SPRING/SUMMER We are offering a number of work-study positions in the OFFICE of CAREER PLANNING AND PLACEMENT. We are fun, interesting, and challenging people to work with at the University. You also will see many of your friends coming in each day to explore career opportunities. Come to the Office of Career Planning and Plancement, 3200 Student Activities Build- ing OR call Kathy Zeh at 764-7460 and choose one of the fol- lowing positions available for work-study students. CAREER RESOURCES LIBRARY-10/15 hour position Assist with processing and cataloging of new acquisitions; variety of filing, shelving and maintaining resources; serve as information person for people with questions about library resources and Career Planning & Placement services. CREDENTIALS-10 hour position Assist in typing, filing, record keeping, xeroxing, telephone inquiries; running mimeo, collator, addressograph machines; other office projects. EDUCATION-45 hours (2 positions) Handling large number of mail; assist with counting of vacancies for Annual Report; assist with correspondence to employers; input edu- cation candidate data into computer; and various other projects. HIGHER EDUCATION-12 hour position Assist with daily opening, sorting, copying, routing of mail; filing vacancies in notebooks and files; handling registrant address changes, mail returns; typing labels and small amount of correspondence. PRE-PROFESSIONAL-10 hour position Maintaining and expanding resource area; conducting library research; compiling current statistics for medical, dental and law; updating the in- formation notebooks, as well as assorted clerical duties. RECRUITMENT-15 hour position Recruiter scheduling, correspondence; handling recruiter literature; type bulletin; record salary statistics; maintain recruiting information; and various other clerical duties. Join The Daily 4 Sports Page 24 Wednesday, May 6, 1981 The Michigan Daily WSU softballers end Miehigan season, -2 4 By JIM DWORMAN It was a disappointing finish to the season. After winning its first seven games and 13 of its initial 19, the Michigan sof- tball team fell apart, finishing with a 19- 16 record and coming up empty-handed in the AIAW state tournament. THE WOLVERINES entered the double-elimination competition with hopes of reaching the finals and earning a berth in the AIAW regional tour- nament, but they fell short of their goal, losing to Wayne State in the quarter- finals of the losers' bracket, 4-2. After dropping a 5-3 decision to Michigan State in the tournament's opening game, who joined WSU and Western Michigan in advancing to the regionals, the softballers rebounded to defeat Eastern Michigan by a score of 5-1, briefly keeping their hopes alive before their elimination. Junior center- fielder Debbie Haines paced the Wolverine victory, stroking a three-run double in the sixth inning to break a 1-1 deadlock. Pitcher Laura Reed got the win, raising her team-leading victory total to nine. For Reed, the victory marked the end of a fine season. The junior righthander lead the pitching staff in strikeouts (56), earned run average (1.03) and in- nings pitched (102), as well as in vic- tories. "IT WOULD HAVE been a long season without her," said coach Bob DeCarolis of Reed. "We have to be very impressed with the job that she did." For her stellar performance, Reed was named the team's Outstanding Player. Another Wolverine who received post-season honors was left-fielder Diane Hatch, who was named to the AIAW All-State team by the coaches. Despite finishing the campaign with a batting average of only .280, the lowest of her career, Hatch led the team in runs scored (20) and stolen bases (12), while sharing the team lead in hits with 28. Although pleased with the individual successes of Reed and Hatch, DeCarolis was somewhat disappointed with the overall performance of his team. "We were just too inconsistent," ex- plained the rookie coach. "Toward the end of the year, our hitting was almost nonexistent, and we'd only win when Laura was pitching." BASEBALL May 6 EASTERN MICHIGAN (DH), 1 p.m. May 9 at Michigan St. (DH) May 10 MICHIGAN ST. (DH), 1 p.m. May 12 WAYNE ST. (DH), 1 p.m. MEN'S GOLF May 8-9 Spartan Invitational, at East Lansing May 10-11 Badger Invitational, at Madison MEN'S TRACK May 9 CHICAGO TRACK CLUB MEN'STENNIS May 8-10 BIG TEN TOURNAMENT WOMEN'S TENNIS May 8-10 SMAIAW, at East Lansing SCORES NBA Finals Boston 98, Houston 95 (Boston leads series, 1-0) American League Boston 8, Kansas City 7 (12 innings, completion of suspendedgame) Baltimore 3, Minnesota 2 National League Houston 4, Chicago 3 Montreal4, San Diego 3 Philadelphia 8, Los Angeles 7 St. Louis 4, Atlanta 1 San Francisco 9, New York 7 I I I 6 Reed ... only tourney winner PERM FFAE INTRODUCTORY FIFTEEN MINUTE TREATMENT 50 O% Medically Approved *"Offering Modern Insulated Probe OFF : Reasonable Rates 10 Years Experience 0 0