Rage Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridcav. Aaril 4. 1 969. Page Eight THE MICHLGAN DAILY 1rIdnv A nr jil1Td1 .+ ' 11 Clendenon HOUSTON (M-The Houston Clendenon and outfielder Astros concluded the Donn Clen- Alou. controversy finally ends Jesus denon. controversy yesterday by accepting two young pitchers and an undisclosed amount of cash from the Montreal Expos. Roy Hofheinz, owner of the Astros, then said he is dropping a federal suit for a minimum $10,000 in damages from the Expos. Houston obtained John Billing- ham, 26, Montreal's number two or three starting pitcher, and Skip Guinn, 24, a left handed. re- liever the Expos obtained from Atlanta in the National League expansion draft. Billingham was a right hand relief pitcher last year With Los Angeles. Hofheinz said the the settlement was worked out after Houston rejected Wednesday another offer by Montreal to send Clendenon to the Astros. The controversy, that once had Baseball Commissioner B o w i e Kuhn demanding and receiving a written apology from Hofheinz, dated back to a Jan. 22 trade in which Houston sent outfielder Rusty Staub to Montreal in a straight deal for first baseman . Clendenon visited the Astro- dome and indicated he was pleased with the trade but last month abruptly asserted that business commitments had forced him to decide to retire from baseball. Houston claimed the retirement nullified the deal. Staub added complications by saying he would not return to the Astros. Kuhn eventually assigned Staub and Clendenon to Montreal and Alou to Houston and told the two clubs to work out satisfactory compen- sation for Houston. Clendenon changed liis mind again Wednesday and signed a two-year contract with the Expos. Clendenon's value to the Expos will largely come from his prowess at the plate. The former Pitts- burgh Pirate star once hit .299 and should find the short fences at :the stadium in Montreal well within his range.'His return gives the team an additional bonus on the dear they made to get Staub one of the bright young hitting stars of baseball. Hofheinz and Spec Richardson, Astio general manager, said they mentum. The end of this means a relaxing feeling because this has been a big cloud hanging over us all spring," Walker said. Hofheinz said be thought the filing of the law suit had played a major role in resolving the cor- troversy. "We now have fair compensa- tion in terms of players," he said. "The suit will be dismissed be- cause there is no need to beat a dead cat." Hofheinz was asked if he were displeased with thehmanner in which Kuhn had handled the situation. "That would be inappropriate to discuss," he said. "We are satisfied with the final results but not with the time it took." In separate deals, Richardson said Steve Shea and Howie Reed, young righthanded pitchers, had been sold to Montreal and that Houston's Oklahoma City farm club had sold another righthander, Leo Marentette, to Montreal's Vancouver farm club. Billingham was the first pitcher acquired by Montreal in the ex- pansion draft. He has been basic- ally a relief pitcher during six years in the minors and one with the Dodgers. Guinn has struck out an aver- age of more than one batter per inning throughout his career. He played at Richmond, Va., and Shreveport, La., last season prior to reporting to Atlanta. 'The Pearl' given warrant Cardinals sell Bo Belinsky By The Associated Press * BALTIMORE -- Earl "The Pearl" Monroe, star player of the Baltimore Bullets of the National Basketball Association, was served yesterday with papers declaring him to be the father of a boy born to an unmarried nurse's aide. Baltimore city deputy sheriffs handed Monroe the paternity suit warrant at Friendship Airport when he got off a plane with his team- mates from New York City, where they lost the fourth and final play- off game Wednesday night to the Knicks in an Eastern Division semifinal. 0 ST. LOUIS- The St. Louis Cardinals announced yesterday they have sold the contract of lefthander Bo Belinsky to Hawaii of the Pacific Coast League, a California Angels farm team. The Cardinals asked waivers on the much publicized pitcher Monday. In four spring appearances with the Cards Belinsky hada 1.95 earned run average in 12 2-3 innings. He struck out 10 and walked 16. * * * 0 LAKELAND, Fla. - The Detroit Tigers dropped eight players yesterday in trimming down to the 25-man limit for opening day. Veteran pitchers Roy Face and John Wyatt were released, while at the same time Dick Radatz, a former American League star relief pitcher, managed to pick up a contract. Pitchers Les Cain and Bob Reed; catcher Joe Cernich and out- fielder Wayne Redmond were returned to Toledo, as were catcher Hector Valle and pitcher Tom Timmerman. ! LONG BEACH, Calif. - The stretched-out National AAU in- door swimming and diving championships get underway today for men and women, with finals in the various competitions set for next week. 0 John Billingham accepted the two young players and cash in that they were no longer interested in Clendenon be- cause of his heavy business com- mitments and because of the high level contract he signed Wednes- day with the Expos. Manager Harry Walker agreed. "Despite all the ramifications of this situation, the morale of our club is at a high point now and the high priced contract of- fered to Clendenon by Montreal would not have been, worth the risk of disrupting this high mo- I; Donn Clendenon . ZA(f NORTH (AMPUS (OMMITTEE NEEDS SIZE AND SPEED: Moeller expects run at roses, 41 presents - -- -_ ~ a Little Club with "THE JOHN HIGGINS NOTICE NON-NATIVE SPEAKERS OF ENGLISH All speakers of English as a second language* are invited to take part in an experimental test of English language proficiency to be given in AUDITORIUM A, ANGELL HALL AT 7:15 P.M. ON THE 9th OF APRIL. You will receive $5.00 for approximately 1 12 to 2 hours of your time. If you are interested you must call and register at the following number 764-2416 on or before April 8th. QUINTET" FREE! Fri., April 4, 1969 Bursley Snack Bar 9-12 P.M. 'NO ELI STUDENTS CURRENTLY ENROLLED IN TENSIVE ENGLISH COURSES ARE ELIGIBLE FOR' AT THIS TIME. THE IN- THE TEST By TERRI FOUCHEY title. He and the rest of the team elievable as it may sound to did not go to the Rose Bowl be- Moody Hayes and' the ma- cause t h e faculty voted against of Ann Arbor's population, letting the team participate. exists a former Ohio State Like many Ohio State athletes, 1 player who would like to Moeller has a p u r e Ohio back- chigan win the next Rose ground. He went to Ohio State af- ter lettering in t h r e e sports in Moeller is the man who high school. There he devoted his this shocking ambition of energies solely to football and was tg his former coach of team captain and All-Big Ten in tnd victory this coming No- his senior year. ' 22nd. But considering the Moeller coached football for at Moeller is the new Mich- three years at Belle Fontaine (O.) efensive coach, the ambi- high school before moving up to not unusual. Miami to join Bo Schembechler's ever, he hasmotivesdbesides staff. He is another of the coaches normally attributed to a Schembechler brought along from who wants to see his team Miami. tgood season. Moeller was Now that he has been given a backer on the 1961 Ohio second chance to spend Christmas eam that won the Big Ten in the sunny environs of Pasadena --- - -- -- Moeller plans to take advantage of. it. He feels this year's Wolver- ines are a team capable of ful- filling his wish. Moeller is confident for several reasons. "We have a great deal of returning personnel a n d they should be able to continue on with last season's record. This will not be a rebuilding year because of our experienced players." One of the main goals of the new staff is to return to the great winning tradition of Michigan football and "last season is an ex- I I t 1. Richard Balzhiser cellent foundation to begin with." After viewing the films and the first few days of practice, Moeller thinks there are several good pros- pects. "None of them, obviously, is experienced in our type of de- fensive setup, but t h e majority have an asset to both :themselves and the staff, in t h e i r playing time experience." Moeller considers this type of experience helpful to a player, but it is not his so 1 e criterion for judgment. "The abilities to move and react quickly are the m o s t necessary qualities for a defensive player, especially for an end." He places these before size, b u t he adds, "The ideal player would naturally have size and be ableuto move. From looking at the pros- pects, I'm hopeful that this year we may possibly find a player with both these qualities." O t h e r characteristics which Moeller looks for in his players are toughness a n d aggressiveness. However he combines the ability to be a team player with all his standards,. "If they think about the team first and carry out their responsibilities in that area, they'll be an asset to the team and a good player." Moeller said that the first prac- tice sessions have gone well and he was pleased with the good at- titude on the field. "I've also seen a couple good sophomore end can- didates, but their biggest obstacle is to overcome t h e experienced players." He related that the leading problem for the new staff is that more time must be devoted to the teacher-learning process t h a n a returning staff is faced with. "Teaching the players our system and trying to fit their talent into it is our main goal for spring prac- tice." The established players with their already known skills will provide a good base for this pro- cess. With the eager sophomores Moeller has coming up that are as yet untried, the presence of the material can be likened to pieces of a puzzle. Hopefully the talent pieces will fit into the jigsaw puzzle of plays he has prepared for them. When all the pieces are p u t together they may show Gary Moeller sit- ting in a bed of roses. Friars have trac strouble cPROVIDENCE, R.I. OIP) - The 12 members of the*Providence Col- 4' I1 41 proudly proclaims he is a ROMNEY REPUBLICAN I E B a Ip Tai DIFER Examine the Balzhiser Record on 5 vital issues . FAIR HOUSING from the street. The vote was taken while the' city administrator and city planning chief (who were negotiaitng with the developer at the time) were on vacation. (Ann Arbor News, Aug. 31, 1965) BALZHISER was one of only three Republican councilmen to vote against Ann Arbor's 1965 Fair Housing Ordinance. He also un- successfully tried to amend the ordinance to exempt single-family homes from its coverage. (Ann Arbor News, Dec. 21, 1965) s VIETNAM 9 PUBLIC HOUSING BALZHISER, in 1965, introduced a resolution praising the conduct of the war and condemning civil disobedience by Vietnam pro- testers. Earlier he had voted to deny a parade and loudspeaker permit to the 'National Committee Against the War in Vietnam. (Ann Arbor News, Oct. 12, 1965) BALZHISER moved to cut the public housing program in half. When his amendment to reduce the number of units from 200 to 100 was defeated, he voted for the program. (Ann Arbor News, April 19, 1966) * 26 STORY APARTMENT BUILDING BALZHISER voted for approval of the new 26-story apartment complex without guarantees of adequate parking and set-back . PARK-RECREATION BALZHISER moved to cut the size of the Park-Recreation Bond issue by $400,000. If the amendment had been passed, the slash would have eliminated the only swimming pool facility easily accessible to students. (Ann Arbor News, Feb. 15, 1966) ON MONDAY 44 APRIL 7 VOTE ROBERT H RRIS 1, for 0 {i 'i