THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, April10, 1971 (Continued from Page 5) PERSONAL FILIPINO JOURNALIST, American ed- ucated and a Ph.D. student, current- ly working in one of the country's major metroploitan dailies, wants a sophisticated, broadminded, and compatible upperclass or graduate female student as companion for a two-week trip to London Nov. 8-21, 1971. I'll be responsible for the round trip fare, New York-London, as well as for separate hotel accommodations, theatre, meals and trips, etc. C or - respondence between any interestedI student and myself between now and November is a must, in order to create a condition of intellectual and personal rapport. It will also be possible for me to visit Ann Arbor at least twice a month. Write: Bene- dicto M Buenavista, Copy Desk, The Plain Dealer, Cleveland, Ohio, 44114. 18F76 BILLIARDS, table tennis, bowling till 1 a.m. Fri.-Sat. Union M pin bowling Sun. 1 p.m:-mid. CF75 REALLY FINE WEDDING PHOTOG- RAPHY done by a Daily photographer. Call Jim Judkis, 769-5814. dF7@ SINCE ALMOST all gem diamonds come from Africa, a brand label for a ring mounting does not guarantee the quality of the major diamond in the ring. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. Univ. 663-7151. F then and NOW If you want a photograph just like the one your parents had-go to ANY studio. Call me only if you can ap- preciate my talents and style. Richard Lee, Inc.-761 -9452 DFtc EUROPE 71 APRIL 30- MAY 9 DETROIT-LONDON-DETROIT .... $199 AIR ONLY $179 PERSONAL LIVING on or near campus? Tired of your old furniture or just can't find a furnished apt.? Let GLOBE IN- TERIOR RENTALS help you. Rent one room of furniture or a houseful! Coordinate your own ensembles or rent an entire suite. All rentals with option to buy, or rent for two years and it's yours! We also rent office furniture. Contact Claudia Schaper, our Ann Arbor representative, anytime at 769-7667 or call collect 313-682-0078, from 10-6 p.m., Monday-Saturday. ectc CAN YOU BELIEVE IT? Tom and Harry have sold enough waterbeds so that they can offer Kingsize waterbeds for $29. Special finals sale to brighten those bleak days. Wave of the Future. 214 E. Washington, 769-9020. cFtc UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER presents EUROPE $159.00 SUMMER: DETROIT DEPARTURES M' diamondmen battle' tough Hurons in twinb~ll' standing PERSONAL -Pat Atkins "Waterbeds can get you through CA007 Det-Lon-Det 5/5 - 6/8 : CP049 Win-Ams-Lon-Win 5/6-6/7 CA003 Det-Lon-Det 5/6-6/24 CA94 Det-Lon-Det 5/6-6/24 CP071 D-Ams-Lon-Det 5/15 - 6/6 CAOO9 Det-Lon-Det 5/15 - 8/15 CA001 Det-Lon-Det 6/28 - 8/28 CAOO2 Det-Lon-Det 6/29- 8/26 CA010 Det-Lon-Det 7/2 - 8/19 CAO51 Det-Lon-Det 8/1 - 9/1 SUMMER: N.Y. DEPARTURES CA014 N.Y.-Lon-N.Y. 5/31-8/13 CA013 N.Y.-Lon-N.Y. 6/29-7/30 $159.00 $179.00 $159.00 $159.00 $189.00 $199.00 $219.00 $219.00 $219.00 $219.00 $199.00 $209.00 MAY 2 - 30 WINDSOR-LONDON AMSTERDAM-WINDSOR JUNE 24 - AUG. 5 DETROIT-LONDON-DETROIT AUGUST 2 - SEPT. 13 DETROIT-LONDON-DETROIT $209 $219 $209 Administrative and Travel Services by .Students International UAC Travel, 2nd floor Michigan Union 763-2147 or 769-5790 2Ftc [F YOU ARE considering an abortion, take some time to communicate with vour heavenly father through fasting and prayer for inspiration to make the right decision. Phone 764-2004 if you want to talk things over or need assistance in prayer. 9 36F76 ATTENTION - Pinball freaks, the Wiz- ard has come to Mark's Coffee House (605 E. William) bringing a room full of pinballs. DF70 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $7.50 Rh positive, $10 & $12 Rh neg- ative. Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9-4. Wed., 1-7. 18-21 years old need par- ent's permission. Michigan Community Blood Center 404 W. Michigan, Ypsilanti 483-1894 Fte INCLUDES TAX, TRANSFERS AND FIRST NIGHT ACCOMMODATIONS IN LONDON TRAVEL ARRANGEMENTS-CALL NOW STU DENTOU RS CALL NOW STEVE-761-9231 ALAN-769-1407 LISA-761-8215 ALEX-761-7568 DAVID-763-2278 CF8O Red is a rose, green is the grass, you'll feel much better, with a waterbed under your mass.' Love, Tom and Harry cFtc WATERBEDROOMS have lots of poten- tial.. Consider the possibilities at Wave of the Future Waterbeds. Tom and Harry discount everything. 214 E. Washington. 769-9020. cFtc IT'S A WONDER anything this good is legal, the Four Rivers Company, 769- 8235 dist. for waterbed company, prices start at $30. cF99 ADVENTURESS Send $12.95 in cash silver or gold buillion to the Wagon Werke along with your VW and get a spring tune- up for "cheep." 1245 Rosewood, Ann Arbor. 662-2576. 61F78 CAN'T GET IT UP? Maybe you need a Wave of the Future Waterbed. Re- sults not guaranteed but lots of fun trying. See Tgm, Harry, and Cathy at 214 E. Washington for further con- sultation. 769-9020. cFtc EXPERIENCED SECRETARY- desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing etc. IBM selectric Call Jeanette, 971-2463. 12Jtc EYPNP-THERAPY: to help you lose weight and .stop smoking. Douglas Belts, 761-0440. 8-10:30 a.m. cFtc For the student body: FLARES by A Levi Farah Wright A Tads 'A Sebring CHECKMATE times of no money better than By ELLIOT LEGOW money can get you through times of no waterbeds." The Michigan diamondmen, vic- Love, tors in both ends of a doublehead- Tom and Harry cFtc er Tuesday, try for another two ------ - --- -- wins today when they host East- TRAVELLING THIS SUMMER? - Try ern Michigan in a twin bill start- double-knit flare slax from Marty's. One rinse and they're ready to wear. ing at 1:00 p.m. /Marty's Men's Fashion Clothing, 310 Pitching h a s been Michigan's S. Sate.C~tcforte so far this season and it was WEDDING INVITATIONS you can dig. strong pitching performances by Custom designs. Do your thing and Jim Burton and Mickey Elwood call 761-0942 anytime. 96F80 which gave the Wolverines their BOARD EXAMS - Kaplan tutoring .3-2 and 2-1 wins. classes now being formed for June and July. ATGSB EXAMS and July Michigan hurlers have not fail- LSAT EXAM. For information, call ed to complete a game in t h e 851-6077. 55F80 Wolverine's twelve outings to date YOUR DRUGSTORE away from home. and the composite earned run av- Village Apothecary, 1112 S. University. erage remains at 1.15. Coach Mo- cFtc by Benedict has lost one of four THINK YOU'RE pregnant? Call 76- aces, however, as left-hander Pete GOTIDE for Problem Pregnancy Coun- Helt suffered an injury to h i s seling Referral. cFD pitching hand and won't be able HAPPINESS FOR $12.95 to work today against the Hurons. If you love your VW give it plugs and Righty Tom Fleszar will work points and a complete tune up on one game for Michigan but the our spring sale. Wagon Werke, 1245 other starter is uncertain due to Rosewood, Ann Arbor. 662-2576. 60F78 the injury to Helt. TOM couldn't get his motor to start. Fleszar h a d a 2-1 record on It was causing his girlfriend to part. Mihgnstidt rzn n He bought a waterbed,completely ownigan's trip to Arizona and lost his head, and now he's afeared o for his heart. No pitchers other than Fleszar, Love, Helt, Burton, and Elwood have Tom and Harry worked for Michigan yet this year, cFtoso Benedict will have to c o m e WATER BEDS - don't consider this a back with Burton or Elwood or fad. Proven to aid the back and aid reach into his bullpen.- the couple. 50 yr. guarantee. All sizes For the Wolverines to k e ep Lowest price anywhere. Willing Frte ovrietoo make deals on 5 or more. Four Rivers winning, however, they are going Co. 769-8235. cFtc to have to get some hitting help. ABORTION Referral Services. forPat Sullivan, Michigan's sopho- which some agencies charge fees, are more firstbaseman, has delivered also performed without charge by the timely hits and has driven in 12 following University connected agen- runs ties: Counseling Division, Bureau of The outfield 'also has been hit- Psychological Services: 764-9466 ting well with Mike Bwen, John Mental Health Clinic: 764-8314 Hornyak, and Tom Kettinger all Office of Religious Affairs: 764-7442 Student Services Counseling batting over .300. However, Bene- Office: 764-7430. Cusln DFtc dit worries about the 1 a c k of -- 64- - ----- - I timely hitting from his players. EUROPE $159.00 Filling in the infield for Michi- gan will be Sullivan, Jim Koco-! SUMMER: Detroit Departures loski at second, Mike Rafferty at 3. 5/2 -6/6 Det/Ams/Det. $159 short, and Mark Carrow at third 4, 5/5 -6/25 Det/Ams/Det $169 t n akCro ttid 5. 5/16-8/16 Det/Ams/Det $189 The Hurons will give Michigan 6. 6/25-8/29 Det/Ams/Det $209 a good test as they have six .300 6A. 6/26-8/27 Det/Lon/Det $209 hitters and boast a 5-5-1 record. 7. 7/1 -8/15 Det/Ams/Det $209 Competing in the Anaheim Col- 8. 8/1 -9/2 Det/Ams/Det $219 SUMMER: New York Departures legiate Baseball Tournament, the Hurons, the defending NAIA na- 9. 5/28-6/27 NY/Ln/NY $199 10. 7/12-8/1 NY/Ams/NY $209 t i o n a l championships finished Also, a Complete Range of Travel strong to capture the consolation Services: Rail Passes; Car Leases & bracket title. Purchases; Motorcycles; Intra-Eu- Thirdbaseman Al McLaughlin ropean Charters & Many More, leads the Huron attack. Mc- PLEASE PHONE OR STOP BY AT Laughlin hit .375 in Anaheim and EITHER OF OUR TWO OFFICES: WORLD-WIDE CHARTER was named to the all-tournament 211RSouthW Sae Strt team at third. Also named to the oru all-tourney squad w a s second 611 Church Street sacker Mike Ferguson. Ann Arbor, Michigan Dave Yeager leads Eastern's Dial: "ON-A-TRIP" outfielders with a .333 mark and 66-2-8747 has good power. Freshman Larry Open only to U of m students, facui- Bolt hit .353 on the Huron's trip try, staff, and immediate families. adas salse isl sa ________________________ and also established himself as a CNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES CENTER strong defensive performer. presents The Hurons' pitching does not EUROPE $159.00 quite match Michigan's but their team earned average of 3.35 is SUMMER: DETROIT DEPARTURES adequate. CA007 Det-Lon-Det 5/5 - 6/8 $159.00- CP049 Wind-Ams-Lon-1,as e s CAOO Det-Lon-Det. 5/6-6/21 $15900 O iyOd~leS CA94 Det-Lon-Det 5/6-6/21 $159.00 CP071 D-Ams-Lon-Det 5/15 - 6/6 $189.00 Bring Results CA09 Det-Lon-Det 5/15- 8/15 $199.00 CA001 Det-Lon-Det 6/28 - 8/2 $219.00 _ = _ =___ CA002 Det-Lon-Det 7/2- 8/19 $21900 *.----..-_- - CA05 Det-Lon-Det 8/1 - 9/1 $219.00 SUMMER: N.Y. DEPARTURES IA04 N.Y.-Lon-N.Y. 5/31-8/13 $19.00I ANO CA13 N.Y.-Lon-N..Y. 6/29 - 73 $209.00 / Administrative and Travel Services j by Students International UAC Travel, 2nd floor Michigan Union I 763-2147 or 769-5790. 2Ftc famous AUTO TUNE-UP & REPAIR. U.S. and I import cars. Still ludicrously reason- . able. A.A. Motorsports (student own-I ed/operated). 662-6746. 28F75 SITUATIONS WANTED: Parttime or I -67 MGB V.W., BRG, AM-FM, many ex- 98F74 tras, engine and trans rebuilt. Runs I L great. Very reasonable. 769-5735. 6:30- 9 P.M, DF76 PROFESSIONAL, versatile, lead/r h y-1 OPEN 2 thm guitarist. Everlon Nevermore. I Must sing. 1-835-3328. .54F77 Ieakfus FLYING TO NEW YORK AFTER EXAMS?-For schedules, reservations, youth cards or reduced rate informa- tion, call Peter Graham, 761-4014. . 22F8C11 HUNGRY? 3% minute walk from the Bagel Factory CARRIAGE HOUSE 1224 Washtenaw 665-8825 -Associated Press IT'S A ROBBER! It's a thief! No! It's South African Gary Player tiptoeing out of creek after playing a shot from the murky depths in yesterday's second round of the Masters Golf Tournament in Augusta. Player finished with an even par 72. M1asters story: Coody faters, Ja r leads The new look Tigers . . . ... and, still, Number Six THE WRITING of final columns is left as an option to senior sports editors, one which I was planning to pass up. Yesterday, however, I met Al Kaline. The Detroit Tiger organization annually hosts a press day, probably hoping to get as many reporters and cameramen as possible out of their hair in one day. I was among that group as Tiger players bounced up the dugout steps of Tiger Stadium and onto the waiting field of press and television crews. Since Kaline had not been in the first contingent of Tigers to come up the steps, I waited as unobtrusively as possible for his appearance. Tiger special events director Lew Matlin, noticing me, approached and asked, "Can I help you find someone?" Perhaps a trifle too eagerly, I replied, "I'm waiting for Mr. Kaline." "Mr. Kaline?" he echoed with an air of showmanship. "He'll be right out." A few moments later, Kaline appeared. I thought, as I began talking to Kaline, of his 19 seasons with the Detroit club. He perched a foot on the top step of the dugout and, resting his hand on his left knee, answered my questions courteously, as if what he was relating to me had never been discussed by him before. Unlike some of the other Tigers on the field, Kaline matched in person his television image. Squinting only slightly in the direct sunlight, Kaline. com- mented enthusiastically about the "new" look Tigers of opening day. "I -prefer playing for a club that uses a lot of different strategies like the hit and run," he says. "It's better to be trying something when the runs aren't coming than to be standing with the bat on your shoulder. With a running strategy, you're not depending on one or two persons to deliver." Kaline could have been reciting Manager Billy Martin's words. "With running, aggressive baseball," Martin asserts, "you're making fools of the opposition. It's not fun to al- ways sit back and hit, because there are times when the hits don't come. Then you have to do everything possible to unnerve the opposition, especially the pitcher." Martin's non-stop approach, so much a reversal of Tiger bombshell baseball strategy in the last decade, is a photocopy of his personality. Assertive and aggressive, Martin is a believ- er in actions speaking louder than words. "When I came to Detroit in 1958, people built me up as a holler bug and a spark plug. I never considered myself a yell, yell guy," Martin says, "and I don't now. I lead by my actions, not by my words. I'm aggressive. I don't give any ground. They labeled me that BRASH Martin, and I don't bother shaking the phrase. As long as they spell my name right, I don't care," Martin ends with a laugh. After such a long self-appraisal, Martin complained fur- ther by way of illustration, "When Bobby Richardson comes into a room, he's introduced as World Series Hero Bobby Rich- ardson. When I come into the room, I'm called that BRASH, cocky Martin, and I had a better World Series record than Richardson did." The Tigers are gung-ho about the new running ball that Martin has brought to Detroit. "I'm glad to be playing for Billy Martin and I'm glad Billy is playing this way," Kaline says. Kaline adds with a quick grin, "I stole three bases in spring training." Back in 1958, Martin and Kaline were teammates, Martin splitting his baseball duties between shortstop and third base for the Detroit team with Kaline in his ac- customed right field spot. Now Martin has returned to Detroit, where the stadium name has changed and the streets have changed. And Al Kaline has changed, too, to some extent. "Of course, he's matured a heck of a lot more from when I played with him," Martin notes. "There just aren't many players as complete a ball player as he is. Running, hit- ting, fielding,,he can do them all. It's amazing that after 19 years of playing ball, he still looks like a young player." As with other Detroiters of my generation, there has always been a Tiger team with the name Al Kaline on the line-up card. His first game with the Tigers was half way through the 1953 season at the age of 18 and since then he's added 2364 more. In .1955 he became the youngest player ever to win the league batting championship. "I was just a 20-year-old kid then," Kaline recalls. "Every- thing went absolutely perfect that year, I'd swing the bat and it would go through for a hit. You only get those years once in a lifetime." Nothing draws fans like success and excellence and Kaline showed both that year, the start of my interest in the Tigers and sports. Kaline continues, "There was pressure on me to keep myself at that pace, but it was gone within the next couple of years." Much else besides success was to follow Kaline in those coming years. I could remember his succession of injuries; the broken cheek bone in 1959, the broken collar bone in 1962, the foot operation in 1965, the broken finger in 1967, and the broken arm in 1968; and the mental frustration of a fifteen year wait fqr a World Series game. Through all that Kaline managed to remain the consistent, conscientious man in rightfield. Those thoughts, more than of (P)aline's successes, prompted me into a very unreportorial request as I finished the interview with Kaline. I could not help but ask him for his autograph. #. } D F! CUSTOM SANDALS We Make and Guarantee for 2 Yrs. Fine HAndmade Sandalsin 20 Styles CALL 662-6845 HIDE-OUT, 343 Maynard St. Come On In 86F90 MAGIC IS FUN! You should have a magician at your next party. Call Bill 764-0731. CFtc DEAR MILDRED Go to the Wagon Werke at once. I just traded 75 lb. of brown rice for a spring tune-up worth $12.95. It's just off Industrial Hwy. in Ann Arbor, 1245 Rosewood, phone 662-2576. 59F78 FREE Computer Dating information. Send name, address to Data-Mate, 1324 CD CommercesCenter, Lansing. 99F80 REIDE NEEDED to Washington, D.C. anytime after 6 p.m. on Tuesday, April 27. Will share driving, expenses. Please call Harry at 764-9833. DF76 PEOPLE NEEDED for five week Alaskan summer backpack expedition with ex- perienced guides. Call John, 663-6036, or Otis, 663-9283. FD WHY BUY mass-produced wedding bands? Have yours personally design- ed. Order now for summer. Reason- able prices, Call Jhan, 769-7550 after 4:00. F79 TURN ON TO YOUR MIND. Biofeed- back (alpha wave) equipment avail- able. Explore meditation states and other altered states of consciousness. Call John Evans, 769-0868, for more information. CF80 SALES CONSULTANT' "PLACING SALESMEN IS OUR ONLY BUSINESS" 2155 Jackson Rd., Suite 101. 769-8270 Ftc AUGUSTA, Ga. (YP) - Don Jan- uary, a lean and laconic veteran, overtook fellow Texan Charles Coody with a three-under-par 69 yesterday and ambled into t h e second round lead in the 35th Masters Golf championship. January, 41, who is in his 16th year on the pro tour, had a 36 hole total of 138, six under par for two trips over the demanding Au- gusta National Golf Club course, a 6,980 yard, par 72 layout. He was one stroke in front of Coody, who had to rally strongly El THER . i Ii II I 'PAS I ~1EY I 4i HOURS I t served I NEY a aLdberty 1 I U I kND I ands ith his oupo mmm.u~mmm..mmiinmmmuminammm for a 73. and pudgy Bob Murphy, who got a share of second when he chipped in for a birdie on the final hole. They are tied at 139. Tom Weiskopf, a 6-foot-3, 28- year-old, was alone in fourth at 140. Weiskopf had a second round 69, including a bogey. five on the final hole. Next was a quartet at 141, head- ed by disappointed Jack Nicklaus, the current PGA king and the man picked by most to grab the green jacket that goes to the winner of this famed tournament. Nicklaus had a 71 and was tied with Gene Littler, the man who lost to Billy Casper in a playoff for this title a year ago, D a l e Douglass and 25-year-old Hale Ir- win. Littler had a 69, Douglass a 71 and Irwin a 72. "I'm kind of disappointed," Nicklaus said after taking con- secutive bogeys on the 14th and 15th holes. "It was kind of a fun- ny round. I had a chance to bust it wide open and I let it get away from me." Disappointed as he was, he was the only one of the game's super stars in strong contention. Casper had a 73 for 145. South African Gary Player had another 72 for 144. Arnold Palmer, as us- ual playing before a major por- tion of the massive gallery of some 20,000 had a scrambling 72 for 145, seven strokes back of the leader. The raw-boned, drawling Jan- uary has scored 10 tour victories in his career, including the PGA national championship. He won his last title in the 1970 Greater Jacksonville Open. r1 1 I11 The April 15 deadline is near YOUR Federal tax money paid for My Lai BUT YOU DON'T HAVE TO BUY WAR For information contact Ann Arbor War Tax Counselling I: 15c ofonCne s of ut I 11 State Street at Liberty P.O. Box 559; 662-9484 AFTERNOONS 2-5 TUES.-THURS. 7:30-9:00 (, I' 'I Em wammmm DISHEARTENED? On the road to nowhere ? 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