PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ce'riti neV irrzrv 1c iner aATUVj3JjI1X9JULY i16, 196f i$ MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Tigers Win in 1 By The Associated Press Detroit grabbed a quick 2-0 DETROIT-Pitcher Earl Wilson lead in the first inning when Wer hit a three-run pinch-hit home walked and rode home on A: run in the 13th inning to give Kaline's double. Jim Northrup's Detroit an 8-5 win over Baltimore wind-blown triple scored Kaline. last night. Northrup drove in another rur Wilson's hit came after Jim with a double in the fifth after Northrup singled and went to sec- Johnson and Andy Etchebarrer and on a sacrifice and Bill Free- knocked in two Baltimore runs han was intentionally walked. in the fourth. Brooks Robinsor Bill Monbouquette, who pitched scored Baltimore's first run ir four perfect innings in relief, was the second when he doubled and the winner and Stu Miller, also in came around on an infield out anc relief, took the loss, a balk. Don Wert's two-out, two-run single tied the game for the Tigers A's Beat Yankees in the ninth. Willie Horton was hit by a pitched ball opening the KANSAS CITY-Danny Cater ninth, but Eddie Fisher retired the hit a two-run double in the eightl next two battefs. Then Gates inning, powering Kansas City to Brown lashed a pinch hit double a 5-4 victory over the New York and Wert delivered his hit. Yankees last night. Dave Johnson and Boog Powell Cater's double came off Yankee combined to boost the Orioles into starter Mel Stottlemyre after Mike the lead. Powell's 20th homer Hershberger singled and Roger broke a 3-3 tie in the sixth inning Repoz walked. Cater also drove and Johnson's second run-scoring in a run in the third with a sac- single of the night produced an- rifice fly. other run in the eighth following The Yanks had taken the lead a pair of walks. in the sixth inning, scoring two t l s Z r Z s z i r a e e r e 3th, 8-5 uneaned runs on singles by Roy White and Clete Boyer. The A's started the scoring with two runs in the first on a force; play and a single by Larry Stahl. Now York tied it up in the third- when Bobby Richardson doubled in a run and Jake Gibbs singled, scoring Richardson. M * * 5 iW/archal Wins 15th For Direct Classified Ad Service., Phone 764-0557 Monday through Friday, 12 Noon to 2 P.M. BIKES AND SCOOTERS YAMAHA 125, '6544100 miles. Elec. star 663-3878 or 764-0318, Z 650 cc BSA. $700. Beautiful, adult own ed, semi-customed engine, rebuit last Sept. 663-2268.Z2 KAWASAKI LOW PRICES PERSONAL - 1, FOR RENT -1 PHILADELPHIA-Willie May a a PHILADELHAWham eed ahom New 85cc trail or road, only $310 fu land Jim Hart hammered home price-incl. tax, title, lie., while the runs and Juan Marichal won his last. 15th game of the season as theR San Francisco Giants blanked the RI C H B ELL'S Philadelphia Phillies 8-1 last 23257 Woodward, 548-4483 night. Ferndale, north of Detroit The homer was the 21st this Z season for Mays and gave him 526 1965 HONDA C140. Helmet. 650 mile4 for his career-eight short of Jim- excellent. NO 5-9468. Z4 my Fox and second place on the HONDA-10. Only 416 miles. Store all-time homer list. Hart's shot all winter. NO 3-9623. Z2 was also his 21st of the season. t. WANTED - Man to share apt, Fall- 22 Winter term. $57.50 monthly, Call - BattleCreek collect,962-0804, Mark. n- lt GRADUATE FELLOWSHIP OPPORTUNITY To train a new kind of specialist-s in the teaching of science, math, reading, etc., to children under age six, sepecially disadvantaged. Excel- lent career opportunities at leadership ll and planning levels, as interest in y quality preschool education mounts. Funds recently received for limited number of $2,500 fellowships begin- ning fall '66, providing a year of aca- demic study and active participation in an exciting research and develop- ment program. Able, aggressive, and 20 independent students invited to ap- ply, regardless of undergraduate ma-{ s, jor. Write to Dr. Carl Bereiter, In-I 2 stitute for Research on Exceptional Children, University of Illinois, Ur- d bana, Illinois 61802. F38 4 - ---- - - MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS HI-FI STEREO FM receiver, 75 watt, 1 year old at %1 price: $170. Ten Have, 764-7516, days only. X26 SPECIAL GUITAR SALE 8 Now in stock - GOYA and GIBSON CLASSICS UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE, INC. 512 William (Maynard Street) NO 2-5579 2 & 3Mans NOW LEASING FOR FALL 21, Blocks from Campus New Building Air-conditioned, carpeted, fully fur- nished bi-levels with 1, large bedroom and study. Paved and covered park- ing. SPECIAL TERMS FOR MARRIED COUPLES 731 Packard Call 663-8866 afternoons and evenings C30 APARTMENTS FOR FALL Efficiencies, 1, 2 & 3 Bedrooms. Call 761-5690 between 4-6 p.m. If no answer: 1-864-3852. C42 APARTMENTS FOR FALL-Luxury 2 bdrm. apts., air-cond., disposal, park- ing. Well furn. Opp. IM bldg. Call 761-5690, between 4-6 p.m If no answer call 1-864-3852. C43 NOW LEASING FOR FALL FOR RENT 418 E. Washington, WASHINGTON MANOR. On Campus, ? block from State. Mod. turn. 1 bdrm, Suitable for 3 students. Air-cond., sound proof- ing and many extras. NO 8-6906. U13 ROOMS FOR RENT-Excellent singles and doubles, available now in all- graduate house. 3 blocks from cam- pus. Phone 663-5930 anytime. C36 1335 GEDDES Luxury 2-bedroom apt. with new fur- nishings, wal-to-wall carpeting, dis- posal, off-street parking; for fall. Also other modern furnished 1, 2 and 3-man apts, in campus and hospital locations; immediate and fall, CAMPUS MANAGEMENT 662-7787 days 761-4018 eves. & Sun. C16 i G I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Baltimore Detroit Caifornia Cleveland Minnesota Kansas City Chicago Washington New York Boston W 58 50 48 46 42 40. 40 39 37 37 L 31 35 39 39 45 47 47 51 49 54 Pct. GB .652 - .588 6 .552 9 .541 10 .483 15 .460 17 .460 17 .433 1914 .430 19111 .407 22 San Francisco Pittsburgh Los Angeles Philadelphia Houston St. Louis Atlanta Cincinnati New York Chicago w 55 53 49 47 45 41 42 38 35 27 L 34 34 36 40 41 44 47 48 50 58 Pet. GB .618 - .609 1 .576 4 .540 7 .523 8' .482 12 .472 13 .442 15?, .412 18 .318 26 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4, Cleveland 2 Minnesota 5, Washington 4 Kansas City 5, New York 4 Detroit 8, Baltimore 5 (12 inn) California 4, Boston 2 TODAY'S GAMES Boston at California INew York at Kansas City Washington at Minnesota Cleveland at Chicago Baltimore at Detroit YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 5, Pittsburgh 4 San Francisco 8, Philadelphia 1 Los Angeles 4, New York 3 (11 inn) St. Louis 9, Cincinnati 2 Houston at Atlanta (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at New York San Francisco at Philadelphia Chicago at Pittsburgh Houston at Atlanta St. Louis at Cincinnati i in o th LE th M TG w se w Sc 4- di Sc in in Je jhe K ar he in 1 Ralston Loses in Meet, ar May End Tennis Career By The Associated Press ........ . . . MILWAUKEE-Dennis Ralston, . the nation's top-ranked tennis pi star, was knocked out of the Na- o tional Clay Courts Tennis Chain- se: pionships yesterday and said later in that this would be his last seasonr as an amateur player. Si The 23 - year - old Bakersfield, /al Calif., athlete was beaten 2-6, 6-3, to 8-6, 6-4 by Frank Froehling of Coral Gables, Fla., eighth-seeded dl in the tournament. fo "I don't feel the same way Ik used to feel about tennis," Ral- ru ston said. h His defeat in the quarter-finals frustrated his third attempt to win the clay courts title.IJ Ralston plans to take a rest, th and didn't know when he would 3ly return to the game.-n "Maybe it will be when I feel; like playing again," Ralston said. - in To Return for Davis Cup DENNIS RALSTON d( But he indicated he would be ta back for the Davis Cup zone play- second and third sets, Froehling ag offs with Mexico in Cleveland in battled Ralston on even terms wl August. through the crucial fourth. th Ralston noted that the end of The score was tied 4-4 when the season was still a long way off, Froehling's volleys broke through and added "I may change my Ralston's service and he took a mind." 5-4 game lead. Ralston and Froehling spent Ralston's hopes ended a few pi much of their heated match bat- minutes later. He made a brilliant sc tling linesmen and trying to quiet return of a Froehling lob shot, but ni crowd noises. Ralston was particu- the ball skidded outside the base- er larly unhappy after losing the line. Ralston disagreed with the la third set and stalked off the court linesman's call, with a set still to play, but return- Froehling went on, despite aby ed after going part of the way double fault, to capture the set ed towards the exit, and the match. hi "It was just impossible for me Richey Wins F to continue out there," Ralston Cliff Richey, the No. 2 seed, ad- th said. "Every five minutes some- vanced to the semifinals with a thing would happen." 6-4, 6-4, 8-6 victory over Stan th Froehling Makes Comeback Smith of Pasadena, Calif. gli Ralston appeared on his way to In another quarter-final matchJo a semifinal birth with his 6-2 No. 2 foreign seed Owen David- K opening set victory, but the lanky son of Australia defeated third- o Froehling began to take the upper seeded Charles Passarell 2-6, 6-3, R( hand after that. After winning the 2-6, 7-5, 10-8. In the last of the quarterfinal J matches Marty Riessen of Evans- Yv erom e ies ton,Ill., neutralized the big game li of top foreign seed Tony Roche oflea W~X/orld ID~ash Australia, beating him 6-2, 3-6, le -u 1 [* (1 -. Riessen's backhanded passing Marichal allowed just five hits gaining his victory. He struck ut nine and walked one. Willie McCovey tripled opening e second inning and scored on en Gabrielson's infield out foi ie first Giant run. In the third ays banged his homer, scoring om Haller, who had been hit ith a pitch. White Sox Win CHICAGO - Tom McCraw's venth inning single delivered the inning run as the Chicago White ox rallied for three runs and a 2 victory over the Cleveland In- ans last night. John Romano opened the White ox' seventh with a home run. ty- g the score at 2-2. Floyd Rob- son walked, went to second on erry Adair's sacrifice and came ome on McCraw's hit. A single by en Berry and pitcher Bruce How- rd's sacrifice fly brought McCraw ome with the third run of the ining. Cleveland scored a pair of un- arned runs in the second on two alks and two errors sandwiched round a single by Pedro Gon- -lez. Cubs Dump Pirates PITTSBURGH - Robin Roberts tched Chicago to a 5-4 victory ver Pittsburgh last night and nt the Pirates into second place the National League. Roberts, making his first start nce he was signed by the Cubs fter his release from Houston mited the heavy-hitting Pirates eight hits and received strong ipport from Ron Santo, who rove in four runs and went three- ir-three. Santo got the Cubs to a three- in lead in the first inning with a ome run, scoring Adolfo Phillips id Billy Williams ahead of him, The Pirates tied the score on )se Pagan's two-run double ill e first and Jim Pagliaroni's tal- from third on a passed ball the ext inning. Pagliaroni's double in the fourth ning chased home Donn Clen- mon from first for a 4-3 advan- .ge, but Santo tied the game gain in the sixth on a single hich scored Glenn Beckert from iird. Dodgers Nip fets NEW YORK - Dick Stuart's nch single in the 11th inning ored Ron Fairly with the win- ng run as the Los Angeles Dodg- s edged the New York Mets 4-3 Est night. Stuart.claimed as a free agent r the Dodgers after being releas- by the Mets last month, lined s hit off Jack Hamilton after airly had walked and moved to ird on Jim Lefebvre's double. The Mets had tied the game in e eighth when Larry Elliott sin- ed, moved to second on Cleon nes' sacrifice, went to third on en Boyer's long fly and scored a passed ball by catcher John oseboro. Roseboro's two-run homer in the xth erased an early 2-0 New ork lead. Then Tommy Davis de- ered a two-out single in the ghth that gave Los Angeles a 3-2 ad. ORGANIZATION NOTICES 188E OF TlS COLUMN FOR AN- )UNCEMENTs is available to offlcial, ongized and registered student orga- ations only. Forms are available in mn 1011 SAB. Folk Dance Club (WAA), Folk dance, n., July 18, 8:30-10:30 p.m., Women's hPetic Bldg. VoiCe-8I)S Education series, "Twen- th Century Revolutions," Ruth ube & Martha Kemnitz speaking on be Cuban Revolution," Mon., July 8 p.m., Rm. 30 Union. General mberiship meeting, plans for Interna- mal Days of Protest, Tues., July .19, )mu., Rm. 3G Union. * * utheran Student Chapel, Hill St. at est Ave., worship service, 10:30 am., ipper 5:30 p.m." Speaker 6:15: "Japan lay," Miss Helen Shirk, former mis- mary to Japan. BRIDGESTONE-COTTON 50 to 250 cc. Service on Most Makes HONDA PARTS AND SERVICE UNIVERSITY MOTORCYCLE SALES 211 E. Ann NO 2-3979 ZI BULTACO Immediate Delivery NEW AND OLD BUILDINGS 608 MONROE-Large apt. for 2-3-4 and 5 students. Avail. for fall occupancy. Air-cond., covered parking. Finest furnishings are but a few of the desirable features of our bldg. Still a few apts. available for summer. APARTMENTS LIMITED 663-0511 WANTED TO RENT 3 BEDROOM HOME-Wanted to rent or sublet; unfurnished, by Aug. 1. Phil- lips executive family. CALL 761-1490. - .-.------U7AV'V t~±,l VI rT. rAL, -Wet n HELP WANTED SALESMAN to start now. Professional opportunity, married, 22-30, Bachelor's degree. Phone 453-4030 for interview. COLLEGE STUDENTS-Part time eve- ning work at Ypsi-Arbor Lanes as pin Jumper. Apply in the evening. H33 ON-CAMPUS AND SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE A great opportunity for aggressive college students to earn a high in- come distributing material to college campuses all over the United States. Combine sumhmer travel with large profits, or work part-time on your own campus. Fall jobs are also avail- able. Contact: Collegiate-Dept. D, 27 East 22 St., New York, N.Y. 10010. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $6 for Rh positive; $7, $10 and $12 for Rh negative. Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. 9-4; Fri. 1-7. 18-21 years old need parent's permission. 483-1894. YPSILANTI Detroit Blood Service USED CARS 1960 DODGE, 6 cyl., 2 door, standard shift, good cond. Call 665-0007. N23 1965 JAG XKE. 4.2 liter, conv., Met, Blue. Excel. cond. New Michelin X tires, new Blaupumkt radio. Call NO 8-6767 after 5 p.m. N24 '59 TRIUMPH TR-3--Wire wheels, Tor- rneau cover, etc. Selinger, 764-3446 or 662-4753. N8 TRIUMPH TR4-1963, overdrive, radio, heater, luggage rack, Toneau, in good running cond. Price $1250. 665-4617. SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! LEVI'S SLIM-FITS--$4.50 "White" and 5 Colors For "Guys and Gals" Cord. SLIM-FITS-$5.98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asstd. Colors-$6.98 University Motorcycle Sales 211 E. Ann NO 2-3979 '1 ' TIRES-All types and sizes-Road, Race, Srambles, Trials. Tachometers for HONDA, Yamaha, Suzuki, Bridge- stone, BSA, BMW. HONDA of Ann Arbor 3000 Packa rd Rd. 665-9281 Z NICHOLSON MlC SALES At horiitd dealer for TRIUMPH YAMiAHA -- BMW --- GILERA, 224 S. First. Phone 662-7409. Z SAVE $8 to $10 On al new HONDAs during HONDA orF Ann Arbor' Summer Sdes Fcsiv Bp or order new at the home of the i peop e3 li 1 000 Pacard Rd., 6 65-9281 !01 FOF SALE-192 Yamaha 80. Only 2100 miles. Ex(cle condition,. Call 761-1 7179. Z47 World's FASTEST Street 250: The X-G HUSTLER with 12 mo. or 12,000 mule warranty, means the most in RELIABILITY. (See the NEW Sport 150, too) at SUZUKI Cycle Center 4040 Washtenow 761 -2650 --. ANT --T-- --~~-T WANTED FOR -. V ILI& NJJAJ.DUJ.Lttvri ANTD FR ALL - West of and 100cc Trails BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS E2preferably close to campus, with bed- 250cc Batadors A-1 New and Used Instruments Efficiencies, 1 & 2 Bedroom room, living room, kitchen and bath. 250cc TT, '66% Scramblers Rental Purchase Plan Apartments Willing to pay what the place is 175cc Camparas PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR worth, maybe more. 175c Merciures 119 W. WashingtonPtrick J Pulte Inc Contact Thomas R. Copi at 662- RatCiBEL'. LIiERAInD.B8183 or 764-0552. - L9 RICH BELL'S SLINGERLAND Drums, Bass, Tom, WEEKDAYS-NO 5-9405 We carry complete parts Snare, High Hat and Ride Cymba ls.A 9-5-NO SUMMER SUBLET 2357wodvrd 58448$200 (will accept more if offered)i. SATURDAYS 95N 2-524402 23257 Woodward. 548-4488 663-4877, ask for Rob; call late. X25 C21 Ferndale, north of Detroit CHARTER HOUSE APT.-6-man, air- Z21: FOR SALE cond., 2 bathrooms, 2 bdrms. 663- WANTED-Used bicycles-3 speed only. - ___ Also junk motorcycles. Will pick up SPANISH Manuscripts, W3th-T7th cent F IWA1TED-2 male roommates for IIIB motorcycles only. Cal 662-6986. After Latin and Catalan, $10 to $25. 761- to share 6 room house near N. Cam- 7 p.m. cal 761-0749. 5579, after 7 p.m. B9 NEW, completely furnished, close-in pus. $30/mo. Cali 761-6234, between STUDENT BIKE SHOP F-R 4 ---- apartments. Available for 2-4 persons. 6-7. U27 SU NTBK SHPFOR SALE-1964 Volkswagen. Spotless. ________________ 1135 E. Huron Has everything $1250, Call after 5. DAHLMANN APARTMENTS GIRL TO SHARE 2 bdrm. Island Dr. z19 668-7107 . B37 Office: 545 Church St. p Aircondpool parkngsfand Dtc R-~~ A C-~~-~761-7600 $70 per mo. 663-9181 after 5. U3 RENT A CYCLE BY OWNER C28 From $3.25 an hour. Beautiful five bedroom home on private -- ------ -------- HELP WANTED lake. 20 minutes from Ann Arbor,j swimming, sail boating, golfing, and hunting. Completely landscaped. First floor carpeted. Drapes throughout. All electric kitchen, complete laundry. near high school and low taxes. Call Brighton, 229-4664. B3 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Hist. 741 notebook in Grad Lib. Call NO 5-3120. A43 LOST-Tues., 7-12-.U. & Church- Black rim glasses. 482-5507. Al' BARGAIN CORNER VISIT OUR Western Store - Boon> Clothes, Hats, Lee Jeans, Saddles . Tack Schnelder Western Supply, 2635 Saline Road, I mile from U o M Stadiunm. WI --- - FOR RENT FALL - For 2. 3, 4, or 5. Mod. furn.. air-cond., balconies, quiet. Call 665- 2689. C31 BEAUTIFUL 4- or 5-man modern apt. available for Fall. Air-conditioned. See it at 1000 Oakland. For information, call Dan or Jim, 761-3785. C44 I FEMALE GRAD student seeks room- mate for Fall semester. Call Maddie, 761-0637. C17 University Towers Apartments FALL & SUMMER RENTALS ON CAMPUS From $60 per person per month FEATURES INCLUDE: HEATED SWIMMING POOL Luxury Lobby Color TVs Billiard Room Air Conditioning Many other extras MODEL APT. OPEN 536 S. Forest 70-6, Every Day 76 1-3565-NO 5-4480 MALE UNDERGRADUATES One or two openings in personality research-20 hours work total, at $2.50/hour. No special background re- Squired. All applicants will receive $1.50 for completing brief, required application. (This information will be used for an unrelated study, now underway.) ' phone Miss Taylor (9a .m.-4 p.m.) is 764-8522 H34 COMPUTER PROGRAMMER Position avail, for computer program- mer to work on FORTRAN, UMAP, and IBM 360 coding and data man- agement. AB degree and 1 years exp.; math 473 or equiv, exp. Full or 'half time. Call 764-2115 to make appt. for interview. H21 PART TIME Multi-Million Dollar Company hiring for part time sales work. Earnings ni excess of $3.00 per hour. This is not pots-knives-books or any of that door to door nonsense. This company is expanding all across the nation, con- sequently this could be more than jutst a part time job for the right person. If you're 20, have use of a car, and are bondable write William D.i Nichols, 3372 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. LEVI JACKETS. BWhite"-$6.98 Blue Denim-$6.98 4 LEVI'S Superslim's-$4.98 LEVI'S Dungarees-$4.49 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S "White"-$5.98 TURTLENECKS-$1 .69 (15 Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nights SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington 1 F ', t ,. '' * WORSHIP Z3I PERSONAL WAN IED -- Trwo girls to share new aprtment near the stadium. Prefer' gradua-te students. Call 665-2856. F3 IF YOUR HOME is for rent or sublet, please CALL 761-1490. We need a 3 bedroom, unfurnished home, by Aug.' DANCE-Sat. nite at the Y, 350 S. Fifth St.. AA. Live music, refreshments 9-12. Single people 25 years and mp. F50 AS THE BALMY breezes of summer drift in, thougts just naturally turn to the out: of doors-getallpicnic suptll s titt RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA Affiliated with the Baptist General Conference Rev. N. Ceisler SUNDAY SERVICES 9:45 a m.-Sunday Bible School. I 1 00 a.m.-Morning Worship. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Gospel Hour. An active University group meets each Sunday for the 9:45 service. Coffee is served at 9:30 a m. ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL 331 Thompson NO 3-0557 Msgr. Bradley, Rev. Litka, Rev. Ennen SUNDAY-Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:15, 10:45, 12:00, 12:30 MONDAY-SATURDAY - Masses at 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 11:30 a.m. and 12:00 and 5:00 p.m. Confessions following masses. WEDNESDAY - 7:30 p.m. - Evening Moss, Confessions following, SATURDAY-Confessions-3:30-5:00, 7:30= 9:00 p.m. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgewood Across from Ann Arbor High Rev. V. Palmer, Minister SUNDAY UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL 1511 Washtenaw Ave. The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod A. T. Scheips, T. L. Scheidt, Pastors SUNDAY 9:45 a.m.-Service with Holy Communion. 1 1 :00 a.m.-Bible Class discusses Sermon sub- ject series on "Affirmations on God's Mis- 6:00 p.m.-Gommo Delta, Lutheran Students Organization, Supper. 6:45 p.m.-Sunday evening program. WEDNESDAY 10:00 p.m.-Midweek Service. Message Pastor Scheips. by R ecord o f *9 1 shots were incredibly accurate. They consistently kept Roche EDMONTON, Alta.-Harry Jer- away from his favored net posi- ome of Vancouver flashed overI The semifinal play today will the 100-yard dash in 9.1 seconds match Froehing agalist David- last night, matching the world!sanh rengiagaitey.d record held by Bob Hayes of the Passarell Suffers Cramps United States. Passarell, who arrived here wit h Hayes set his record in St. Louis a sprained back, suffered leg' June 21, 1963. cramps in the final set while trail- Jerome, a 26-year-old school ing Davidson eight games to seven teacher, long has been recognized The cramps left Passarell and le as one of the world's premier won the game, but they returned sprinters. in the next game and he was un- I NO re R o Mo SAtl | Q Stiet Tat "Ti 18, L For Sul Tod sior Open every night 'til midnight TV RENTALS - Lowest student rates.j Call Hi Fi Studio, 663-7242. 121 W. Washington St. Free Delivery. F7 NEED EXTRA MONEY? Fill or Part Time Work -be your own boss, too $25.00-50.00-and more per momnth is possible, working part time, Not a door-to-door proposition, no phone soliciting, no quota to meet, no age limit, no "franchise fee," no training period. Come to the Ann Arbor YMCA-YWCA Tuesday, July 19, 8:00 p.m., to get the full story. Ask for Mr. Campbell or Mr. Hoey. F2' EVER PLAY JACKS WHILE WORKING? WE DO. Come in and see for yourself. Join us in a game, or as a staff mem- her. The Michigan Daily, Fi8 RENT Your TV from NEJAC Zenith 19-in. all channel portables for only $10 per month. FREE service and delivery. Phone 662-5671. F FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. For transportation call 665-2149 9:30 a.m.-Sunday School for pupils from 2 to 20 years of age. 11:00 a.m.-Sunday morning church service. Infant care during service. 11:00 a.m.-Sunday School for. pupils from 2 to 6 years of age. A free reading room is maintained at 306 E. Liberty, Open daily except Sundays and holidays from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.; Monday evenings from 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION SUNDAY 8:00 a.m.-Holy Communion and Sermon. S11:00 a.m.-Morning Prayer. 7:00 p.m.-Evening Prayer (Chapel) WEDNESDAY 7:00 a.m.-Holy Communion. FRIDAY 12:10 p.m.-Holy Communion. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH & WESLEY FOUNDATION At State and Huron Streets Phone 2-4536 Hoover Rupert, Minister Eugene Ransom Campus Minister 9:00 and 11:15 a.m. - "Blessed Are the Peacemakers." 5:30 p.m.--Supper and Discussion. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Phone 662-4466 1432 Washtenow Ave. Minitsers: Ernest T. Campbell, Malcolm G. Brown, John W. Waser, Harold S. Horan SUNDAY Worship at 9:00, 10:30, and 12:00-12:45. Bible Study for College Students at 10:30 a.m. Presbyterian Campus Center located at the Church. UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH 1001 E. Huron at Fletcher Pastors: Malefyt and Von Haven He had shared the old mark of 9.2 with Hayes, Armin Hary of Germany and Horacio Esteves of Venezuela, before Hayes broke it three years ago. He also shares' the 100 meter record-10 flat- with Hayes, Hary and Esteves. Jerome ran his 1,0 flat in the 1960 Olympic trials at Saskatoon.1 able to put anything on his serv- ice. In men's doubles, Passarell and Froehling defeated the South Af- rican team of Ray Moore and Peter Van Lingen, 6-3, 7-5. Ralston and Clark Graebner of Beechwood, Ohio, defeated Joa- (muin Tovo-Mavo of Mexieo and, 10:00 a.m,-Bible School 11:00 a m.-Regular Worship. 6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY 7:30 p.m.-Bible Study. Transporta+ion furnished for all NO 2-2756. services-Call ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH 1501 W. Liberty St. Ralph B. Piper, David Bracklein, Fred Holtfreter, Pastors Worship Services-8:30 and 11:00 a m. Holy Communion - Second Sunday of each month. Church School & Adult Bible Class-9:35 a.m. Holy Baptism-First Sunday of month. Nursery faciilties during worship services and BETHLEHEM UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 10:30 a.m--Morning Service. "A Woman to Remember," Dr. Calvin Malefyt speaking. i 13 I I i I wI