PAGE TWO ~ ZICHI AN I)AILY SUNDAY, t PPM 30. 1950 ,I 'HL~~NI1dHIGA7NJi~ThY SNAY. i~lA2PRTL V~ 1.V VV AS iFIED -- .... .. . a u M' Netmen Blank Titans, 9-0 4 * * * v . , ....... MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday Is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M.sfor Sunday Issue. BUSINESS SERVICES ACCURATE TYPING. Reasonable rates. Phone 29437. )33B EXCELLENT DAY NURSERY -Phone _2-7810. ) 32B SPRING ITEMS NOW IN-Nearly New Clothing Shop, 311 E. Huron. Ph. 3-0166. Open 12-5:30, Sat. 10-5. )8B SHIRTS - Nine hour service (by re- quest), three day service (regular ser- vice). Ace Laundry, 1116 S. Univer- sity._ )7B VIOLA STEIN-EXPERIENCED TYPIST -Master's and Doctor's manuscripts and legal work. Phone 2-9848 after Dnoon. )30B TYPEWRITERS AND FOUNTAIN PENS Sales and Service MORRILL'S-314 S. State St. )11B FOR SALE FOR SALE. 1950 ENGLISH motorcycles $280 up. India M/C Sales, 207 W. Liberty. Phone 2-1748. Open evenings. )83 3 SPEED ENGLISH LIGHTWEIGHTS. $47.50. PARTS AND ACCESSORIES. Student Bicycle Agency, 629 E. Univ. 77 l PERSONAL R.C.A. VICTOR - Table model, radio- phonograph combination with auto- matic changer. Excellent condition, $35.00. Bob Carr, 413 Chicago House W.Q., 2-4401. )114 BOXER PUPPY-7 months, champion class, ears clipped, all necessary shots taken. Call 2-9631. )115 NEW GOLF SET - 4 woods, 9 irons. Louisville low stroke clubs and bag. Phone 2-6455. )113 SINGLE PATRON season ticket, center 1st floor, $12.00. Call 9881. )112 ROYAL PORTABLE, very slightly used, -$50. Call 25-0044. ______ )111 1936 BUICK 4 DOOR, R & H. Excellent condition. Reasonable. 934 S. State. Phone 6088. __ )110 TO HIGHEST BIDDER-Portable de- luxe 78 rpm record changer-player. Call Don Pelz, 2-7603. )102 3 SPEED ENGLISH LIGHTWEIGHTS. $47.50. PARTS AND ACCESSORIES. Student Bicycle Agency, 629 E. Univ. __________________) 77 BLUE, GREEN, YELLOW & WHITE ba- by Parakeets-$4.49 - $5.49 each. 562 S. Seventh. Ph. _5330. ___ __)2B 1_EXCELLENTLY~CARED FOR limed oak Ansley Radio Vic, Webster chang- er, 9 tube radio, table model. Liberty Music Shop.______ )109 HIGH FIDELITY Meissner Radio, five bands, 13 tubes. Call 2-6947. )105 Motorcycle Sales 10 days only-many to choose from. India M/C Sales, 207 W. Liberty. Ph. 2-1748. Open evenings. )9 WIRE RECORDER -- Manufactured by Webster-Chicago, the producers of the world's finest audio-recording equipment. Will record up to one hour. Recording will last forever or can be erased and wire can be reused. If interested contact Bob Plank, Ph. 2-9707 after 7 p.m. )103 DIAMOND engagement and wedding rings. Large discount. Jay Angle, wholesale representative. Ph. 2-4481. )9 Cousins on State Street 20% OFF ON A collection of Perfume and Cologne Odds and Ends. )3 ATTENTION: Navy R.O.T.C.-U.S. Navy type oxfords $6.88; U.S. Navy "T" shirts 45c; Navy Black hose 30c pr.; White shorts 59c. Open 'til 6 p.m. Sams Store,_122_E._Washington. )5 WOMAN'S riding boots size 8%. Ex- cellent condition. Phone 8539 after 5:00. ) 80 ® B~URTONd HELP WANTED DO YOU need any help? If so, you will get good results from a DAILY HELP WANTED ad. Try It and see. )7P EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES MEDICAL PERSONNEL for medical and dental field. 408 Park Ave. Bldg. WO 3-5789 DETROIT, MICHIGAN ) E FOR RENT ANNEX for a fraternity. Study rooms, dormitory sleepingmquarters. South- east section, 10 minute walk from Engineering Arch. Telephone 2-4346. )16F STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY never advertises on Sunday. __)2 HUNGRY? You don't have to be. J. D. MILLER'S CAFETERIA at 211 S. State offers you a complete tasty dinner for 59c in- cluding entree, potato, vegetable, sal- ad or dessert (pie or cake), bread, butter, beverage. Hmmm, good!! )2P LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 209 5. iState Phone 8161 )1P 10 MEALS FOR $4.99 The new "STREAMLINER" meal tick- et gives you 5 lunches and 5 dinners for only $4.99 at Club 211, 211 S. State. Your ticket expires only when com- pletely paunched. Regular meal tick- ets are still available. )2P LOST & FOUND LOST-Fraternity pin in vicinity of I.M. Bldg. Reward. Call Carl Bieser 2-6824. )69L LOST-Racine wristwatch with metal band. Call 250611. )64L WANTED TO RENT ACCOMMODATIONS FOR ONE person for summer: with cooking privileges. Call Dorothy Carlson, 5723, 9-5; 258- 478 after 7. )17N WANTED-TO-SUB-LET: Wife and hus- band, both teachers, desire to sub- letsapartment for summer school session. Write Mrs. June D. Kelly. Box 181, Galien, Mich. )11N RESORT THE OLD TRAIL INN. Harbor Springs, Mich. A modern inn on the shore of beautiful Lake Michigan with the hospitality, atmosphere, cuisine and friendlness of an old fashioned inn. Attractive guest cottages, American plan. Honeymoon reservations wel- come. Write the Old Trail Inn, Har- bor Springs. )12 Read and Use Daily Classifieds - Winners Cop Easy Victory, Drop One Set Mackay, Hetzeck Win In Varsity Opener By DAVE PRESTON Michigan's tennis squad started out the 1950 season on the right foot yesterday with a 9-0 shutout victory over the University of De- troit on the home courts. In the number one singles match Co-captain Don MacKay had little trouble downing Al Renuart by a 6-1, 6-0 score. MacKay displayed a well-rounded game, being parti- cularly effective at the net. THE WOLVERINES' number' two man, Al Hetzeck, was a little wild, but still easily defeated the opponents' Dick Zaborowski by virtue of his stinging drives, 6-0, 6-3. The winners' Dick Lincoln,l the only lefthander to see ac- tion, continued the trouncing by quickly and neatly dispatching Dick Russell, 6-1, 6-2. Coach Bill Murphy chose to give sophomore Steve Bromberg his baptism of fire in the number four slot, and Steve quickly proved that he would be a man to be depended for the next three years. Showing none of the effects of inexperience he breezed by Scott Krause 6-1, 6-0. * * * IN THE NUMBER five position versatile Len Brumm showed as much skill as he did on the hockey team this winter. In his 6-2, 6-3 win over the Titans' Wally Pro- mack he flashed a steady brand of tennis to wear down his adversary. Until the last minute Mur- phy had not decided on his num- ber six man, but had the plea- sure of seeing Bob Stahl justi- fy his decision by topping Bill Jeanette, 6-0, 7-9, 6-4. Although many games were forced to Major Scrimmage Caps Third, Week ofVarsityGrid Practice DON MacKAY .. . tennis drum-major TRANSPORTATION HILDEGARDE SHOPPE 109 E. Washington Expert Alterations Custom Clothes STUDY IN EUROPE THIS SUMMER. Call Dick Arnesen, 2-8265, after 5 p.- m., for info on low-cost study plans. ) 23T by Established Tradition )3B WASHING, ironing done in my own home. Also rough dry and wet wash- ing. Free pick up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. )1B HAVE YOUR typewriter repaired by the Office Equipment Service Company, 215 E. Liberty. )4 DOES JUNIOR keep you from going out? Try a reliable Baby Sitter. Kid- die Kare, 3-1121. )10B c co T" ROOMS FOR RENT WAAIJT~FnTA% TRA1g ' IF OUR TASTES AGREE, let's swap classical record albums. 2-7981. )17T TRAVEL and STUDY ROUND TRIP BY AIR. NEW YORK TO PARIS. $355. Call Dick Arnesen. 28265. After 5. ) 24T NEED PRIVATE HOME accomodations forMay Festivaluand commencement? Call 2-9850, Student Room Bureau, 12 noon-1 P.M., 6-7 P.M. )63R PLEASANT inexpensive rooms for sum- mer in fraternity house. Near cam- pus. Call 2-2202. )67R deuce, and he dropped the only set Michigan lost, Stahl was more than equal to the occa- sion when the chips were down. It was essentially the same story in the doubles, both in the per- sonnel ,and the results. The only change was Murphy's insertion of sophomore Dave Barrett into the number three doubles. The move proved successful as Barrett team- ed with Brumm to down Promacdk and Jeanette, limiting them to only one game, 6-1, 6-0. t., - - MacKAY and Hetzeck show d they will be a duo to be reckoned with all season in their 6-1, 6, 1 shellacking of Russell and Za - browski. Both men were amazing- ly sharp for this early in the sea- son, and used a repertoire of shots, which consistantly left their op- ponents flatfooted. Using a devastating net game Lincoln and Bromberg_ overpower- ed Renuart and Joe Mikula, 6-3, 6-0, to complete the whitewashing in impressive fashion. By MARV EPSTEIN The cold weather finally caught up with Michigan's spring grid aspirants as they went through their second major scrimmage yesterday.. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan shift- ed the scene of action from the practice area behind the baseball stadium to the old Ferry Field gridiron, where Fielding H. Yost's point-a-minute heroes made his- tory. AND FOR THE first hour the spring crew looked so good that comparisons with the by-gone era of the great Yost were being made by some of the 200 on-lookers. But the almost-winter wea- ther seemed to cool off things and for the second hour of ac- tion the varsity hopefuls re- minded the Wolverine coaching staff that this, after all, is still spring practice. Although Coach Oosterbaan ex- pressed dissatisfaction with the last half of the work-out, he did concede that whatever it was that dampened the performances of the majority of gridders did not affect a select half-dozen. * * * - THREE OF THESE are men who have already attracted con- siderable attention. They are the double-barrel backfield shotguns, Dave Hill, Frank Howell and Rog Zatkoff. Hill's graceful shiftiness Intra -Murals Paced By Net, SoftballAction With an opening in the mon- soon season, the Intra-Mural spring athletic program continued with activity in softball and ten- nis. Pitcher John Case went the six inning distance on the hill for Zeta Psi and also belted out a home rum in the second inning to pace his fraternity to a 14-4 victory over Triangle. prompted one spectator to tab .him a "football ballerina." Howell broke away for a dozen pay-dirt type runs. The other member of the marked trio, Rog Zatkoff, is a brick wall defensive artist who has made himself a terror to of- fensive backs. Tom Kelsey, holdover letterman at end, Bud Reeme and Bob Hur- ley drew special mention from Oosterbaan for the first time. IN A BIT of experimentation, Kelsey was shifted to a guard'slot, and in the first extended prac- tice he has participated in showed remarkably well. Reeme stood out as an offensive end, while Hurley, a 5 foot, 10 inch freshman from Colorado, works out of the tail- back slot. Oosterbaan admitted that the size of the spring contingent is making it difficult to spot all the talent. More than 100 try- outs are still sticking out the grind. Competition is so keen that many of the freshman aspirants are pressing too hard, said the Maize and Blue mentor. He cre- dited excessive fumbling, 'conspi- cuous throughout yesterday's ses- sion, to the fact that several of the newcomers are trying to out- do themselves. Today and Monday A r z ----n A. M' Sailing Club Humbles Irish In First Dual Meet of Season BENIIECHT'S/ k story of dark terror and strange love S A REPUBLIC PICTURE with JUDITH ANDERSON - MICHAEL CHEKHOV IVAN KIROV - VIOLA ESSEN -LIONEL STANDER By BOB LANDOWNE The University of Michigan Sailing Club swept to a lop-sided victory over Notre Dame in their first dual meet of the season at Whitmore Lake yesterday. The score was 1-0 since a point is awarded only for each first place in a dual meet. THE WOLVERINES used al- most every available member of the club asabout20 sailorssaw action as either skipper or crew- man on the two-man Tiger dinghies. In each of the five races, both teams manned five of the sailing club's dinks and the crews changed boats each race to eliminate any mechanical advantage. ping the skilled Michigan tars as the best Notre Dame could do was take two second places. * *' * ODDLY ENOUGH, five differ- ent skippers registered the vic- tories for Michigan. Bob Preston took the number five boat across the finish line for Michigan's first point, and Teena Lawrence was skippering number 10 as she easily won the second race for the Wolverines. Bill Morgan was first with num- ber one as he clinched the meet with the Wolverines third vic- tory in as many races. Jim Rukin and Red Oppenheimer then made it five straight and a clean sweep for the day. Though rather cold, the weather was very suitable for sailing with the wind not too erratic.k * ENDS TODAY orp , ,.-. 0 - MINIATURES - THE KENTUCKY DERBY STORY" COLOR CARTOON Nevertheless, there was no stop- IN A THREE INNING game, Bob Schmidt pitched a one hitter as Sigma Phi Epsilon whitewashed Trigon, 6-0. Scoring one run in the sixth to tie the score, and then push- ing across the tie-breaker in the final frame, Alpha Sigma Psi nosed out Phi Sigma Kap- pa, 6-5. Paced by a four-bagger by Tom Olin, Sigma Chi outlasted Alpha Delta Phi, 18-11. In the only other fraternity softball contest Sigma Phi overwhelmed Sigma Pt, 22-1. Ken Vance won his own game with three hits and two walks for a perfect day at the plate. * * * IN THE independents league, Newman Club topped the rlawVi- ans, 14-7. The Dodgers beat the Mites, 2-1, on the strength of a first inning homer with a man on by Don Keyes. There was also fraternity ac- tion in tennis with Pi Lambda Phi beating Delta Tau Delta., 3-0. Stan May paced the squad by taking his two sets 6-0, 6-1. With Bill Cartwright playing a consistent game Kappa Sigma downed Delta Chi, 3-0. * * * CHI PSI LOST all four sets to Chi Phi, and Theta Xi beat Kappa Nu. On the strength of Barry Le- vey's backhand slams Zeta Beta Tau was able to beat Theta Chi, 3-0. For the fourth time this spring the water-polo championship play- offs were called off. The only thing holding up the start of cricket this year is the arrival of equipment from Bri- tain. } WihJNE HAVO Shown at 3:20 - 6:40 - 9:55 ® PLUS * Shown at 1:40 - 5:00 - 8:20 CAN A WOMAN COMMIT A SIN WHEN SHE IS LO v I i _ __ I STARTING TODAY Continuous from 1 P.M. TODAY Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 P.M. I 1 CONTINUOUS FROM 1 P.M. NOTE . . . If you are easily hypnotized -- don't come alone. " TUESDAY * "BATTLEGROUND" A w 4 0 Just Published - CAMPUS ZOO An uproarious education in itself for the student, teacher, parent or alumnus by the creator of White Collar Zoo and Home Sweet Zoo ^I 0 4,F fw A iNAin0 -0 MM,7MUM W- ,-M I I - -w. ~~="~' .- El I ~ --- __--... ,, I