emerging Forces at Jakarta last November. None was and regardedras a serious Olympic contender. The 10 world records, five by men and five by women, involved performances made since the first .f this year. Miss De Varona, wno was 17 on Monday, was given official 'redit for her 5:16.5 clocking in the 400-meter women's individual medley, the best ever. She was the only American in- cluded in the latest list of world record smashers. Five Russians, four Britons and three Australians had marks recognized, including two relay events. Australia's Dawn Fraser re- ceived official sanction for her remarkable 58.9 seconds in the 100 meters freestyle at Sydney last Feb. 29. Two other Austral- ians-Ian O'Brien, a breaststrok- er, and Kevin Berry, a butterfly specialist. also were included. O'Brien swam the 110 ."ards )reaststroke in 1:08.5, Berry did the 200 meters butterly in 2:06.9. Georgiv Propopenko of the So- viet Union figured in three of the world records. They included the 100 meters breaststroke, which he did in 1:07.4; the 220 yards breast- stroke, 2:31.4, and a part in the 44-yard medley relay. The suspensions involved swim- ed by Kotaro Abe, honorary sec- retary of the international fed- eration. The banned swimmers, whose suspensions are for one year, in- clude 12 Japanese, eight Argen- tines, one Bulgarian, seven Cam- bodians, four Dutchmen, one Mex- ican, one Dominican, two Sicilians and nine from the United Arab Republic. Philadelphia San Francisco Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee St. Louis Houston Chicago Los Angeles New York W 7 7 7 6 6 6 6 4 2 L 2 3 4 5 5 6 7 6 9 8 Pct. .778 .700 .636 .545 .545 .500 .462 .400 .308 .200 YESTERDAY'S GAMES Los Angeles 6, Houston 0 Only game scheduled TODAY'S GAMES San Francisco at Chicago Los Angeles at Houston (n) Philadelphia at Cincinnati (n) Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (n) New York at St. Louis (n) AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Cleveland 5 2 .714 Detroit 6 4 .600 Baltimore 5 4 .556 Chicago 5 4 .556 Minnesota 6 5 .545 New York 4 4 .500 Washington 6 6 .500 Boston 4 6 .400 Los Angeles 4 7 .364 Kansas City 2 5 .286 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 6, Los Angeles 3 Only game scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Minnesota Chicago at New York Baltimore at Boston Washington at Los Angeles (a) Detroit at Kansas City (n) GB -- 1 Y 2 2 21/ 3- 5 GB I 1 1 13/; 21/ 3 3 1 I , I 11 FINAL SABBATH SERVICE OF SEMESTER This Friday, May 1, at 7:00 P.M. Zwerdling-Cohen Chapel, 1429 Hill St. 1' - ' I' carry "the safe money" AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES I ~ R$ E245.678 to AmrinMe s~ v Iian4 r r3 'bb3C.OOSC1 12t5L'A 0 I _/ UNIAMEMMOMM Yrnx'II oninv vnur frin sn much more when vyou know that your money I "1~ 1-1 %.Z I I