Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, May 29, 1970 T Fillser 4 Cubs' last inning rally nets win FOR RENT FOR RENT LOST AND FOUND THE ABBEY THE LODGE LOST-4 mo. old large male part- two-run homer in the ninth in- The Ann Arbor Fair Housing Ordi- iAIGerman shepherd wearing red collar. ;ning, his second of the game, gave nance and the University of Mich- CARRIAGE HOUSE+ Lost Sat. near East U., Tappan, andth Cicg Cusa 8-vcor igan Regents' bylaws prohibit dis- THE FORUM VISCOUNT Oakland. Answersto "Boris." Call the Chicago Cubs an -victory crimination in housing. Questions still the local favorites! Several select 761-0422. 42Atc over the Pittsburgh Pirates yes- should be directed to Off-Campus apartments available for summer and -------- - ----- terday. Housing, 764-7400. fall smesters in each of these modern PLEASE, f anyone has seen a moheled Hickman's first two-run homer' buildings. grey medium size torn cat w/white stomach and partly white face, either into the left field seats had tied 1 AND 2 BEDROOMCaptfOrFalflish Charter Rea ity dead or alive in West Park area, I the score at 6-6 in the seventh but I AN 2 EDROM ats. or all.Dis- ,have to take rabies shots. Please call the Pirates had recaptured the washers and A/C, Call Jim, 761-0321 Fine Campus Apartments Les, 769-7997 eves., or Trudy, 764- teadinteeghd nrecatured the at 408 Hill, No. 9. 6C23 1335 5. University 665-8825 1406 days. 41A20 lead in the eighth on Matty Alou's 1 Ctc -- i68single, following a wild throw by DOUBLE SIZE TOWNHOUSE, walk ____ LOST-Sun., Diag, tortoise shell glasses. Hank Aguirre, third Cub pitcher. downtown from lovely two bdrm. for Black case, "Phila," reward. 662-2686. B family. Many extra rms. . photo- THOM AS( D A7A 35A18 Billy Williams singled with one graphic dkrm., family rm. w/fireplace, iL- --out in the bottom of the ninth off 1g. study. All appliances and dish-# FOUND-Ladies brown rimmed glasses Gene Garber and Hickman fol- washer. $275 pays-central ac, heat, 914 S. STATE in black reptile case on E. Univ. near water. 761-4008, 725 W. Huron. Avail. I Bdrm. 3-Man Oakland. 769-3449. 37A18 now. 37Ctc Air Cond. calico cat. Janet, 769-1389. 38A19 A _____________~~~~ ____- td okLS o onhln-ardfml u STRATFORD 629 S. FOREST 2-Bdrm. 4-Man On Campus Air Cond. Parking 761 -8055 50Ctc EDINBURGH APTS., 912 Brown St., Kings Inn Apts., 939 Dewey, Royal Dutch Apts., 715 Church, taking ap- plications now for Fall rental. Call 761-6156, 761-3466. 48C22 AVAIL. FOR SUMMER, & FALL ALBERT TERRACE 1700 Geddes Beautifully decorated, large 2 bedroom,' bi-level apartments. Stop in daily noon to 5:30 (Mon.-Fri.), 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sat. or phone 761-1717 or 665- 8825. liCtc ROOM FOR MAN in nicetsoutheast area home. Call 663-8244 after 5 p.m. or weekends. CX! PARKLANE 511 E. HOOVER -Lg. 1 Bdrm. -2-4 People -Bilevel -Air Cond. -Dishwashers -Parking -Laundry 761-8055 or 663-3809 2Ctc Laundry Parking 761 -8055-769-4759 lCtc Campus-Hospital' , Fall Occupancy , , a, Furnished Apartments Campus Management, Inc. 662-7787 335 E. Huron 470tc APTS 3 LIMITED j Fall Rentals 663-0511 761-5440 Featuring Forest Terrace, 1001 S. Forest, Mgr. in Apt. No. 211. Park Terrace, 848 Tappan, Mgr. in Apt. No. 10. Many other 1, 2 and 3 bdrm. apts. available on campus. 38C82 ONE-MAN APT.-Kitchen, bath, living room; avail. June-on. 662-4112. 713 E. Kingsley, No. 3. 5C18 STUDIO ROOM FOR MAN with priv. entrance and lavatory. Call 663-82441 after 5 p.m. and weekends. C vTI SUMMER SUBLET MODERN 2 bedroom 3-man apt. for July-Aug. A/C, dishwasher. 521 Wal- nut, Apt. 8 769-2228. 37U22 TWO MAN furnished apt, with utilities to sublet July lst. 906 Packard. 665- 2125. 38U19 JULY-AUG. Whole house for sublet. 3 bdrm., kitchen, living room, din- ing room, 1'2 bath, basement. $200/ mo. Fits 4 comfortably. Will take up to 6, single or in groups. Near IM bldg. Call 662-1989. DU21 LOST-Cat, 12 lb. black and white, pink nose, long tail, short hair, 1230 White. 764-2171 8-5, 769-6234 any other time. REWARD. 39A20 LOST-Male black kitten around Law- rence St., N. State, N. Division area since Saturday. 663-1639. 40A18 LOST - My identity in blue French purse. 769-0874. Reward. 33A18 LOST - Young male cat, white and gray, very affectionate. Pleasecall Peter~, 769-0673, 34A19 2 LOST CATS-One orange and white male and one small adult black and white female. Vic. Hill and Tappan. Return to 8201.2 Hill. 764-1220, Pam, 26A18 FOR SALE STOVE, $50; washing machine, $25. Call 662-5395. 27Btc PARTS FOR '62 FORD. 3345 Packard. j 288322 sports axy NIGHT EDITOR: j PAT ATKINS lowed with his 10th homer of the season into the left field bleachers. Hickman has hit five home runs in the last six games. Cleo James of Chicago hit his first major league homer in the sixth inning of a see-saw game in which the Cubs came from be-. hind three times to win. Cards soar 1 . -Associated Press PIRATE THIRD-SACKER, Richie Rebner, lets the ball get away 'ey t nroI erum PHILLIPS tape recorder for sale. Call! 769-4121. DB23 HAND PAINTED screens for sale. Caro- lyn, 662-8056. 25B20 TENNIS RACKET (Wilson), almost new. Ex. cond., best offer. 769-7186. 26B18 14 FOOT Fiberglass Runabout w/wood top, 40 horse Mercury outboard elec- tric, w/trailer. Many accessories. $645. 434-0774 or NO 8-6696. 20B18{ NEW YORK - St. Louis knock- as the Cubs Billy Williams slides sa ed out Jim McAndrew in a four- inning. The Pittsburgh team let theg run first inning yesterday and a ninth-inning homer by Jim Hickma rode to a 9-2 victory over the >--- ---------- - New York Mets behind Bob Gib- son. COURT HEARINGS-:* fely into third in the fourth game get away, too, losing on an. Joe Hague knocked in five runs for the Cardinals with a home run and three singles in the 13-hit attack against loser McAndrew, Don Cardwell, Cal Koonce and Tug McGraw. Kuhn talks at trial; MUSICAL MDSE., TRADEWI NDS 121 E, HOOVER -1 Bdrm. 3-Man -2 Bdrm. 4-Man -Bilevel -Garbage Disposal -Central Air/cond. -Laundry -Parking 761-8055 or 761-9178 3Ctc 711 ARCH near State andPackard Modern 2-bdrm, apts. for Fall SUMMER SUBLET - Own bedroom in air-conditioned house on Church. Immediate occupancy. Call 665-6807. 23UlE 2-MAN APARTMENT available for July- August sublet. Roomy, close to cam- put. $90. Call 769-0872. 24UF TWO BEDROOM furnished - Campus location. Ideal for couple. Call 761- 2095 after 6:00 p.m. or on weekends. 7U1 DIRT CHEAP-Bi-level apt. for rent from June-Aug. 761-6365. 35U19 FEMALEROOMMATES wanted June- Aug. Rent negot. A/C, parking, excel, lent campus location. 761-7956. 25U18 RADIOS, REPAIRS Vic Davalillo and Julian Ja- YINI t I f .NIAIIUt vier walked to open the game and HERB DAVID GUITAR STUDIO ! Rich Allen singled, scoring Day- Instruments and accessories, new and By The Associated Press charge of common assault against used. Lessons, repairs. 209 S. State. lillo. After Joe Torre walked, load- The ssociatPrs c argdefenseman Ted Green of the Bos- 665-8001. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. X ing the bases, Cardwell replaced'; The courts of two nations conl- dfnea e re fteBs 76-12454.1 McAndrewaue s inged scoring vened again yesterday to continue ton Bruins should be thrown out TENOR SAX., $100. Doug, 761-2454. inquiry into two controversial because it is contrary to the Bill ____X while Ken Boswell wasrthrowing' professional athletic disputes. Of Rights. GIBSON electric guitar, $89. Larry, 761- out Mike Shannon. In New York, Baseball Com- Houston also told Provincial 9431. 39X18 missiqner Bowie Kuhn testified Judge Michael Fitzgerald that RADIO, TV, HI-FI & car repair. House in Federal Court yesterday that Crown witnesses had failed to calls-VERY REASONABLE! 769DX2i stelingcollective bargaining between play- show that Green committed any DX2__ _ ers and owners was the best way offense during a National Hockey ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS-Un- to affect changes in the game's League exhibition game here last BIKES AND SCOOTERS beaten Luis Tiant notched his Is ySept. 21. ___ ixt pichin vitor andpowredreserve system. YAMAHA 180 - Excellent cond. low sixth pitching victory and powered I Green and Wayne Maki of the mileage. 761-0573 after 6 p.m. 43Z20 the Minnesota Twins to an 11-2 Curt Flood's 3 million antitrust St. Louis Blues engaged in a stick - shelling of the Milwaukee Brew- swinging duel in the first period. PHOTO SUPPLIES ers yesterday with three singles suit against baseball was given Green suffered a fractured skull and three runs batted in. over to the cross examinaton ofanddidn't play last season. AT CENTURY The lusty hitting Tiant, raising Kuhn, flrst defense witness. atio AThBshs17 aeget.44 d Kuhn, under cross examination \The Best inhis 1970 average to .434, led a by Jay Topkis, one of Flood's at- Good Used Cameras five Brewer pitchers by stroking torneys, said compulsory arbitra- tion of salary disputes would not WE BUY, SELL, TRADE ,run-Scoring single in Minneso- be fatal to baseball." I = ta's four-run second and a two- Everything Photographic run blow in a four-run fourth. Kuhn had testified that one of Irish star DARKROOM SUPPLIES the purposes of the reserve system LUMINOUS PAPER Cesar Tovar drove in three more was to equalize competition on the " runs with his fifth homer in the field. Topkis asked him in cross on this and that Playing the game of musical franchise eric siegel WASHINGTON THE LATEST rumblings out of this city of the white marble pillars have it that the ABA's Washington Caps will be moved out of the Nation's Capitol as a condition of the much- talked about merger of the two pro basketball leagues. That such a deal has apparently been proposed comes as no great surprise to anyone. The locations of professional sports franchises have long been at the mercy of the financial and profit-making motives of the owners, with little concern for the good of the sport or the wishes of the fans. Of all the sports, baseball has been the most frequently and flagrant participator In what seems to be a new na- tional pastime of musical franchises. The most recent ex- ample of baseball's hit-and-run (or should it be hit-and- niss?) policy in regards to franchises occurred in Seattle. After only one turn at bat,/the owners agreed to let the now- defunct Pilots vacate the west coast and become the Mil- waukee Brewers. The reason given for the move, was, naturally, financial. The club was bankrupt, and the rest of the League's owners, with a glance at their bankbooks and a long, hard look at their own self-interest, decided on a policy of franchise-relocation that smacks of Vaudevillian logic. If the fans won't come see the team, take the team to see the fans. Later, the owners issued a statement to the effect that if the League ever expands again, Seattle will be the first town to get an expansion team. But the real bitter irony of the affair is that the Pilots were shunted to Milwaukee. It wasn't too long ago that the Braves, who started out in Boston, left that same city. The Braves' move to Atlanta was only one spin in a dizzy- ing whirl of franchise shifts. The Dodgers and Giants moved to the west coast, the old Washington Senators showed up In the Twin Cities, and Charlie Finley took his traveling circus (it was sacrilegious to call it a team back then) to Oakland. Baseball hasn't been the sole offender, though. Remem- ber something called the Minnesota Lakers? And wasn't there once a basketball team in Syracuse? And the Hawks weren't always from Atlanta, either. Look it up. Taken as a whole, these franchise shifts-especially the move out of Seattle and the proposed move of the Caps- suggest a rather frightening pattern. Any time a financial hitch develops, or a town isn't the financial bonanza it was thought to be, or someone sees greener pastures\or a new sta- dium across the country, a team isn't where it was the year before. What makes this whole thing so detestable is that It reveals an underlying capitalist consciousness that is anti- thetical to the whole spirit of sports. Sure, sports have be- come commercialized, and yes, they are big business' even though the courts keep insisting they aren't. But when sports becomes equated with a commercial pro- duct, and franchises are opened up and shut down like auto plants, something is very wrong. People attend sports events for many reasons, some quite obvious, others less definable, but they don't go to see a team because a greedy owner is standing by a turnstile. This commercial orientation of owners, is understapd- able only if one takes times out to consider who they are. Most of them are old capitalists who made their money in the city and have the attitude that they are coming down to the farm to show the hicks how a real sports team operates. The epitome of this type of owner is the above-mentioned Mr. Finley. A few years ago, he came swinging into Kansas City with a couple of million smackers to back up his two-bit ideas on how to win fans anc make money. He brought in white shoes and organ grinders, along with a platoon of goats and an occasional mule. But the real ass was Finley himself. He thought people would buy baseball like they buy insurance. When they didn't, he picked up and went to Oakland. That's like re- neging on an insurance policy, to put the matter Into a perspective pro owners can understand. The point of the story-and of this column-is that what is needed is not new franchises and new cities or even new fans. What is needed are owners who are more aware of and responsive to the interest of the fans. This idea seems like another one of those nice abstrac- tions, but It can be made a reality. Cities in which pro teams are located can band together in a sort of union, bargaining with the pro leagues for binding commitments that the teams stay in a city for a given number of years. In return, the teams would be given the privilege of play- ing in a city and using the facilities of that city. In the event that an owner cries "bankruptcy," he could be required to place 51 per cent of the team's stock up for public sale to residents of the city. If any club owner tries to violate these terms, the union of cities should make it known that it will deny all clubs in the league the use of city facilities. It seems clear that the only way to stop the game of musical franchises is to tie the maestros down. Aq 4' ." 0 0 0 features include: dishwasher balcony air-cond. and much more Repairs on all makes Phone 761-7848 or 482-8867 26M, JULY-AUG. SUBLET modern, a/c, 2 bdrm. 125 Hill. Call after 6 p.m. 662- Campus-il Block-Fall 7904. 36U21 418 East Washington-Mod. 1 bdrm. for 2 or 3 students. TWO BEDROOM 668-6906 Air-conditioned, close, available June .t 521 WALNUT, modern, spacious. 2 bdrm., 3-man, dishwasher. 668-6906, r 42Ctc Summiti Associates 1 AND 2 BEDROOMS FOR, FALL -GARBAGEIDISPOSALS --AIR CONDITIONERS -SOME DISHWASHERS, -LAUNDRY FACILITIES -PARKING 761-8055 4Ctc 1. Call 769-7538 (late). 34U18 3 RM. BASEMENT Apt. Has kitchen! and bathrm. Corner of Packard and S. Fifth Ave., 4 blocks from central campus. For sublet now to Aug. 30. $70/mo. including utilities. 665-8316.1 31U18 Century Camera (At our new location) 4254 N. Woodward, Royal Oak Between 13 and 14 Mile Rd. Ll 9-6355 Take I-94 to Southfield Expr. North to 13 Mile Road-then East to Woodward and North (MichiganBank. Security and Diner Charges accepted) Tt BSDtC BUSI NESS SE RVICES third and George M it t e r w a l d chased in two more with a single. and double. Every Minnesota starter, in- cluding Tony Oliva and Leo Car- denas who stretched hitting streaks to 13 games, hit safety, examination if he really believed 1 -111JJUL Ll "U U5~5 that statement. By The Associated Press "It hasn't been perfect," said_ i a" ":'" '?"A:?J:": rxyY;grS :^R:fi'r:":?":. ".}'":4:":{6???.}}:":4i:"ii:{?i}: rd":'r:"X :C:."::. ':{":": :4";?? ::"y:"}::}: .<":{ii'f.{R".};.}:: y, ""4:ti" '1~' :S G:"S: }":4,.^:?~.1' :":'. ":i":?":ti?^:'.? .:.{?{h.F ::i .5{:.1"::.1''i.:.:i..'. :..:":i::tif::tiQ: t..ii{.".:?":..:"i:::":"::":':iii .............:":":i::Gnti:"%:S:?:i":':"::": :.f Kuhn, "but it has moved the game overall in that direction." In Ottawa, defense lawyer Ed-' ward Houston said yesterday a 5 Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East SMALL HOUSE on campus-Furnished. SUMMER Tutoring and individualized Sublet June 21-Aug. 24, $130/mo. in- instruction}in small groups. Elemen- eludes utilities. 761-9222. Mature mar- tary level; exp., M.A. 663-7616. 13Jrf ried couple or grad students only. ~~~~-- - - --- ~-~~---~~~~~ ~~-~~ 32Uf TASK CAMPUS NEW FURNISHED APARTMENTS FOR SUMMER AND FALL DAHLMANN APARTMENTS 545 CHURCH ST. 761-7600 38Ctc BARGAIN CORNER Sam's Store NEED LEVIS? VISIT US FOR BLUE DENIM: Super Slims .......6.50 Button-Fly ........6.50 Traditional .......6.98 Bells...........7.50 i 4 2 BDRM. APT. Unfurn. Air-cond. $1401 mo. 761-6829. 49C19 2 BEDROOM Furnished Apt. Yard, porches, near campus. $125/mo. July and August. 761-7132. 26U18 PEOPLE, NEEDED F O R SUMMER SU BLETS 761-8055 SUMMIT ASSOC. 33Utc SUMMER SUBLET - Furnished effi- ciency. a 'c. free parking, swimming pool. $100. 769-5161, 6-8 p.m. 29U20 4TH GIRL NEEDED to sublet mod. a/c apt. $40/mo. 769-7753. 20U14 IMMEDIATE-2 BDRM. furnished. $130/ mo. 769-6250, 761-7556, between 5-9 p.m. 22U19 ONEaBEDROOM-Furnished, air-cond., near campus. June-Aug. 761-6274. 17U1: 1-2 MAN MODERN efficiency avail. June 6 or later, through August. 2 blocks from campus, air-cond., dis- posal. furnished. Excellent summer situation. Call Steve, 663-3860 day or night. 18U19 SUMMER RENTAL 2 Bdrm. furn. unit or partial sublet near law and business schools. Call Professional Management Associates. 769-4227. lUte 1346 GEDDES. Near Observatory-Rooms for men only w or w o. cooking. $40-45 mo. Call 668-6906. 12Utc Does It All! Typing, Printing, Transcripting Conferences and Mailings Call The Professionals 761-4146or47 3035(1 - Or PAINTING-Experienced student paint-i ers, references, free setimate. no ob- ligation. 761-5114. 17J20 WILL TAKE CARE of children 8-5:30 in my home. Ages 4-6. Call Ann, 769- 3215. 11J18 Will TYPE anything. Quick service, in- expensive, like professional. Call Candy at 665-4830 after noon. 12J18 THESES, PAPERS (incl. technical) typ- ed. Experienced, professional; IBM, Selectric. Quick service. 663-6291. 42Jtc NOW ON CAMPUS Campus MultiService TYPING PRINTING THESIS SERVICE Fast, Dependable, Low-Priced 214 Nickels Arcade 662-4222 Summer hours: 10-4 Mon.-Fri. 3Jtc MULTIPLE TYPING SERVICE Thesis Service Papers Dissertations General Office and Secretarial Work Pick-Up and Delivery Available Prompt Service CALL 971-2446 Jtc Baltimore New York Detroit Washington Boston Cleveland Minnesota California Oakland Kansas City Chicago Milwaukee W L 32 13 25 21 20 21 20 23 19 24 14 26 West 29 12 28 15 23 21 18 25 17 27 13 29 Pet. .711 .543 .488 .465 .429 .350 .707 .651 .523 .419 .386 .310 GB 7%/ 10 11 15% 2. 7% 12 13% 162 Yesterday's Results Oakland at California, inc. Minnesota 11, Milwaukee 2 Other clubs not scheduled Today's Games Cleveland at Oakland, night Baltimore at California, night Detroit at Milwaukee, night New York at Minnesota, night Kansas City at Washington, night Chicago at Boston, night NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB Chicago 23 18 .561 - New York 22 22 .500 2 / St. Louis 21 21 .500 2 / Pittsburgh 21 25 .457 4 / Philadelphia 19 25 .431 5%/ Montreal 16 27 .372 8 West Cincinnati 33 14 .702 - Atlanta 25 18 .581 6 Los Angeles 25 20 .556 7 San Francisco 23 24 .489 m10 Houston 20 26 .435 121/ San Diego 21 29 .420 13 ~/ Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 5, Montreal 3 Chicago 8, Pittsburgh 7 St. Louis 9, New York 2 San Francisco 4, Los Angeles 3 Other clubs not scheduled Today's Games Houston at New York, night San Francisco at Pittsburgh, night Los Angeles at St. Louis, night Montreal at Cincinnati, night Philadelphia at Atlanta, night Only games scheduled Larry Mikan of the University of Minnesota agreed to terms yes- terday with the Los Angeles Lak- ers, a team for which his father starred when it represented Min- neapolis. Young Mikan, who at 6 foot-7 is three inches shorter than his dad, agreed to a two-year contract at an undisclosed salary, Laker General Manager Fred Schaus an- nounced in Los Apgeles. A forward, Mikan will report June 13. He was the fourth round draft choice of Los Angeles after establishing himself as the lead- ing rebounder in the Big Ten Con- ference the past three years. He set a Minnesota school rec- ord with 349 rebounds his senior year and had 735 in three seasons for a 10.2 average. He scored 1,007 points for a 13.9 collegiate career mark. The Boston Patriots of the Na- tional Football League announced yesterday in Boston the signing of Bob "Bobo" Olson, Notre Dame's outstanding middle line- backer who set a record of 364 tackles in three years as a starter with the Irish. HELP WANTED EARN $25 by donating cerebrospinal' fluid. Need 21-40 yr. old males-fe- males. 764-0298. 25H27 THE YOUNG , PROF ESS I ONALS We have recently opened our 120th office in Ann Arbor1 and are expanding rapidly (3000 in four years). Our team of hard-hitting, young executives s p e c i a I i z e in search and recruit projects, HELP WANTED STATION ATTENDANTS, preferably fe- male. Super-Test, S. Main and E. Madison, contact Jack Toth, super- visor, in person. Summer or perma- nent. 26H28 PORTER Apply on 2nd floor, Sheraton Motor Inn. 27Htc GRADUATE STUDENT Exchange room and board for 15 hrs. housework Mon.-Fri., weekends off, transportation necessary. 663-2379 or 764-0497. 23H24 WANTED-Students to do caricatures and/or tell fortunes for June 25th graduation party, pay negot. Call S45::1662 n n.l I nr 78- 0211. 1 5H*.J USED CARS CORVAIR MONZA-1964, 2 dr., auto- matic, radio, engine recently over- hauled, new tires and battery, one owner. $585. 663-7839. 26N19 MGC-1969 Roadster w/tonneau, fold- away top, wire wheels, overdrive. Call 663-3406 eves. 27N21 '62 CORVAIR, good shape. Days: 763- 3482, eves: 761-9364. 28N19 PORSCHE, 1966 ' 912 5-speed, Am-FM shortwave radio, good condition, $2965. Call Flint, 234-2006 after 6 p.m. 21N20 1965 TRIUMPH TR-4 convertible, en- tire new clutch and brakes, overdrive, radio, Michelin tires, low mileage, looks great. NO 2-9769. 24N18 67 OLDS 442-New engine, almost en- tirely rebuilt. Excellent condition. 769-4289. NId 1967 TOYOTA Jeep. 4-wheel drive, plow, etc. $1800. Call 663-5512. 16N18 '67 GAL. convert., low mileage, air cond., power disc brakes, power steering, tinted glass. deluxe interior. PERSONAL WILLIAM AND JOYCE-DUO playing Fri. and Sat. at the Ramada Inn. Outstanding Group! 19F18 SOVIET UNION. Driving and Camping. 10 weeks, $1350. Includes air and all expenses. A. Lipson, 2 Garden Terr., Cambridge. Mass. 02138 or call (col- lect) 617-547-1127. 40F36 AMAZING, hugenic. macro-biotic, un- poiuted, ocean fresh, fish and chips. Will ward off old age if taken regu- larly. Lucky Jim's, Packard at Wood- lawn, 12-3, 5-8 p.m. 18F18 DISCOUNT BOOKSTORE? We've been discounting diamonds in Ann Arbor for years. Austin Diamond, 1209 S. University 663-7151 F' TENNIS LESSONS. Reasonable rates. Call 769-4591. Ask for Bob: 11F22 WAR: A PROCEEDING THAT RUINS THOSE WHO WIN. WILD FLOWER- the unique boutique, 516 E. WIL- LIAM (above the bike shop). 15F19 PERSONAL CLASSIFIED 764-0557 CLASSIFIED 764-0557 CLASSIFIED DFtc UPTIGHT?? . . get right at WILD FLOWER-the unique 'outique, 516 E. WILLIAM (above the bike shop). 14F19 Af *i