WEDNESDAY, MAY 4,1966 THE MICHIGAN DAILY a TAKES 3-2 PLAYOFF LEAD: ElFINEDS I Montreal Downs Detroit cS" ad( tit " I' By The Associated Press 4. MONTREAL - The fired-up Montreal Canadiens whipped in a pair of goals in each of the first two periods against battered goalie Roger Crozier last night, coasted to a 5-1 victory over Detroit and moved one game short of their second straight Stanley Cup. The triumph, third straight for the Canadiens, gave them a 3-2 lead in the best-of-seven series, the first time they have held the edge in the playoff. Crozier, who suffered a sprained knee and twisted ankle on his left leg early in Sunday's game, was in the nets for the Red Wings. He hardly had time to get used to being back in action before Montreal had scored. Claude Provost put the Candiens ahead with the game just 66 sec- onds old, beating Crozier from 10 feet out. Yvan Cournoyer scored a power play goal in the final minute of the first period. Dave Balon and Bobby Rousseau increased the Montreal lead to 4-0 by the 12- minute mark of the second period. Dick Duff closed out the scoring at 5:31 of the final period.. Detroit cracked the Canadiens' close checking defense when Norm Ullman scored at the 14:22 mark of the second period. In cracking the home ice jinx which had seen the visting team win each of the first four games of the series, the Canadiens out- shot the Red Wings 33-21. They put 28 shots on the Detroit net in the first two periods against 13 for the Red Wings, then relaxed a bit in the final period, especially after Duff's marker. J. C. Tremblay assisted on the first two Montreal goals and Duff helped on the next two. He then notched his first goal of the finals to climax a spectacular play by t Henri Richard. Richard skated the length of the ice, drew Crozier over to the left side of the net, then dropped the puck for Duff, who banged it in from 10 feet out. Cournoyer's power-play goal came with 39 seconds remaining in the first period. J. C. Tremblay took the puck near the left boards and passed it in front of the net, Cournoyer taking a swipe at it as he skated by. Uliman's goal came one second after Balon had returned to the ice after serving a penalty.. Andy Bathgate took a pass from Paul Henderson and fed it to Ull- man, who shot in his own rebound after Gump Worsley grabbed the first effort. The teams returned to Detroit for what could be the final game of the series Thursday night. A seventh game, if necessary, will be played in Montreal Saturday night. FOR SALE OLYMPIA TYPEWRITER, sale, 665-6765. Very cheap. port., for B29 MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Nats Stop Streaking Birds By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - The Wash- ington Senators ended Baltimore's 10-game winning streak last night, beating the Orioles 3-0 behind the five-hit pitching of Phil Ortega and Casey Cox. Jim French, recalled from Ha- waii Monday in a reshuffling of the Senators' catchers, drove in the first run with a fourth inning single, and Frank Howard blasted a two-run homer in the seventh. Ortega had a three-hitter for seven innings but had to retire because of a pulled muscle in his right shoulder. Tigers Blank Boston DETROIT-The Detroit Tigers exploded for six runs in the sixth inning and blanked the Boston Red Sox 8-0 last night behind the five-hit pitching of Mickey Lolich. Lolich struck out nine while breezing to his third victory in four decisions as the Tigers snap- ped a three-game losing streak. Bill Freehan led off the sixth with a double, only the third hit off Boston starter Jose Santiago, Freehan beat the throw to third on Lolich's bunt and scored the first run of the game on Dick Mc- Auliffe's single. 1 After a walk to Jerry Lumpe loaded the bases, one run scored on a force out and Jim Northrup knocked in another with an infield single. Jim Lonborg then replaced Santiago and was clipped for a two-run single by Don Wert. The final run of the inning scored on George Smith's throwing error. Indians Keep Winning NEW YORK-Luis Tiant pitch- ed his third shutout in three starts last night, limiting New York to four hits as the Cleve- land Indians edged the Yankees 1-0 on Joe Azcue's run-scoring single in the seventh inning. Tiant, who blanked Boston and Kansas City in his other two ap- pearances, allowed o n 1 y one Yankee to reach third in leading the Indians to their 12th victory in 13 games this season. Twins Tfop White Sox CHICAGO - Zoilo Versalles' three-run homer and tight pitch- ing by Camiol Pascual gave the Minnesota Twins a 4-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night. Versalles connected in the third inning following a double by Ber- nie Allen and Pascual's single. The three-run shot erased a 2-1 Chicago lead that the White Sox had gained on singles by Tommie Ages and Don Buford and Pete Ward's double in the first inning. Major League Standings Astros Crush Cubs BOSTON - Lee Mayo hit his third homer in three games and Joe Morgan knocked in three runs with a homer and single as the Houston Astros walloped the Chicago Cubs 10-2 last night. Dave Giusti struggled to his third victory in four decisions while Cub starter Bill Hands, 1-2, was the loser, yielding six runs in four innings, Five of the runs off Hands, Miller Takes Trampoline Championship Special To The Daily LAFAYETTE, La.-Last Satur- day Michigan gymnast Wayne Mil- ler bounced another notch highe in the trampoline world by win- ning the World Trampoline Cham- pionships after teaming with Wol- verine freshman Dave Jacobs tc take the world title in synchron- ized trampoline competition on Friday. Miller, who placed fourth in the world meet two years ago when only a high school senior, and took third last year, completed his rou- tines with a total score of 46.7C to defeat the top trampolinists of eight countries. The Wolverine sophomore had already taken the Big Ten, Mid- Eastern, and NCAA titles earlier this year before climaxing his achievements with the world championship. Jacobs, the other half of the synchronized championship duo placed fifth in the individual com- petition. however, were unearned as the Cub defense committed four errors behind him. * * * Mets Lose Again ST. LOUIS-Ex-Met Al Jack- son pitched four innings of hit- less relief against his former teammates as the St. Louis Car- dinals downed New York 3-2 last night. Jackson, who got credit for his first victory, came on in the sixth and retired 12 straight batters, striking out four. Braves Edge Phillies ATLANTA-Felipe Alou's two- out single in the 10th inning scor- ed Woody Woodward, lifting the Atlanta Braves past the Phila- delphia Phillies 9-8 last night. Woodward beat out a bunt with one out in the 10th and was sac- rificed to second by relief pitcher Phil Niekro before Alou broke the 8-8 tie with a single to left. The Braves tied the score in the eighth when Gary Geiger tripled in two runs. Bill White's two-run homer, a three-base error by cen- ter fielder Alou and Doug Clem- ens' run-scoring single had sent the Phillies ahead 8-6 in the top of the eighth. * * * 1966 YAMAHA 80, low miles, must sell.- $325 includes helmet. Call 663-7390. B30 FOR RENT . 5 RM. HOUSE, newly decorated, 2 bed- rooms, for appt. to see call 665-0347 between 5 arid 8 p.m. C3 SUMMER SUBLET FURNISHED RMS and Apts. (men). Linens, and kitchen privileges. Spe- cial summer rate. Telephone 761-0053. U2 LARGE 2 MAN, furn., 726 Oakland. Available June 1 or later. Call 234- 0256. Flint. U1 MALE ROOMMATE to share mod., air- cond. apt. I block from campus. Call N02 1477, evenings 5:30 to 7:36. US CAMPUS-HOSPT. Studio, furn., sum- mer. $65. N08-6906. U7 3 PERSON SUBLET, next to Rackham, air-condi. 110 N. Thayer. 761-3861. U8$ WANTED TO SUBLET, by doctoral can- didate and wife, efficiency or 1 bdrm. apt. near Main or North Cam- pus, June 13 to Aug. 15. Douglas Lee, 1625 N. Holyoke, Wichita, Kan. 134 GIRL TO SHARE 2 bdrm Island Dr. apt., air-cond., pool, parking, fac.. etc. $70 permo. 663-9181 after 5. U3 FOR RENT-Furn. apt. for one, kitchen fac., bath, hospt. area. $75 month. Available for summer or longer. 662- 7992, 764-5490. U49 THREE GIRLS desire fourth roommate. Hospt, area for the summer. 663-2006. U50 REDUCED-campus-hospt. area, studio rms or suites for men or women. Very attractively decorated and furn. Some p reled. House, refrigerator and phone. Leases thru June or Aug. $7 to $10 a week. 665-0925 or 662-7992. US ROOM AND BOARD EAT in a CO-OP this summer. $11.50 and 3l, hours work per week for 21 meals snacking privileges, and good com- pany. Houses near campus. Contact Inter-Co-operative Council, 2546 SAB 6872. E20 PERSONAL ANN ARBOR'S best buy on a diamond engagement ring. Check it! Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University. 6 3-7151 F COED NEEDED FOR SUMMER-1st half or all summer. Cheap. On campus. 3 bdrms. Call 663-9712. F49 WELCOME BACK!! START YOUR SUMMER RIGHT SHOP AT RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Open every night 'til 12 TAKE A JET to Europe--N.Y. to Lon- don, May 13; Paris to N.Y., Aug. 13 $220 Round Trip. Call 482-8796. F43 RENT Yor TV from NEJAC Zenith 19 in. all channel portables for only $10 per m'jntb, FREE service and de*ivery, Phone 662-5671. E I LIKE COPI! F $11,000 POETRY CONTEST. Open to all poets. Send name and address with lOc for brochure of rules and prizes' THE PROMETHEAN LAMP, Dept. MD 2174 34th Street, Sacramento, Calif F45 2 NURSES want 3rd female roommate Phone 665-5022 after 4 p.n. F44 TRANSPORTATION DRIVING TO NEW YORK May 12 or 13. Riders wanted. Call Randy, 761- 6070. 025 HELP WANTED NEED A PLACE TO STAY.? Responsible couple or grad student to stay for one week with 3 children in our home while parents are away. NO 3-5673 1123 VIETNAM. Military Base, construction Long job. High pay. "Job News," 35c and stamped envelope. TKCO, Box 132, Medina, Wash. H27 $1 PER HOUR Mon. and Wed., and/or Tues. and Thurs. 9:45-11:15 a.m. Care for 3 yr. old. Near campus. 668-8442. H2fi COMPANION to girls 10 and 13 while parents abroad. Aug. 3 to 26. Swim club, min. housework. 662-5840. H30 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $6 for Rh positive; $7, $10, and $12 for Rh negative. Hours: Mon. thru Thurs. 9-4; Pri. 1-7. 18-21 years old need parent's permission. 483-1894. YPSILANTI 404 W. Michigan Detroit Blood Service USED CARS 1961 MGA Conv. Jim Langworthy, 801 Catherine. 764-2535. N3X JAGUAR 1948 MARK IV. Drophead Cpe. Dk. green. New top and interior. New tires. Body excellent, engine fair. Call or write 2802 N. Aiver Rd., Saginaw, Mich. N33 BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! LEVI'S SLIM-FITS-$4.50 "White," and 5 Colors For "Guys ond Gols" Cord. SLIM-F ITS-$5 98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asst'd. Colors--$6.98 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE INC. 518 William (Maynard House) MUSIC--Domestic and Foreign Music books and all accessories NO 2-5$79 X1'7 BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan A-1 New and Used Instruments PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington BIKES AND SCOOTERS RALEIGH Super-Matic Moped. Cheap. Call Randy, 761-6070. Z17 1965 YAMAHA 125 cc. Used only by white-haired old lady to drive to church. 3700 mi. $30 Liability ins. in- cluded. NO5-0505. Z18 NICHOLSON.M/C SALES Authorized dealer for TRIUMPH - YAMAHA -- BMW - GILERA. 224 S. First. Phone 662-7409. Z Read' Classifieds CAMPUS BOOTERY 30.4 South State Street ~4~J/~a~ae &~4e~ Beefy, masculine, authentic in every detail, Florsheim brogues are a must for your wardrobe. And, of course, superb quality craftsmanship makes every pair an outstanding value! I -LdĀ¢96c2ss LJ STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES LEVI JACKETS "White"-$6.98 8lue Denim-$5.99 Pirates Nip Cincinnati CINCINNATI-Donn Clenden- on's second two-run homer of the, game, with two out in the 12th inning, gave the Pittsburgh Pi- rates a 5-4 victory over the Cin- cinnati Reds last night. Clendenon homered over the center field wall off Sammy Elli, following a single by Jim Pagliar- oni. The blast snapped a 3-3 tie The Reds came back to score one run in the bottom of the 12th. LEVI'S Superslim's-$4 98 LEVI'S Dungarees--$4.49 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S For Gals and Guys "\ghite"-$5.98 TURTLENECKS-$1.69 (15 Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nights SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington I I I K ifyou live In Chicago and are going back to Chicago this summer, now is the time to plan Your Summer School Program check all these advantages of summer study at ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY * Completely accredited graduate and undergraduate programs. . Choose from these and additional courses: AMERICAN LEAGUE MW L Pct. Cleveland 12 1 .923 Baltimore 12 2 .857 Chicago 10 5 .667 Detroit 11 7 .611 x-California 8 7 .533 Minnesota 6 7 .462 Washington 510 .250 Boston 4 12 .250 x-Kansas City 3 11 .214 . New York 4 13 .2351 x--Late game not included. YESTERIJA V'S RESULTS Minnesota 4, Chicago 2 Detroit 8, Boston 0 Washington 3, Baltimore 0 Cleveland 1, New York 0 Kansas City at California (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at New York (n) Baltimore at Washington (n) Kansas City at California (n) Minnesota at Chicago (n) Boston at lDetroit (n) GB 3 5 6 10, GB 1% Accounting Chemistry English Economics Marketing Secretarial Practice Music Eclucatio* Education Advertising biology Business low Mothematics Personnel Administration Psychology Political Science Computer Technology Music Theory Your choice of two 6-week summer terms June 20 or August 1, 1966 Your choice of moring or evening classes Nine week evening term begins June 20 USE THIS COUPON TO RECEIVE A COMPLETE SCHEDULE OF SUMMER CLASSES ROOSEVELT UNIVERSITY f16 iw. af' . t. . t .,tS ... -a ,. Pittsbur San Fra Los Ang Atlanta NATIONAL LEAGUE rgh 12 5 . ancisco 13 7 .6 geles 12 $ .6 11 9 .5 n11 IQ K Ict. .06 650 .50 K-qft r M 1 Y 0 '