PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, MAY 24, 1966 a -- - - - - -- i - -- ..TvUESDA.,....y .. .AY 2w4 . 1ยง6C I|fl Z FINISHES THIRD IN BIG TEN: Michigan Nine Wins Twoj Trackmen Place Fourth in Title Meet CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.40 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 2:30 daily. Phone 764-0557 PERSONAL HAIR REMOVAL Done by electrolysis. Information avail- able through U. Hospital Derm Clinic. 764-5140. F33 HAVE TRIO, WILL SING. Band wanted also. Call Sue at 761-7725 after 5 p.m. F31 FREE CALICO Kittens. 7 weeks. Call NO 2-0833. F30 HI HANDSOME! Thank you for a very nice weekend. Hope you enjoyed it as much as I. F34 THREE GIRLS desire fourth roommate for Fall. Modern, furnished apart- ment on Walnut. Call 663-5475. F28 EVER PLAY JACKS WHILE WORKING? WE DO. Come in and see for yourself. Join us in a game, or as a staff mem- ber. The Michigan Daily. F18 WE HELP put ourselves thru grad school running this ramshackle room- ing house. Now here's your chance. All you need is cash and derring do. Call Bob Greenberg, 662-8559. F14 LARGE APARTMENT NEEDS one or two more girls. Close to campus. Very cheap. 665-6329. F9 TWIMC BETCHA CAN'T STOP HERE JUST ONCE! RALPH'S MARKET Open 9 a.m. to Midnight 709 Packard HAPPY SUMMER to Everyone In Love F48~ TIME ON YOUR HANDS? Do something creative. Join The Mich- igan Daily business, editorial or sports staff. Few hours; lots of fun. F ANN ARBOR'S best buy on a diamond engagement ring. Check it! Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University. 663-7151 F' RENT Your TV from NEJAC Zenith 19 in. all channel portables for only $10 per month. FREE service and delivery. Phone 662-5671. F DATING is more enjoyable with THE RIGHT PERSON IBM Computer AND personal interviews help us arrange DATES YOU'LL REALLY ENJOY MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE Call 662-4867, write 216 S. State for free brochure or interview F HELP WANTED $1 FOR 1 HR. Register Voters. Call 663- 0553. H24 TALKATIVE, OUTGOING, confident, educated male over 21 to explain a fascinating new service to young wo- men by telephone. Evenings part time,flexible hours. Call 761-1416 im- mediately. H22 PART OR FULL TIME help needed. Service station. Call NO 8-9586.H2d 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 yr. exp.; math 473 or equiv. exp. Full or half time. Call 764-2115 to make appt. for interview. H21 HELP WANTED - female kind lady to granny-sit with lovable convalescent in S. Campus area. Write Box 52 giv- ing exp., ref., wages. H23 SALESMAN to start June 1st. Profes sional opportunity, married 22-30. Bacheros degree. Phone 453-4030 for interview. H41 FEMALE STUDENT wanted to work for handicapped student from Sat. 12 to Sun,. 6 p.m. $15 weekend. Call 665-2482. H48 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $6 for Rh positive; $7, $10, and $12 for Rh negative. Hours: Mon, thru Thurs. 9-4; Fr. 1-7. 18,21 years old need parent's permission. 483-1894. YPSILANTI Detroit Blood Service 404 W. Michigan PART TIME Multi-Million Dollar Company hiring for part time sales work. Earnings in 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 just a part time job for the right person. If you're 20, have use of a car, and are bondable write William D. Nichols, 3372 Washtenaw Ave., Ann Arbor, Mich. FULL OR PART TIME, all training furnished, work any hours available. Call NO 2-6274, H31 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 summer 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. COLLEGE STUDENTS-Part time eve- ning work at Ypsi-Arbor Lanes as pin jumper. Apply in the evening. H33 WANTED TO RENT UNIV. INSTRUCTOR desires quiet rea- sonably priced apt. near campus for fall. Call 665-8181. L 2 NURSES want 3rd female roommate Phone 665-5022 after 4 p.m. F44 FOR SALE USED PGA CLUBS, 1-wedge, 1, 3, 4 woods, Spaulding bag. $95. 761-3230. B43 FOR SALE-1964 Volskwagen. Spotless. Has everything. $1250. Call after 5, 668-7107. B37 BIKES AND SCOOTERS 19655 HONDA CS-90, less than 800 miles, excellent cond. 761-1146, 5-7 p.m. Reasonable price. Z40 '65 HONDA 50, elect, starter, 600 miles. Like new. 663-4019 after 5. Z41 HONDA CB 160, 1965, call Gary, HU 2- 6271. 39 1965 HONDA 50. Just tuned in perfect condition. Will sell for $145. Call Ed, 764-0558 12-3 only. Z34 1965 HONDA 50, just tuned; in perfect condition. Asking $150. Call Ed, 764- 0558 12-3 only. Z36 WE TRY HARDER. We have to. We're 3 miles from town. Our campus cus- tomers go to great lengths to get out here for sales, parts, and service. There must be a reason for it. HONDA of Ann Arbor. Z27 HONDA C-100, only 416 miles. Stored all winter. NO 3-9623. Z24 1965 YAMAHA - Brand new, never driven. 80cc. 662-3651, Z26 '64 DUCATTI 125. Best offer. Rob Eifler, 662-9890, 12 to 12:30, 6 to 7 p.m. Z25 NICHOLSON M/C SALES Authorized dealer for TRIUMPH - YAMAHA - BMW - GILERA, 224 S. First. Phone 662-7409. Z SUMMER SUBLET 4 MAN APT. avail. for Sum, session. Mod., air-cond., close to campus. 761- 0637, U47 2ND SESSION-2-3-4 men, air-cond., on campus, fully furn., new apts. Call 665-8330, 665-2689 or 665-2451. U48 ROOM FOR RENT, 428 Cross. U46 2 'BRDM. FURN. APT, Available for sublet June 26-Aug. 19. Free air-cond. 11 blks, from campus. Call Madison Management. 663-5584. U42 3 RM. FURN. APT. 726 Oakland. Call Mrs. Bella Collins, 665-8392, or call Jim Collins, 663-2644. U43 FURN. APT, for rent. June-Aug. 1005 Packard. Call 483-0500, ext. 294 (8 to 4:30) or 663-0405 evenings. U45 MALE ROOMMATE needed rest of Spring half term. Mod. apt., TV, air- cond., good location, good price. Call evenings, 761-6216. U41 SUMMER SUBLET-House furn., fresh- ly painted and redecorated, 5 bdrms., near campus, dishwasher, washing machine and dryer. Call 761-7402 be- tween 4-7 p.m. U38 APT. FOR RENT-One man, half price. In 4-man apt. for summer. Close to hoasp. and campus. 721 E. Kingsley, No. 205. 662-4810. U36 CAMPUS-521 Walnut, furn. studio apt, Summer $60, Fall $85. NO 8-6906. U34 NEED 3RD GIRL to share 3 man mod. apt for 3B. 2 bdrms., air cond. 761- 0726, U321 FALL SUBLET for 1 male junior. U. Towers, low price. Call 416 545-6902 or write 4 Prospect Street S., Hamil- ton, Ontario. U29 GIRL TO SHARE 2 bdrm Island Dr. apt., air-cond., pool, parking, fac., etc. $70 per mo. 663-9181 after 5. U3 REDUCED-campus-hospt. area, studio rms or suites for men or women. Very attractively decorated and furn. Some paneled. House, refrigerator and phone. Leases thru June or Aug. $7 to $10 a week. 665-0925 or 662-7992. U51 Three key Wolverine blasts overt the fences in Yost Field provided the scoring punch and Geoff Zahn and Jim Lyijynen supplied the pitching to sweep a doubleheader from Michigan State and end the season on a high note Saturday, The two wins weren't enough to move the team higher than third in the conference standings, how- ever, as Ohio State's doubleheader with Iowa was rained out and Minnesota swept its twin bill from Indiana. The Buckeyes only played six of their scheduled 15 games but won them all to take the title. The Gophers were 11-2-1 and Michi- gan was 10-3 for the season. Three homers-one by little Mel Wakabayashi in the first game, and one each by Chan Simonds and Dick Schryer in the second- brought in all the Michigan runs in the two games except one. In the second game which Mich- igan won 5-3, the Wolverines only managed to pick up five hits to 11 for the Spartans, but four of the Michigan safeties came in the fifth inning to provide the winning margin. The two teams were tied in the second half of the inning with two outs when Captain Bob Gilhooley lined a single into left field which was followed by another one-base hit by Ted Sizemore. Center fielder Schryer then step- ped 'up to the plate and slammed a belt-high pitch a good 30 feet over the left-field fence to give the Wolverines a lead they neve: lost. The first two Michigan runs o the game came in the fourth in- ning when Les Tanona reached first on a fielder's choice and wat brought home my Simonds' home run blast to right. In the Wolverines' 2-1 victory in the first game 147-pound Mich- igan hockey captain Wakabayashi handed Spartan Dick Kenney hir first loss of the season when he belted a low liner over the center field fence with one out in the bottom of the ninth. Michigan had come from be- hind to tie the score in the sev- enth on another score by Waka- bayashi. He beat out an infield single and came home on a triple by Sizemore. e 0 Y h e d ,I i MEL WAKABAYASHI Golfers Take Homers Stop Spartans Twice FOR RENT 1 FEMALE GRAD, student seeks room- mate for Fall semester. Call Maddie, 761-0637. C17 ROOM FOR MAN-Nice Southeast sec- tion home. Call 663-8244 after 5 p.m. and weekends. C GARAGE - two blks. S. of EQ. $8 mo. NO 8-6665. After 6 p.m. C14 3 GIRLS need 1 to share luxury apt. for fall. GL 3-5488, 1 to 4. C15 1 335 GEDDES Luxury 2-bedroom apt, with new fur- nishiings, wall-toq-wall carpet:ig, dis- posal, off-street parking; for fall. Also other modern furnished 1, 2 and 3-man apts. in campus and hospital locations, immediate and fal,. FIRST GAME MICHIGAN STATE AB R II Maedo 2b 3 1 0 Polisar ss 3 0 0 Frye of 4 0 2 Speer If 3 0 0 Binkowski lb 4 0 0 Biedenbach 3b 4 0 0 Juday rf 3 0 0 Kilbourn c 3 0 0 Kenney p 3 0 1 Totals 30 1 3 MI CHIGAN AB RII Gilhooley ss 3 0 1 Sizemore c 3 0 2 Schryer cf 3 0 1 Tanona if 4 0 0 Bara rf 4 0 0 Simonds lb 3 0 0. Spicer 3b 4 0 0 Wakabayashi 21 3 2 2 Zahn p 1 0 0 Totals 28 Z 6 MICH. ST:ATE 000 001 000-1 MICHIGAN 000 000 101-2 E-Polisar, Speer, Kilbourn, Wa- kabayashi, Zahn. LOB - Michigan 9, Michigan State 6. RBI - Frye, Sizemore, Wakabayashi. 2B-Frye. 3B -Sizemore. IR-Wakabayashi. DP- Speer, Biedenbach, Binkowski. PO-A -Michigan State 25-10, Michigan 27-8. SB-Maedo. S-Juday, Polisar, Zahn 2. t'ITCIIING SUMMARY I1' 11 R-ER B SO Kennev L, 5-1) 8'; 6 2-2 5 4 Zahn ((, 3-1) ) 3 1-1 1 5 1115)-;;peer (by Zahin). Walker 2b Polisar ss Frye cf Speer If Walters rf Binkowski 1b Steckley c Biedenbach 3b Blight p Goodrich p a-Holmes b-Maedo AB 3 4 4 3 4 4 ! 2 I I 0 2 0 Rf 0 1 1 0 0 0{ 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 27 3 11 a-Grounded out Blight in 6th. b-Ran for Waiters in 7th. - MICHIGAN AB R 11 Gilhooley ss 3 1 1 Sizemore c 3 1 1 Schryer cf 2 1 1 Tanona If 3 1 1 Bara rf 2 0 0 Simonds lb 2 1 1 Spicer 3b 1 0 0, Wakabayashi 2b 3 0 0 Lyijynen p 2 0 0 Reed p 0 0 0 a-Fisher 0 0 0 Totals 21 5 5 a--iayed left eld for Tanona in 7th. MICiI. STATE 110 000 1-3 MICHIGAN 000 230 x-5 E-Walters, Schryer, Wakabayashi 2. DP - Lyijynen. Gil-hoole, Si- monds; Wakabavashi.G ilhooley, Si- inondsa Binkowski, Walker. LOB - Mlichigan State 10, Michigan 3. P0-A -Mchigan State 18-6, Michigan 21- 12, RBI-Walker, Frye, Simonds 2, Schryer 3. 2B--Frye 2. HR-Schryer, Simionds. S-Spicer, Biedenbach. SF -Ulight. ., PITCHING SUMMARY IP H R-ER BB SO Blight (L, 2-3) 5 5 5-5 3 4 Goodrich 1 0 0-0i 1 0 Lyijiynen (W, 2-2) s ;z 10 3-1 3 2 Reed T 1 0-0 0 1 IIBP-Biedenbach (by Lyijynen). PB-Sizemore. SECOND GAME MICHIGAN STATE H 1 1 3 2 1 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 'Second .Place, Get NCAA Bid Michigan's golf team led by third place finisher Bill Newton finished second in the Big Ten meet at Iowa City and received a bid for the NCAA tournament in June. The team had a 72-hole total of 1502 strokes, the scores of the top five men in each round going to- ward the team totals. Ohio State won the tournament with a hot 1480, while defending champion and favorite Purdue dropped to seventh place with 1526 strokes. Northwestern's John Seehausen took medalist honors in the tour- ney with rounds of 71-73-70-72- 286. Alex Antonio of Ohio State placed second with a 291 and New- ton was one stroke behind with a 73-75-71-73-292. Also finishing in the top 10 in the field of 60 golfers was Wolver- ine John Richart, who carded a 71-80-73-74 - 298, good for the 10th spot. Third among the Michigan golfers was John Schroeder, shoot- ing a 75-77-78-74-304. Following Schroeder were Jim Evashevski and next year's captain Bob Bar- clay, both with 307's, and Chip Groves with a 309. Both the Buckeye and Wolver- ine teams were offered bids to' play in the NCAA tournament at Stanford on June 22-25. Coach Bert Katzenmeyer accepted the bid and will take the team to the national tourney. "Ohio State's depth and balance were its strong points. Each man on OSU's team had one very low round. The gap between us open- ed up in the third. Ohio State had a very fine round while we did not play as well as we could have, and we could -not gain the difference back in the last round," said Katzenmeyer. Katzenmeyer was also impress- ed by the overall quality of all the teams, describing the conference as "the strongest overall. that I have seen it in 20 years, with the top six teams all averaging 76 strokes per round." TEAM SCORES-Ohio State 1480, MICHIGAN 1502, Wisconsin 1509, Michigan State 1519, Minnesota 1519, Indiana 1521, Purdue 1526, North- western 1546, Illinois 1561, Iowa 1569. By BUD WILKINSON Special To The Daily1 BLOOMINGTON-The Wolver- ine thinclads took three firsts, a second and a third in the field events, but it wasn't enough to counterbalance their weak show- ing in the running events as Michigan placed fourth in the conference track championships last weekend. The tourney was won by Michi- gan State with 521/2 points follow- ed by Iowa with 43, surprising Minnesota with 33, and Michigan with 32. State was leading Iowa by 5 /2 points going into the final event -the mile relay-and needed to at least place to win. State had not had a mark bet- ter than 3:16 in the relay and five teams had done better-led by Iowa with a 3:09.8-and the Spartans also had failed to place a runner in the 440. Clutch Finish However, when it counted, State's Mike Martens, Rick Dunn, Daswell Campbell, and John Spain put together four personal bests to win the relay in 3:10.9, leaving Iowa in third and wrapping up the meet for the Spartans. Michigan finished fifth in the relay. Jack Harvey set a Big Ten record of 57' 2" in the shot and Steve Leuctman threw the shot 54' 1" to place third in the event. In- the high jump sophomore Rick Hunt cleared 6' 6%/4" to take the title. He attempted to break the conference record with a jump Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB Cleveland 22 9 .710 - Detroit 20 12 .625 2/% Baltimore 19 14 .576 4 Minnesota 16 15 .516 6 California 18 17 .514 6 Chicago 15 17 .469 711 New York 15 19 .441 8/ Washington 15 20 .429 9 Boston 13 21 .382 91 Kansas City 12 21 .364 11 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Kansas City 5, Washington 3 (12 inn)C Only game scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Chicago (n) California at New York (n) Kansas City at Washington (n) Minnesota at Boston (n) Cleveland at Detroit (2, t-n) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB San Francisco 25 13 .658 - Houston 21 16 .568 3% Los Angeles 21 17 .553 4 Philadelphia 18 15 .545 4'2H Pittsburgh 18 16 .529 5 Cincinnati 16 17 .485 614 Atlanta 19 21 .475 7 New York 13 16 .448 7 St. Louis 14 19 .424 81, Chicago 9 24 .273 131 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Atlanta 6, Cincinnati 41 Philadelphia 9, Houston 0 Los Angeles 3, Pittsburgh 2 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Pittsourgh at San Francisco (n) ! Philadelphia at Los Angeles (n) New York at Houston (n) Atlanta at Cincinnati (n) Chicago at St. Louis (n) of 6' 9" but missed in three at- 'tempts. Placing second for the Wolver- ines in the pole vault was Cap- tain George Canamre. He and Iowa's Bill Burnette both went over the bar at 15' 4" but Burnette was awarded the title because of fewer misses. Other point scorers for Mlichi- gan were Bob Gerometta with a :48.1 second place in the 440-yard run-4 behind Wisconsin's Steve Whipple, and Cecil Norde and Jim Mercer who finished third and fourth, respectively in the 880. The 880 was won by John Spain, a sophomore from MSU, in a time of 1:48, more than two seconds under the old record. Two Hurdle Records Besides records set in the shot put and the 880 an automatic rec- ord of :50.7 was set by MSU's Bob Steele in the new 440-yard intermediate hurdle event, and Bob White of Indiana set a record of :13.9 in the semifinals of the 120-yard high hurdle event. Field Firsts LONG JUMP-1. Atkinson (W); 2. Bjorklund (Minn); 3. Garrett (MS); 4. McGilmer (Iowa); 5. Gibbs (Io- wa). Distane-24'81/" DISCUS THROW-1. Donnelly (M); 2. Crites (W); 3. Herbert (MS); 4. Miller (111); 5. Cavotta (OS). Dis- tance-166'5%,4". 660-YD.,RUN-1. Mondane (Iowa); 2. Martens (MS); 3. Brubacher (Io- wa); 4. Poole (W); 5. Harris (N). Time-1:17.7. 100-YD. DASH-1. Kohl (Iowa); 2. Simonsen (Minn); 3. Bryant (Minn); 4. Garrett (MS); 5. Weddle (nd). Time-:09.6. MILE RUN-1. Boydston (N); 2. Wieczorek (Iowa); 3. Weinert (W).; 4. Elwell (Minn); 5, Link (MS). Time-4:09.2. 440-YD. RUN-1. Whipple (W); 2. Gerometta (M); 3. Giliham (Minn); 4. Ferree (Iowa); 5. Soltvedt (Minn). Time-:47.7. 120-YD. HIGH HURDLES-1. Wash- ington (MS); 2. White (Ind);. 3. Steele (MS); 4. Randlph (Iowa); 5. Wolf (P). Time-:13.8 (not a record because of favoring wind. Record of :13.9 set by White in semi-finals). SHOT PUT-1. Harvey (M); 2. Lane (Minn); 3. Leuchtman (M); 4. Stone (Ill); 5. Bliss (W). Distance -57'2s/" (new Big Ten record). 880-YD. RUN-1. Spain (MS); 2. Hartman (Ill); 3. Norde (M); 4. Mercer (M); 5. Griffith (Iowa), Time -1:48.0 (new Big Ten record). 440-YD. INTERMEDIATE HUR- DLES-1. Steele (MS); 2. Reimer (Iowa); 3. Stalling (W); 4. Brown (P); 5. Watson (111). Time -- :50.7 (automatic Big Ten record for new event). 220-YD. DASH-1. Kohl (Iowa); 2. Washington (MS); 3. Garrett (MS); 4. Campbell (MS); 5. Weddle (Id) Time-:20.6 (record disallowed be- cause of favoring wind). HIGH JUMP-1. Hunt (M); 2. Stuart (Minn); 3. (tie) McKoy (MS) and Norton (Ill); 5. Bowers (MS). Height-6'6%". POLE VAULT-1. Burnette (Iowa); 2. Canamare (M); 3. Schmidt (W); 4. Clark (OS); 5. Hord (OS).Height -15:4~. TWO-MILE RUN --1. Assenheimer (N); 2. Boydston (N); 3. Weinert (W); 4. Heinonen (Minn); 5. Shar- key (MS). Time-9:07.9. O NE-MILE RELAY - 1. Michigan State (Martens, Dunn, Campbell, Spain); 2. Minnesota; 3, Iowa; 4. Wisconsin; 5. MICHIGAN. Time - 3:10.9. TEAM SCORES - Michigan State 52!.-, Iowa 43, Minnesota 33, MICH- IGAN 32, Wisconsin 31, Northwest- ern 15, Illinois 11%, Indiana 6, Ohio State 4, Purdue 3. 5 4+r , Read and Use Daily Classifieds CAMPUS MANAGEMENT Netmen Split 662-7787 days 761-4018 eves. & Sin.I C16 "o 608 MONROE-Large apt. lor 2-3-4 and Ind1V1dull Z 5students. Avai:. for fall occupancy Air-end., covere p arking Fine t e sirable features of our bldg .u s 4 LOST AND FOUND LOST-1 pair of girl's brown glasses in vicinity of S. Univ. between Linden and Church. Call 663-0053, after 5. A31 LOST-Bulova gold watch with gold band. In a library during finals. Call, Bud, 764-0562. A30 LOST-ONE LADY'S GOLD WATCH- On Tues., 5-10, on campus (some- where). Reward. Call 662-3225, Sue Lorge. A28 LOST-Reward for information regard- irg a brown female long hair stripped cat lost May 5, in the Forest-Forest Ct. area. She's needed desperately to nurse her new born kittens. 663-4162. A25 LOST-2 boxes April 26 at S. Quad. Any information call Ann, 764-4944. Re- ward. A24 USED CARS 1962 TEMPEST, excellent cond., snow tires. $600, which is $100 less than the Blue Book price. Phone 662-5733, ask for Benito. N44 1965 VW 1500S, 66 HP, sq. back sedan (looks like reg. station wagon), going to Europe. 668-6868. N43 '63 CORVETTE CONY. Gold with cream top. Very clean. 665-6932. N42 FOR SALE--1965 Triumph Spit Fire, green, 13,000 miles. Call Linda, 439- 7231. N40 '63 CORVAIR Monza, excellent condi- tion. 662-1026 after 5. N41 COMET, 1963, Convert. V-8, power steering, radio. 668-6286 after 5. N39 BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! LEVI'S SLIM-FITS-$4.50 "White," and 5 Colors For "Guys and Galt" Cord. SLIM-FITS-$5.98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asst'd. Colors-$6.98 I Still a iew atos. avail. or summer APARTMENTS LIMITED 663-0501 C12 418 E. WASHINGTON, ' Block from Campus-Mod. 1 bdrm. beautifully furn., air-cond., balcony. Suitable for 3 students. $180-Fall. NO 8-6906. CIO ONE ROOM for single woman. Kitchen facilities. Rent $50. NO 2-6987. C8j MUSICAL MDSE.,I RADIOS, REPAIRS FOR SALE -- BUFFET "A" Clarinet, Excellent cond. New Double Case. $250. 662-6496. X23 UNIVERSITY MUSIC HOUSE INC. 518 William (Maynard House) MUSIC-Domestic and Foreign Music books and all accessories NO 2-5579 BANJOS, GUITARS. AND BONGOS 1 A-1 New and Used Instruments Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 Wt. Washington BUSINESS SERVICES ANY MOTH HOLES, tears or burns in your clothes? We'll reweave them like new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224 Arcade. OPTICAL REPAIRS CAMPUS OPTICIANS IN THE NICKELS ARCADE t 240 Nickels Arcade -- 761-3993 Your number for QUICK, ACCURATE. AND EXPERIENCED manuscript and thesis typing, transcription - medi- cal, legal, and technical conferences; raimeography; offset; ditto; litho- graphy; varityping and composition. AA PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ASSOCIIATES, INC. 334 Catherine Michigan's netln. after wiil- nig eight of nine semi-finals matches to assure themselves of the team title, lost four of eight finals matches Saturday in their bids for individual glory. The Wolverines, directed by Coach Bill Murphy who has now won nine titles in the past 12 years still topped second-place State by 25 points and walked away with two singles and two doubles crowns. Ed Waits and Bill Dixon, both top-seeded at their respective po- sitions, won singles titles. Waits knocked off Paul Bishop of Wis- consin, 6-2, 6-4, in the number four match; and Dixon downed Illinois' Rick Wurtzel, 6-4, 6-3, in sixth singles. Karl Hedrick and Jerry Stewart combined to whip Rich Monan and Mickey Szilagyi 9-7, 7-5; and sin- gles winners' Dixon and Waits teamed up to top Steve Levenson Iand Jerry Johnson of Illinois, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. SlINGLES No. 1-Ilallinger (W) def. Hedrick (M), 8-6, 6-4. No. 2-Szilagyi (MS) def. Stewart (Al1), 7-5, 3-6, 6-3. No. 3 - Baer (Ind) def. Holden (Ill), 4-6, 6-4, G-0. No. 4-Waits (M) def. Bishop (W), Wi- i, 6-4. No. 5 - IDhooge (MS) def. Tee- guarden (M), 6-2, 6-2. No. 6--Dixon (M) def. Wurtzel (111), 6-4, 6-3. DOUBLEIS No. 1-Hedrick-Stewart (M) def. Slmonan-Szilagyi (MS), 9-7, 7-5. No. 2-Phillips-hooge (MS) def. Swit-T(eguarden(M), 6-0,1-6,6-3. No. 3-Dixon-Waits (M) def. Lev- enson-.Johnson (I11), 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. TEAM SCORES - MICHIGAN 138, Michigan State 113, Indiana 88%, Illinois 85-, Wisconsin 72, North- western 45, Minnesota 40, Ohio State 30%, Iowa 29', Purdue 12. HI(G TEN STANDINGS W L TI Ohio State 6 0 0 Minnesota 11 2 1 MICHIGAN 10 3 0 Michigan State 8 5 0 indiana 6 5 0 Illinois 5 7 0 Wisconsin 6 9 0 Iowa 4 7 0 Purdue 2 9 1 Northwestern 2 13 0 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Pet. 1.000 .821 .769 .615 .545 .417 .400 .364 .208 .133 MICHIGAN 2-5, Michigan State 1-3 Iowa at Ohio State (rain) Wisconsin 11-2, Purdue 4-6 Illinois 7-6, Northwestern 3-4 Minnesota 11-2, indiana 4-1 DOWNTOWN HONDA World 's Biggest SellerI WENK Sales & Servic 310 E. Washington Big or Small We have them All State St. blilsi nSt. o c 5th Ave. 4th Ave. On St nil 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. I / ofma -m SUZUKI Are Here! The X-6 Hustlers have arrived! If you want the FASTEST street 250 in the world and the best warranty in the industry. COME TO A Message for You I LEVI JACKETS "White"-$6.98 Blue Denim--$6.98 SUZUKI Cycle Center just East of Arborland 761-2650 Z24 Passport Pictures Application Pictures Group Pictures Wedding Pictures Available at any time Ready Quickly CALL NO 3-6966 0 Special Package Golf Deal 8 irons, 3 woods, Bag & Cart A from Ann Arbor Bank For complete student and faculty banking needs see Ann Arbor Bank. Specialcheck checking accounts, travelers checks, foreign exchange, letters of credit, and four campus offices are just a few reasons why Ann Arbor sank should be your bank. Stop in at any Ann Arbor Bank office and get acqsaint- ed with alert, accommodating banking. I I LEVI'S Superslim's-$4.98 LEVI'S Dungarees-$4.49 II i I I I I