'" o.riivr.z,"" THE MICHIGAN DAILY
WAGE~
Wolverines Favored
'M'Rated 10-Point Favorite
Evashevski,Five Sophs Start
Over SMU
*
IIErS
-_
By DAVE GOOD
Sports Editor
Ghosts from football seasons
past go flitting around the cam-
puse^ of Michigan and Southern
Methodist these fall days, sorry
remind.rs of times when both
ranked among national leaders.
But both have fallen upon lean
years, and as the two square off
in vast Michigan Stadium at 1:30
p.m. today, Michigan ranks as a
10-point favorite in a game which
has commanded little attention
nationally.
The teams will play before an
estimated 64,000 Band Day fans,
the smallest crowd for a Michigan
season-opener since 1960, when
48,021 showed up to watch the
..THE LINEUPS
SMU
Harlan
Knee
Cude
McAllister
Sitton
Miller
Graves
Campbell
Caughran
Richey.
Sherwin.
Pos. Michigan
LE Conley
LT Keating
LG O'Donnell
C Ceechini
R G Hahn
RT Yearby
RE Hoyne
QB Evashevski
LH Clancy
RH Wells
FB Anthony
are seniors and both play on the
left side.
They form the bulwark of what
is potentially the best Michigan
line in years, averaging 212
pounds a man.
Michigan's starting eleven re-
mains unchanged with the excep-j
tion that Frosty Evashevski is re-
placing the injured Bob Timber-
lake at quarterback. The other
starters are Jim Conley and soph-
omore Jeff Hoyne at end, Keating
and soph Bill Yearby at tackle,
O'Donnell and Rich Hahn at
guard, soph Tom Cecchini at cen-
ter, soph~s Jack Clancy and Dick
Wells at halfback, and Mel An-
thony at fullback. .
Southern Methodist, meanwhile,
brings in one of the lightest teams
to invade Ann Arbor in a decade.
Not a single starter goes as heavy
as 200 pounds, and the line aver-
ages only 194 pounds a man.
Fry Starts Big
Hayden Fry was voted South-
west Conference coach of the
year last season-his first with
SMU--for getting enough mileage
out of his team to win two games.
SMU will be utilizing the "I"
formation this year, with all four
backs lining up directly behind the
center and prepared to snap into
almost any formation imaginable.
Fry calls it the "combination T"
and warns that the Mustangs will
be gambling on offense as well as
defense this year.
Fry's team flew into Ann Arbor
yesterday afternoon from Dallas
behind rumors of being exception-.
ally fast as well as light. Jordan,
who preceded the team by several
days, emphasizes that the Mus-
tangs don't have extraordinary
speed.
'Our linemei are quick," he
says, "but we aren't by any means
the fastest team in the Southwest
Conference."
If Fry has a secret weapon, he
isn't really coming out and saying
so, but it's interesting to note he
has a :09.4 sprinter on the team
who isn't even listed in the three-
deep lineups.
He is John Roderick, a 6' 168-
pound sophomore who will go as
a spot player at offensive split
end.
TEXAS SIZE LINEMEN-Everything is bigger in Texas-every-
thing, that is, but the linemen. Two of the small, but tough, line-
men from SMU are John Knee (left) and John Hughes. Knee (198
lbs.) is in the running for all-conference honors at tackle in the
hard-nosed Southwest Conference. Hughes (205 lbs.), a defensive
specialist, holds the Mustang's record for pass interceptions in a
game with four.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL:
Sooiters Challenge
USC ,,for Top Spot,
By The Associated Press
Badgers and
Irish Battle
In Top Game
CHICAGO UP) - The Big Ten
fully opens its 1963 football sea-
son in today's round of nine games
that will jam a half-million fans
into eight Midwest ,arenas and
Miami's Orange Bowl.
The program, featuring a con-
ference opener between Indiana
and title-touted Northwestern be-
fore 40,000 at Evanston, Ill., is
heavily spiced with intersectional
flavor.
But a prime neighborhood scrap
will send Big Ten defending cham-
pion Wisconsin against tought-to-
peg Notre Dame before a capacity
55,000 at South Bend, Ind.
Northwestein and Wisconsin,
tabbed to battle it ouk for the Big'
Ten crown, got a one week jump
on the rest of the, league, NU's
Wildcats winning at Missouri 23-
12 and the Badgers romping over
Western Michigan 31-0 at ;home.
Saturday's largest crowd will be
an expected 80,000 At Columbus,
Ohio, to watch Ohio State's al-
ways formidable Buckeyes open
against once-beaten Texas A&M,
a 14- loser last Saturday to LSU.
Other contests involving debuts
by Big Ten clubs :
Nebraska at Minnesota, before
a probable opening record crowd
of 65,000.
North Carolina at Michigan
State, 65,000.
Washington State at Iowa,
53,000.
Purdue vs. Miami, Fla., at
Orange Bowl, night, 42,000.
California - at Illinois, 38,000.
Except for pre-season consider-
ation given Wisconsin and North-
western, rated No. 6 and 7 in the
current Associated Press national
poll, the Big Ten looms complete-
ly unpredictable..
Wisconsin and Iowa boast the
only starting units devoid of soph-
omores, but first-year performers
apparently hold the key to the
length and breadth of the confer-
ence. '
Minnesota expects to start four
sophs and the pattern is definite
for newcomers to put the starch
in what coaches demand most-
squad depth.
Such teams as ,Michigan State,
with Steve Juday; Iowa with Gary
Snook; Indiana, with Frank Stav-
roff; Ohio State with Don Unver-
ferth; and even powerful Wiscon-
sin, with Dave Fronek, may rise
or fall on sophomore quarter-
backs as starters or soon-to-be
starters.
Only Northwestern, riding the
brilliant passing arm of Tom My-
ers; Purdue with the seasoned pair
of Ron DiGravio and Gary Hog-
an; and Illinois with Mike Talia-
ferro, own battle-tested quarter-
backs.
HELP WANTED
BABYSITTERS WANTED - Flexible
week-day hours. Apply at 324 E. Jef-
ferson, Apt. 4, weekends or after 6.
H138
GIRL FOR PART-TIME WORK-Sat.
noon 'til Sunday evening. 665-0547.
MAN OR WOMAN to cook dinners Tues-
day, Thursday, and Friday evenings.
B'nai Brith Hillel Foundation, 1429
Hill Street. Phone 663-4129. H36
PART-TIME MAN for service station
who will be here for next 2 yrs. Exp.
preferred but not necessary. Leave
name, address and phone at Box 4,
Mich. Daily. H39
WANTED-Part-time sales. Students to
sell blankets and stadium robes 'in
your school colors. For more informa-
tion write to: Franklin Textile Corp.,
312 Fifth Ave.. New York 1, New York.
Attn. Mr. M. Elbaum. H37
FOR SALE
LINES
3
4
Figure 5 average words to a line
Coll Classified between 1:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
Phone NO 2-4786
Wolverines whip. Oregon here. At
the same time, it's the largest
crowd the Mustangs will see this
year, according to Lester Jordan,
the SMU althletic business man-
ager and sports information di-
rector.
But that's just a sign of the
times. Back from last year's 2-8
SMU team is no one to recall
names from out of the past like
Doak Walker, Kyle Rote, Don
Meredith. Michigan, meanwhile, is
almost as short of personnel able
to conjure up visions of the likes
of Ron Kramer and Jim Pace.
O'Donnell Stands Out
Captain Joe O'Donnell, the 238-
pound guard, has been picked as
a preseason All-America candi-
date by one national magazine,
and Coach Bump Elliott accord-
ingly lists him and 240-pound
tackle Tom Keating as the two
best players on the team. Both
The last Oklahoma invasion of
Southern California came in the
Dust Bowl days and was mounted
on battered jalopies.
It is a high-powered Oklahoma
machine that Bud Wilkinson
brings to the Los Angeles Memor-
ial Coliseum today in the headline
game on the college football pro-
gram.
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
ONE-DAY
.70
.85
1.00
SPECIAL
SIX-DAY
RATE
3.48
4.20
4.95
New York
Chicago
Minnesota
Baltimore
Detroit
Cleveland
Boston
Kansas City
Lose Angeles
Washington
W
104
93
90
85
78
77
75
73
70
55
L
56
67
70
75
82
83
85
87
90
105
Pct. GB
.650 -
.581 11
.563 14
.531 19
.488 26
.481 27
.469 29
.456 31
.438 34
.344 50
JOHN RODERICK
:09.4sprinter
13,000 Preps
In 'Band Day'
Today's season opener at the
Michigan Stadium will again fea-
ture the musical talents of some
13,000 Michigan high school stu-
dents in the traditional "Band
Day: '
During the half time of the foot-
ball game these student musicians
from some 188 Michigan high
schools will combine with the 185-
member University Marching Band
to present the biggest musical
spectacle of the year.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago 11-7, Washington 2-1
Minnesota 4, New York 3
Baltimore 5, Detroit 2
Kansas City 3, Cleveland 1
Only games scheduled
TODAY'S GAMES
Minnesota at New York
Los Angeles at Boston
Detroit at Baltimore
Washington at Chicago
Cleveland at Kansas City (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
x-Los Angeles 99 60 .623 --
St. Louis 92 68 .575 7%
x-San Francisco 86 73 .541 13
Cincinnati 85 75 .531 14/
x-Philadelphia 84 75 .531 15
Milwaukee 83 77 .519 16/
Chicago 81 79 .506 18/
x-Pittsburgh 73 86 .469 26
Houston 64 96 .400 35Y2
New York 51 109 .319 48Y2
-Does not include night games.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Philadelphia at Los Angeles (inc.)
Pittsburgh at San Francisco (inc.)
New York 10, Houston 2
Chicago 3, Milwaukee 2
Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 0
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at Los Angeles (n)
Pittsburgh at San Francisco
Chicago at Milwaukee
Cincinnati at St. Louis
New York at Houston
r
1
k
f
t
I.
It
Sophomore's
Big TD Pass
Wins for UD
DETROIT 03) - Sophomore
Tom Zientek ignited the slow-
starting Detroit Titans with a 57-
yard touchdown strike and paved
the way for a 20-7 victory over
Northern Michigan last night.
Zientek, a 20-year-old from To-
ledo, Ohio, proved an adequate
successor to Detroit's Jerry Gross
by passing for two touchdowns
and setting up a third with a 37-
yard toss.
The Titans were a lack-luster
team pushed around by the small
college eleven from Michigan's
Upper Peninsula until Zientek's
57-yard pitch to George Walkosky
late in the first period.
The Wildcats had driven to De-
troit's 34 and 28 without scoring
before Zientek got the Titans go-
ng with his sudden pitch.
He hit Walkosky with another
scoring pass of 12 yards in the
second period. A 37-yard Zientek-
to-Tom Siedlaczek pass set up a
5-yard touchdown jaunt by Fred
Beier in the third period.
The Wildcats finally were able
to score in the final two minutes
on an eight-yard pass from Jerry
McCulloch to Bill Rademacher.
I-M Football
FACULTY
Radiation Lab 12, Cooley Lab 0
Mathematics 28, Chemistry 0
Nuclear Engineering 6, Psychology 0
Anthropology 8, Chem. Engineering 6
Biological Chem. 12, Philosophy 0
Willow Run 14, Engineering Mech. 0
"B" SOCIAL FRATERNITY
Beta Theta Pi 14, Evans Scholars 6
Alpha Epsilon Pi def. Alpha Kappa
Lambda, forfeit
Sigma Alpha Epsilon def. Trigon,
forfeit
Southern Cal, the defending na-
tional champion now on a 12-
game win streak, is ranked No. 1.
The Sooners are No. 3.
That is the only head-on clash
among the occupants of the Top
Ten.
The Trojans are rated slight fa-
vorites over Oklahoma. The cur-
rent Southern California heat
wave might affect the outcome
since the Trojans' reserves did
not sparkle in the opening 14-0
victory over Colorado.
The line-up for the rest of the
Top Ten:
No. 2 Alabama draws a soft
touch in Tulane.
No. 4 Texas, winner over Tu-
lane, opens conference play at
home against Texas Tech.
No. 5 Navy gets William and
Mary, a team that is expected to
do little better against the loaded
Middies than West Virginia, 51-7
losers last week.
No. 8 Arkansas gets Missouri this
week.
No. 9 Georgia Tech is host to
Clemson, which gets its second
tough assignment in a row.
No. 10 Pitt, a new member of
the groups after its 20-0 victory
over UCLA, is at home to Wash-
ington, knocked out of the tenth
spot 10-7 by Air Force last week.
I FOR SALE-Low priced used mattress.
Call 2-0626 after 7 p.m. B21.
NEWELECTRIC STOVE and dishwasher
$60 each. Call NO 5-5839. B18
FOR SALE-Component Hi-Fi set. Call
Jim, 663-5566. B17
FOR SALE-Microscope "Zeiss" mono-
cular-binocular, excellent cond. Ph.
542-6431, Detroit. B9
L. 0. SMITH ;Typewriter-13" super spe-
cial, Elite type. Perfect cond. $55.
May be seen at 420 Maynard. Ask for
Miss Hilton. 662-3241. B3
QUALITY STEREO-Fisher 200B tuner
and K X 200 amp. Two KLH-14 speak-
ers. $450 cash or will sell components
individually. Call 665-7990 after 6 p.m.
HOUSE-Three bedrooms, $14,000, terms
to suit. Lakewood, 115 Highlake, city,
gas heat, full basement, fenced back-
yard, wooded lot, near elementary
school, lake, shopping center, bus line.
Ainn. storm screens - screen porch,
tool shed, electric stove, dishwasher.
NO 5-5839. B15
DESK LAMP, pole lamp, stationary cab -
inet, letter file tray, file baskets. 3x5
metal card files (2 drawer), walnut
and brass book ends. Call R. L.
Wrentmore, days 5-9114 foraappoint-
ment eves NO 3-9493; If not available
leave name and number. B21
FOR RENT
BLOCK FROM CAMPUS-Large furn-
ished I- bedroom apt. $75 per month,
includes all utilities. NO 3-7268. F26
PARKING PLACE
Block from Law Quad. $4.50 per ma
NO 3-7268. 045
APARTMENT FOR SUBLEASE-$45/mo.
Good location, 535 Packard, NO 2-
8186. Move in today. C2
GRAD STUDENT (1 or 2), to share new
modern apt. 3 blocks from campus.
453-3287. C12
MAN WANTED to share furn'd. house.
$40/mo., utilities incid., car necessary.
662-3865, 5-7 p.m. C47
ROOM FOR RENT-Clean, plea ant;
garage included. Male student pre-
ferred. 223 Buena vista. NO 2-7692.
C50
LOOKING FOR GIRL ROOMMATE for
new, spacious apartment near cam-
pus. Excellent facilities. Phone NO
5-2167 after 6 p.m. if interested. C1
CAMPUS-3-bdrmn. duplex, 205 Ingalls at
Ann Street. Excellent for 4 or 5 per-
sons. $200. Immediate occupancy. NO
5-9121; Nights NO 5-8023 or NO 2-8313.
BEL-AIR APTS.-1 ana 2 oedrnoms. All
new, Danish modern furniture. Air-
conditioning, balconies, wall to wall
carpeting. Campus location. 2-5780.
Eves. 2-5140. C24
GIVE YOUR TUMMY A TREAT
WITH GOODIES FROM
U.S. Closes In on Davis Cup;
Doubles Win Sinks England.
BOURNEMOUTH, England (P)
- Chuck McKinley and Dennis
Ralston nailed down victory for
the United States with a Davis
Cup doubles win over Britain yes-
terday, as the Yankees took a giant
step toward spending Christmas
in Australia. \
McKinley and Ralston, the
American d o u b le s champions,
trimmed Mike Sangster and Bobby
Wilson 6-4, 6-8, 9-7, 6-2, for an
insurmountable 3-0 lead.
McKinley, from San Antonio,
Tex., and Frank Froehling, Coral
Gables, Fla., won both singles
Thursday. The remaining two sin-
gles matches t o d a y are a
formality.
The Americans now meet India
in Bombay next month for the
right to challenge Australia for
the tennis cup. They are heavily
favored to defeat the Indians.
TRANSPORTATION
WANT RIDE Tuesday and Thursday
from Ypsi to campus to arrive by 9
a.m., to leave at 6 p.m. Will share
expenses. Call 483-4452. G1
USED CARS
1961 VOLVO, Model 544. Will sacrifice.
Call Milan, HE 2-1456. N42
1958 CHEVROLET STATION WAGON-.
V-8 standard. Must sell this weekend.
A sacrifice at $500. NO 5-6851. N43
FOR SALE-.1962 Ducatio. Pretty poor
shape. Make a ridiculous offer. NO
3-2559. N36
'57 FORD V-8 auto. Good transportation.
Only $275. Call Phyllis, 663-6823 before
noon or 665-4927 after 4. N39
1963 BUICK LE SABLE-4-door hard-
top, power brakes and steering, many
extras. Excellent condition, low mile-.
age, private owner. HU 2-0405. N37
1962 AUSTIN-HEALY '3000-Blue, full
equipmen, $2495. 1962 MG-A MK. II
roadster. radio, luggage rack, nice,
$1895. 1961 Austin -Healey Sprite,
sharp, hardtop, red, radio, $1425.
Overseas Imported Cars Inc.
331 S. 4th. 662-2541
BIKES AND SCOOTERS
MAN'S ENGLISH BIKE. $30. NO 3-1379.
Z23
1960 CUSHMAN SCOOTER-New paint
job. Call 662-7880. Z22
FOR SALE--1962 Honda 305 Super Hawk.
Call 2-0050. Reasonable. Z11
1957 ZUNDAPP, 200 c.c. $250. A great
cycle. 338 E. Catherine, Apt. 3. See
Loren Sears. Call 662-8406. Z21
FOR SALE-Bella Motor Scooter, like
new. One of the finest made. Must
see to appreciate. 665-3291. Z12
FOR SALE-1960 Horex cycle. 100 c.c.
Excellent condition, $250. 3-4085 after
5:30. Z17
HONDA OF ANN ARBOR
1906 Packard Road
665-9281 Z3
CYCLES & SCOOTERS-BMW-r50--'59,
all white, extras. Harley tricycle, great
for campus and winter; carries 4,
giant luggage compartment. Vespas,
Cushmans and Lambrettas. NO 3-1714.
MISCELLANEOUS
CHEERLEA DER WA TCHERS:
All-Male Squad Leads C eers--Again
The doubles match was a thrill-
er, described by Bob Kelleher, the
American captain, as "the strang-
est cliff hanger of a match I've
ever seen.
"It was a match of so many
missed opportunity. As soon as
one team went ahead it threw
away its chance. I guess we won
in the end because the British
were even more jittery than we
were."
McKinley was the major factor
in the American win. He often up-
set the British pair by changing
pace at critical moments.
Ralston, f r o m Bakersfield,
Calif., had the best service record.
He dropped his only twice, while
the power-hitting Sangster was
broken three times and McKinley
and Wilson lost theirs four times
each.
The shale court had dried out
and played much faster than in
the singles, but a strong wind still
played tricks with the ball.
Hit Peak
The British pair hit their peak
in the second set, which they took
after the Americans had staved
off six set points, and then went
ahead 2-0 in the third.
Sangster lost his serve in the
sixth game of that set on a error
of judgment, when he let a shot
from McKinley go by only to
watch it land inside the baseline.
That was the turning point, and
the Americans won the set after
the British had saved three set!
points.
The fourth set was a rout. The
Americans went up 3-0, lost two
games, and won the rest.
* * *
Osuna Advances
BERKELEY (/P)-Rafael Osuna1
of Mexico, the U.S. champion, ad-
vanced through the Pacific Coast
International Championshin's
WANTED-Male graduate student to
live, rent free, near campus in com-
fortable home of able-bodied elderly
widower. Ample facilities for privacy
and study. Room, bath, and break-
fast. Osias Zwerdling. Call 3-5107, C3
ROOMMATE FOR 2-MAN APT.-Furn.
On lake 6 mi. from AA on Expressway.
Double garage. Fireplace. Dock and
private beach. $42.50 month each.
Phone NO 3-7281 between 5:30 p.m.
and7:30 p.m. C4
PUBLISHED
FOUR TIMES A YEAR
0
BUSINESS SERVICES'
IRONING in my apt. Reasonable. %
block from Markley Hall. Call 668-
6405. ill
HARPSICHORD instruction by graduate
of Yale School of Music. Instrument
available for practice. 8-8309. J
ANY MOTH HOLES, tears, or burns in
your clothes? We'll reweave them like
new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224 Arcade.
FOR THE FINEST in personalized sta-
tionery, call Bob Epstein, 663-4447.
J1
VOCAL INSTRUCTION
Singing and Speaking
CAROL F. WESTERMAN
Member of the National Association
of Teachers of Singing
715 Granger
NO 8-6584 J7
LET US TYPE and reproduce your
term papers and dissertations (Offset
for reproduction). Photo copy, mail-
ings. Gretzingers Business Service,
320 S. Huron, HU 2-0191 J8
DEVANEY PIANO SCHOOL-Instruction
by a leading professional pianist, Har-
vard alumnus, former pupil of Net-
zorg, Webster, Sandor; veteran of na-
tionwide engagements with Freddy
Martin's orchestra, including coast-
to-coast radio and recording experi-
ence; erstwhile orchestra leader and
concert soloist at the Palm Beach
Biltmore; and currently in second
year as musical director for Ann Ar-
bor's Rubaiyat, broadcasting via
WOIA. 308 Catherine, Ann Arbor. 662-'
3735. Scholarships Available. J6
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
GUITARS, ETC.
Make. Repiar, Buy and Sell
Private and Group Instruction
Hoots Daily
Herb David Guitar Studio
209 S. STATE
NO 5-8001
X1
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Open every night 'til 12
GEN ERATION
LOST AND FOUND
LOST--Keys in vicinity of Frieze or S.
State. Call 3-1561, Ext. 1275. A14
LOST-Vicinity of Angell Hall-Wrist-
watch, Elgin, gold, with inscription
1947. Call NO 3-1152, H. Sweeney. A15
LOST-In vic. of S. U. and Church St.---
Red clutchpurse and brown note-
book. Finder please phone Karen,
665-9761, Ext. 39. Reward. A13
PERSONAL
DIG the MET-TET. F9
RJFCNSWCAMPUS EVENTS
WCBN 650kc F28
COALESCENCE of the arts needs female
patroness. 8-6807. F8
GET YOUR "Activities Booklet" NOW-
Student Offices-Michigan Union. Fl
GERMAN MEAT PATTY on rye served
at ROMANOFF'S, at Bell Tower. P26
WANTED-Girl to share apt. Call 65-
9339. F44
Memo to the PHI's:
I'm driving to Chicago next weekend.
Larry F32
ROAD RUNNERS-For the best in rock
'n' roll, popular music, Call Mike,
663-9591. P49
$1.25
Haircut, Mon. thru Thurs., 347 May-
nard near Arcade. $1.50 Fri. and Sat.
LOST-Gray, tan, paisley, cotton, dress
jacket in vicinity of Tappan, Oakland,
or campus. Please return to 1026
Oakland or call 663-1117. F27
SHORT STORIES
NOW BEING considered for publi-
cation in the campus inter-arts mag-
azine, GENERATION. All material
submitted will be carefully read,
criticized, and returned if not used.
Manuscripts may be left at the main
office, Student Publications Bldg.
First issue in October.
VILLAGE APOTHECARY
1112 S. University
By RICHARD EISENBERG
Does the sight of a pretty cheer-
leader kicking up her heels make
your blood pressure rise?
Does her prancing and strutting
distract you from watching the
football game?
If these habits are bothering
you, you can attend this after-
noon's football game with SMU
with little worry. You see at Mich-
igan there just aren't any-female
cheerleaders, that is.
Rare Tradition
Being ole of the few schools
in the country to feature an all-
male cheerleading. squad, Michi-
gan's holler men will be captained
AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION
"Where marginal prices buy quali
diamonds!" 1209 S. University. 66
7151. F
DIAMONDS-Highest quality at cor
petitive prices. Call C. K. Reaver C
of Ann Arbor, 300 S-. Thayer. 1
2-1132. F
GEOLOGY MAJORS-Feel you're bel
taken for granite? Rock the Unive
sity with your crystal-clear thinkin
Be a Conference on the Universi
Delegate: petition at SGC office. F
SAVE OVER 60c on nationally adve
tised Mayo-Spruce U of M swem
shirts (navy, sizes SML,XL). Hur
to 421 or 219 Chicago House, We
Quad. F
UNIVERSITY STAFF MEMBER war
young, single woman to share 2-g
furnished apt. Location ideal to hc
pitals and campus. Call Ruth, 66
0862 after 7 p.m. F
DENTAL STUDENTS--Feel the 'U'
decaying-that something's gummii
up the -works? Don't denture hea
banging it against a wall. Sink yo
teeth into the Conference on t,
University. Should't chew be getti:
your petition at the SGC office? F:
SEE OUR COSMETICIAN FOR
SIMPLE SKIN PROBLEMS
crowds cheer more, just stare
more.
The boys work on their rou-
tines purely on their own time.
Practices are once a week plus a
Saturday morning drill.
Hamilton Helps
New stunts are always being
sought. A number of this year's
new ideas have been suggested by
team member John Hamilton, who
last summer instructed at high
school cheerleading clinics across
the country.
The squad this year includes
Gary Irwin and Fred Sanders, two
of the top Trampoline men in the
college ranks; John Candler, div-
er: John Hamilton, tumbler and
ATTENTION STUDENTS
Furniture, bookcases, books, ches
desks; Appliances; Antiques: Music
instruments. Bought, sold. DARWIN:
2930 S. State. NO 8-7744. P
AM I YOUR CUP OF TEA? Youn
visiting professor, newcomer to .
scene, wishes unscientific introducti
to emotionally mature young woma
Widely traveled, ex-Villager (vintag
1955), friend of Kulchur, the Foll
lore Center, Beaujolais, languagi
outdoor sports. Bored by cockta
parties, pomp, sports cars, spa
travel, TV, and "dating." I'll rep
to all letters. Write Box 3, Michiga
Daily. P
Meet The Right People
The purpose of our organization, uisir
established techniques of personali
appraisal and an IBM system, is 1
introduce unmarried persons to othe
whose background and. ideals ar
congenial with their own. Interview
by appointment. Phone after 8 a.r
NO 2-4867.
MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC
INTRODUCTION SERVICE
BARGAIN CORNER