THE MICHIGAN DAILY rFRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1950 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Williams Cops I.M*Track itle MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure5 average words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. BUSINESS SERVICES ALTERATIONS and Tailoring of all kinds. Work guaranteed. Phone 2-1919. 821 Packard. )23B STUDENT RATES on FORTUNE-$7.50 a year instead of $12.50. Student Per- iodical Agency, Phone 2-82-42. )2 TYPINGmanuscript, theses, etc. Call Lois Spaide, 2-0795 or 2-7460. )24P VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist. 308 S. State. Legal, Master, Doctors dis- sertations, etc. 2-9848 or 2-4228. )12B WASHING--Finished work and ironing. Also rough dry and wet washing. Free pick-up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. )1B TYPEWRITERS.AND FOUNTAIN PENS Sales, Rentals, and Service Morrill's 314 S. State St. )4B AL CHASE and his ORCHESTRA Ann Arbor's Finest Dance Music! Phone 3YP-4427 )21B GOOD RENTAL TYPEWRITERS now available at Office Equipment Ser- vice Company, 215 E. Liberty. Guaranteed repair service on all makes of typewriters. ) 6B HELP WANTED STUDENT WANTED to wait table for .meals. 1319 Hill St. Ph. 2-6422. ) 38H HELP WANTED TALENT WANTED - AMATEURS. PROFESSIONALS, HOME TALENT Be included in our new Fall Catalog and Index! Opportunities throughout southeastern Michigan. Send a post card for details on a good deal for you. CLUBS AND ORGANIZATIONS Send for our catalog. Fine talent for every occasion. JASI, 321 W. Cortland, Jackson. )39H PROFESSIONAL BLOOD DONORS-The University Hospital Blood Bank will accept new applications from males over 21 years of age who wish to be- come professional blood donors. Apply at the blood bank between 8:30-11:30 a.m., Monday through Friday. Other hours by appointment. Fountain Help-Student wives or girls over 18. Part or full time, 3 to 6 nights a week. 3:30 to 11:30 p.m. Apply to Mgr. soda bar, Marshall's Drug Store. )36H STUDENTS! Do you have any sales ex- perience. We can show you good earn- ings for part time work; also an op- portunity to follow a successful sales organization that offers an excellent future to those who qualify. Write Box No. 302. The Michigan Daily. )30H MAKE YOURSELF PROSPEROUS in- stead of broke. Sell the student rates on TIME & LIFE on evenings. Phone Don Anderson, 2-82-42 for details. )2 FOR SALE ZEISS IKON 1950 Contax IIA, F2 lens, never used. Call Gault, Lawyer's Club, 3-4145. )77 SOLVE YOUR transportation problems. 1935 Chev., new cyl. head, clutch, gen. Ph. 2-2035, 6:30-12:00 p.m. )76 ONE CHECKERED COAT It's too loud for my graduate picture and my girl won't walk with me when Ihwear it on campus. Don't let this happen to you. Invest your money in a grad or Senior picture before the Nov. 3 deadline. ENSIAN. ... .... r r r w r """ FOR SALE PERSONAL STADIUM COAT-Mouton collar, like STUDENT desires part-time afternoon new. Call Bruce, 8238. )68 job. 1:30-5 P.M. Call Cliff 2-5644. )28P READ TIME this year at the special STUDENTS MAY subscribe to LIFE at reduced Student Rate. Still only the special Student Rate of $5.00 a $4.75 a year (instead of $6.00). Regular year (Regularly $6.75). Through Stu- newsdealers do notcarry thisrate- dent Periodical Agency, phone 2-82-42. it must be accepted by specially- ) authorized college agencies. Your representative is Student Periodical EXPERIENCED PIANO TEACHER - Agency, Don Anderson, Grad, man- Don-David Lustenan, 100 Adams Hse. ager. Address 705 First National Bldg. 2-4401. )27P To order you need only phone 2-82-42. - )2 LEARN TO DANCE with great dispatch. RAY HATCH ANCE7.'T OTUDIOS 4 --- A-2 FLIGHT JACKET-Genuine horse- hide front quarter $19.95. Knit cuffs, zipper front, leather epaulets. Open till 6 p.m. Sam's Store, 122 E. Wash- ington. )5 BABY PARAKEETS which can be train- ed to talk and whistle-$6 each. Bird supplies and cages. 562 S. Seventh, Phone 5330. )2B POST WAR Philo amplifier and P.A. system. Automatic record changer. Ideal for parties, like new. Very rea- sonable. Ph. 7356. )73 -- COUSINS -- CUISon State Street Genuine Levis $3.95. Sanforized 22 inch waist line and up )3 209 S. State, Ph. 5083 )4P KIDDIE KARE Reliable sitters available. Ph. 3-1121. )10B LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 122 E. Liberty Phone 8161 CLUB 211 Three meals per day for $1.50 J. D. Miller's Cafeteria. )1P )2P ROOMS FOR RENT ATTRACTIVE furnished double room. Kitchen privileges. 1106 Lincoln. Ph. 5224. )44R 2 ROOM SUITE for 3 men. 1218 Olivia. Call 8746 after 5:30. )34R TOURIST HOME for Overnight Guests. Bath, shower, reasonable rates.518 E. Williams St. Phone 3-8454. )12R ROOMSaavailable for students'hguests football week-ends. Private home ac- commodations, Phone 2-9850, 11:00- 1:00 or 6:30-9:30 p.m. )14R 3RDFLOOR STUDIO NEAR CAMPUS- Prefer two to four art or arch. men students. Linens, use of dark room. Student landlord. Ph. 2-8545, 6-7. )23R LOST AND FOUND LOST-8 mil. movie camera, at Wiscon- sin, game. $10 reward. Call 3972 W Ypsilanti. )50L LOST-Brown rimmed glasses in brown case - on Island. Reward. 2-5553, Rm. 423.. )51L LOST-S.A.M. fraternity pin and guard Saturday night at I. M. Building or vicinity. Reward. Phone 2-9335. 149L LONG LOST-One gold ear ring. Gold chain tied in bow. Reward. Call 6159, evenings. )43L FOR RENT SUITE for 2 couples and 1 db. rm. for football weekends. Call 3-8126. )22F MAN to share 3 rm. apt. Icebox, phone, shower, cooking. $7 wk. Call Hugh 2-2955 after 7:30. )21F f U - ._ IrrfIITIhl' Today & Saturday #i/ thtere. I(ter! NO. MAIN-OPP. COURTHOUSE MAT. 30c NIGHTS & SUN. 40c ALWAYS TWO HITS! MICIS A GRAND Wide, WonderbI Show ROONEY OBRIEN Richard ARLEN . Mary Rath UGHES ;Tno n - of,,,.,, JAMES MILLICAN 'REED HADLEY *eD c o 20. -e. Y-.zr I haven't you heard? 00 Drive in and Park STOP and SHOPr " -r -- r ' , / 'X901 Friendly, Drive-Thru Service " BEER " WINE " SOFT DRINKS " KEG BEER Open Daily 10 A.M., Sundays Noon to 7 P.M. 114 E. Williams Phone 7191 - , r i I I Fraternity Gridders Cut To Six Teams As a result of this week's IM grid competition, the fraternity field is narrowed to six squads fighting for the title. Defending champions Chi Psi dropped out of the running by losing to Alpha Tau Omega 25-0. By applying the whitewash to Chi Psi, the winners remained un- scored upon in four contests thus far. * * * ATO STARTED slow not push- ing over their initial counter until the last minute of the first half. Bud Richner accounted for this touchdown on a one yard jaunt into paydirt. With Connie Nelson on the throwing end, ATO tallied 19 points in the final half. The touchdown scorers were Gordie Smith, Rog Hilardis, and Don Weir. Weir's TD was his fifth this season. Delta Sigma Phi joined the "big six" stopping Kappa Sigma 12-0. Milton Heath was the vic- tor's headliner tossing two scoring passes to Carl Bryant and Jack Hayes to account for the 12 points. * * * SCORING VIA the overland route was Sigma Alpha Epsilon's plan of attack as they dropped Alpha Sigma Phi 20-0. Bill Ray- mond, last year's recipient of the IM best all-around athlete of the year award, pitched two touch- down passes and two extra points to lead his team to victory. Don Zanfagna and Jack Marr each caught passes for a touch- down and extra point. The re- maining six points resulted on a pass from Zanfagna to Art Brown. I-M Scores PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITY Alpha Kappa Kappa 6, Phi Delta Epsilon 0 Nu Sigma Nu 9, Phi Rho Sig- ma 0 Delta Sigma Pi 14, Alpha Kappa Psi 6 Alpha Chi Sigma 7, Law Club 'B' 6 Phi Chi 19, Alpha Rho Chi 0 TODAY at 1:30 3 30 - 5:35 - 7:35 - 9 40 MARiE WILSON JOBN LIJI __ UA MA$W!N See a Complete Show In Two Hours TODAY and Friday By JOHN JENKS Williams House virtually ran away with the Residence Hall In- tra-Mural track meet Wednesday afternoon on the Ferry Field cin- ders, scoring 28 points to beat runner-up Hinsdale House by 12 markers. Wenley placed third in the meet with 13 points, while Prescott's 913 was good for the fourth spot. CHIEF COGS in the Williams wheel were Jerry Pruter and Vic Bouchart, who combined to give their house the, first two places in Michigran Tops Hayden, 13-6 In .DormPlay Only four games were played in the Residence Hall touch football circuit last Monday on South Fer- ry Field, as both leagues B and D had already completed their regu- larly scheduled tilts. Michigan House retained a firm grasp on first place in league A by edging Hayden House, 13-6. The win, Michigan's third, guar- anteed it at least a tie for first, while a victory over Vaughn next week would give it the title out- right. Because of a 40 yard pass from Hayden's Doug Peck to Dick Dennis, Michigan left the field at half-time trailing 6-0. But early in the second stanza Howard Maturen hit Russ Ken- dal on a 20 yard toss to knot the score at six-all. The Maturen-Kendal combina- tion clicked for the extra point and Michigan led, 7-6. Later Bill' Werner intercepted a Hayden ae- riel and scooted 35 yards to make the score 13-6. Fletcher Hall continued on its merry way Monday by slipping past a stubborn Hinsdale aggre- gation, 13-7. Although Fletcher is the only undefeated team in league D, a loss to Tyler House next week would throw the title up for grabs between Fletcher, Williams, and Lloyd. P ruer, Iorchart Pace West Quad's Triumph the high and low hurdles. In the low hurdles, Pruter finished first and Bouchart second, while the order was reversed in the high hurdles. Williams also garnered the top two spots in the mile event. Jack Williams and teammate Alex Mansour ran first and sec- ond, respectively, to add eight points to the Williams total. e Two men, Milt Mead of Wenley House and Bob Cutting of Hins- dale House won double titles. Mead, who won the high jump in last year's River Rouge meet, fin- ished first in both the high and broad jump events. Cutting won both the 880 and the pole vault at- tractions. .* * * The summaries for the meet are: ONE MILE: 1-Williams, Wil- liams; 2-Mansour, Williams; 3- Yakawa, Greene; 4-Conn. Time: 5:07.8 880 YD. RUN: 1-Cutting, Hins- dale; 2-Mather, Wenley; 3-Trojan, Greene; 4-Cooper, Williams. Time: 2:10.2 440 YD. RUN: 1- Richardson, Anderson; 2-Sowatsky, Hayden; 3-Schuller, Prescott; 4-Pierce, Prescott. Time: 59.5 100 YD. DASH: 1-Stewart, Hins- dale; 2-Biery, Prescott; 3-McGre- gor, Tyler; 4-Wright, Winchell. Time: 11.1 65 YD. LOW HURDLES: 1- Pru- ter, Williams; 2-Bouchart, Wil- liams; 3-Winkles, Strauss; 4-Ste- wart, Hinsdale. Time: 8.9 65 YD. HIGH HURDLES: 1- Bouchart, Williams; 2-Pruter, Wil- liams; 3-Ersele, Prescott; 4-Hart- man, Greene. Time: 9.4 HIGH JUMP: 1-Mead, Wenley; 2-Williams, Williams; 3-Philpott, Fletcher; 4-Reynolds, Chicago. Height: 5 ft. 10 in. BROAD JUMP: 1-Mead, Wen- ley; 2-Winkles, Strauss; 3-Shultz, Fletcher; 4-Ferris, Winchell. Dis- tance: 20 ft. 4% in. POLE VAULT: 1-Cutting, Hins- dale; 2-LaTendresse, Grenne; 3- Raymond, Chicago. Height: 9 ft. 9 in. SHOT PUT: 1-Nicita, Tyler; 2- Young, Allen-Rumsey; 3-Ziegel- man, Anderson; 4-Flint, Lloyd. Distance: 38 ft. 5 in. Foresters Triumph In Cinder Meet By BOB LANDOWNE The Forestry Club nosed out Michigan Christian Fellowship by a mere half point in the Indepen- dent track meet held last Wednes- day afternoon. Of the ten events, both the For- estrers and MCF took four first places, but the deciding margin was tallied in the final event, the low hurdles, which was run in semi-darkness. * * * MCF WAS trailing by two points, but Hal Snyder came through with a first place to lift his team's hopes. However, Ed Young of the Foresters took third behind him o even the count, and when Dick McArdle was awarded a tie for fourth the Foresters had their winning half point. Actually it was the Forester's strength in the field events that gave them most of their points. * * * THEY TOOK first place in the shot put and the broad jump, as well as sharing two of the. three tie positions in the high jump, for a total of 18 points out of 312 in these three events alone. Nakamura Co-Op was third with 22 points as Al Strickholm and Arnold Hanawalt won the 100 yard dash and the quarter mile, respectively. Snyder also took the high hur- dles as he and teammate Don Hogue swept that event for MCF. Other MCF winners were Morri- son Ismond in the pole vault and Bruce Clark in the mile run. The Newman Club was fourth with nine team points. Unbeaten Law Club Trounces Phi Chi,_18&0 Law Club "A" continued its un- beaten way in Professional Fra- ternity touch football, hammer- ing Phi Chi 18 to 0. Wingback Oly White, formeI member of the Michigan State Varsity, passed for all three touch- downs, one in the first and two in the second. Bob Tattersole caught two of those passes, one on a perfectly executed transcontinental which covered 45 yards, and another when he got behind the safety for forty yards. Wally Riley caught the second touchdown after Van Baydaerian intercept- ed a pass at midfield to set up the score. Displaying a powerful passing game behind the throwing arm of Riki Kobaydhi, Phi Epsilon Kap- pa went overhead to defeat Phi Alpha Kappa 13 to 7. The Phi Eps also went out of their league to dish out a licking to a team representing their chap- ter at MSC, 15 to 6. Neutral ground, Stockbridge, Mich., was the site of the game, which saw Kobayshi again do his stuff as he flipped a 15 yard aerial to halfback Don Edmondo in the second quarter and another to Bill Nemec in thp third. GRADS-SENIORS Only 8 Days I Left for Pix Appt. Deadline Nov. 3 I i Student Legislature Cinema Guild presents "DEAD OF NIGH"T" a psychological thriller Michael Redgrave - George Withers -- Mervyn Johns Friday & Saturday, Oct. 27-28 7:30 and 9:30 "AN UNUSUAL BRITISH MADE THRIL. LER-well off the beaten Hollywood path." --Time. "Feverishly convincing . . . fine stuff"-New Yorker. Made with exceptional skill and wit-one of the most successful blends of laughter, terror, and outrage that I can remember"-John Agee, The Nation. BECAUSE OF THE REACTION to this film when it was shown, last semester, to the limited membership of the Gothic Film Society, we have brought it back for a campus-wide audience. It is a chilling motion picture in the tradition of "Night Must Fall." -S. L. Cinema Guild I I 7The Charl'eatm 1 & il Courses in this old-time favorite every Wed- nesday and Friday night at 8 o'clock at Roy Hoyer's Studio. ,Come, join the fun! ROY HOYER'S STUDIO 209 South State 2-292,4 eVm 61N MA .erP _._../' vV ; h w , y ,q v rr ----- . ' 'THE VERY BOLDER AND BEEN DONE 'A GALLIC S12 'JUICILY GAL TODAYT SEXY ARLETTY USES HER CHARMS IN A MORE SEDUCTIVE MANNER THAN HAS EMR, ON THE SCREEN BEFORE!"- DAILY NEWS. ZZLER -VERY GEE-WHIZZY!"-WA1ER WINICHELLi LIC-DELIGHTFULLY IMPROPER!"-PM FERNANDELARLETTY-Michel SIMON ONLY THE FRENCH HA VE A WORD FOR IT! -OXFORD FILMS Continuous Daily from 1 P.M TODAY AND SATURDAY! THE HUSHED-UP f STORY OF WHAT GOES ON IN A GIRLS REFORM SCHOOL! 44c to 5 p.m1. Coming Saturday Midnight! HALLOWEEN SPOOK SHOW - 2 SUPER HORROR PICTURES! Tickets Now On Sale P 7 PIEK ETES "Serving Ann Arbor Half a century" Bring The Family In For Some CHICKEN$1d in the BASKET Fresh Crispy Rolls French Fries and Honey Take Out All You Want for Home Use I Grilled HAM STEAK A La Carte -I.25 Combination SEA FOOD DINNER A La Carte i | 95C a ws ::,ice=i " . ........, I I Ii i 10 w rn.'. lmu hrnna .