THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1967 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1967 I H sk Pro Ban on Rigged Delays o Air TV, Radio Commercials Track Records in Jeopardy At Iowa City Championships By WALLACE IMMEN toms soccer game so that CBS, don't think he's around any more."I Rep. Richard L. Ottinger said sterday he is drafting legislation .at would prohibit the rigging of ofessional sports events to per- it scheduling of radio or tele- sion commercials. He said his concern was prompt- . by published reports that pro- ssional soccer players "have been dered to feign injuries or dis- ites in order to allow the tele- sion network to work in its com- ercials." The New York Democrat said in s statement that he hopes his 11 will extend to all professional orts. He added he hopes the 'oposal will spark a full investi- Ltion of the extent to which net- orks are influencing sporting ents "at the expense of the fewer or listener." Soccer refereePete Rhodes had ade the disclosure earlier that e had deliberately called 11 of . fouls in the nationally televised oronto Falcons-Pittsburgh Phan- could air its advertisements. Rhodes, a British referee im- ported to handle games in the Na- tional Professional Soccer League, has an electronic receiving unit straped on his back for televised games. "I get three beeps on the radar thing and then the producer tells me 'a commercial is coming up' so stop the play," Rhodes claimed. He said he visits the dressing rooms before the game and tells the players to lie down or pretend to protest when he blows the' whistle. "The players all cooperate with the networks because it gives them a breather and at the same time it's making money for the league," Rhodes claimed. He said the maximum number of commercial in a. game is 10. He told of one referee who dis- obeyed the orders. "He was being booed by the spectators and forgot to listen to the receiver," said Rhodes. "I warden Bars Puerto !ican Main Events. The NPSL denied the story, but yesterday ruled that time outs will be permitted in games to get in the required number of commer- cials, which is usually ten. Ken Macker, the NPSL commis- sioner said referees will signify a delay for television by waving a large red handkerchief over their heads in a circular motion. Macker said that referees may now allow time outs after goals, on goal kicks, following injuries that require a trainer's attention and before corner kicks and side- line throw-ins. "This new procedure," he ex- plained, "has been designed to provide needed time for our tele- vision sponsors with a minimum of inconvenience for our fans and in a way that will be clearly visible to all." Rhodes also complained that the television people made him buy a .39 caliber starter's gun to replace the .22 he was using because their microphones couldn't pick up the sound. "I bought the .38, but when I put it in the pocket of my shorts, the weight pulled them to my ankles," he said. Rhodes said he can hardly run up and down the field with all the equipment necessary. Another official on the field must carry similar equipment in case the referee gets injured or is unable to finish the game. Net Finals Begin . oday Michigan's defending Big Ten tennis champions will face tough opposition in the 58th annual con- ference meet beginning today on Ferry Field. Michigan leads the league going into tournament action by one point, with 71 compared to sec- ond place Michigan State's 70. The tournament singles begin at 9 this morning, Michigan play- ers will be in action as follows: Dick Dell vs. Phil Ward (Pur- due) 10; Brian Marcus vs. Dave Holden (Illinois) 9; Pete Fishbach. vs. Mike Nolan (Indiana) 10; Ed Waits vs. Larry Lucy (Purdue) 9; Bob Pritula vs. Bob Burkholder (Illinois) 10. By JAKE SLABIAK Michigan's defending champion, Jack Harvey, will attempt to break his conference record shot put mark of 58 feet, 6/ inches to- morrow when the Big Ten's 67th Outdoor Championship Track and Field opens in Iowa City. Among the competitors will be well balanced Michigan State which is favored to grab a rare third straight team title, and a half dozen individual champion- ships-and meet records - may fall in the Olympic attuned meet. The 67th conference meet on the University of Iowa's new $50.- 000 asphalt-rubber oval has been swelled to 18 events with addition of four tests aimed at the 1968 Olympiad in Mexico City. The four new events, increas- ing the already rigorous program. include the triple jump, the 3000- meter steeplechase, the 440-yard relay and the three mile run. Eight individual champions re- turn, but most could stumble in the two-day meet opening to- morrow with preliminaries in eight events and finals in the discus and long jump. -Associated Press CHICAGO CUB'S outfielder Ted Savage was more than perturbed yesterday as umpire Al Barlick called him out attempting to steal home on San Francisco's Dick'Dietz in the fifth inning. Leaping into the air did him little good as the Giants won, 4-2. TigrsSurge Bc ih8Ti SC As Chsox Reds KeepU Pace Thus far this spring, perform- ances indicate that five Big Ten meet records are in jeopardy, high- lighted by the league's first seven- foot high jumper in Michigan State's Mike Bower. The four other records threat- ened include the one-mile run by Larry Wieczorek of Iowa (4:10.7). one-mile relay by Iowa (3:07.1 which also is an all-time record, the shot put by Michigan's Har- vey (58'64"), and the 120-yard high hurdles by Mike Butler of Wisconsin (0:13.9t. In spring competition to date, Michigan State produced ranking performances in 15 of the* 18 events that will be held in the program. Only two schools, Michigan and Illinois, once the twin pins of Big Ten track, ever won the out- door title three successive years, the last sweep by Illinois in 1958- 1959 and 1960. SPORTS NIGHT EDIT WALLACE IMMEN OR: t- r4 NEW YORK (I)-Puerto Rican fighters will be barred from main events at Madison Square Garden for a cooling off period, it was learned yesterday following the second riot within 10 weeks and the third in 21 months at a fight show in the famed arena. Bottles, pieces of chairs and other missiles were tossed into the ring and the ringside sections Tuesday night shortly after light heavyweight champion Dick Tiger of Nigeria was awarded a split decision over Puerto Rican-born Jose Torres in a very close return, 15-round title bout. Edwin B. Dooley, chairman of the New York Athletic Commis- sion, had his men busy preparing a report to Gov. Nelson Rocke- feller about the incident. The other two riots involved fights featuring Puerto Rican- born Frankie Narvaez, a New York lightweight who lost both times. In the first, Narvaez dropped a split decision in a close fight with Flash Elorde of the Philippines on Aug. 4, 1965. In the second, on March 10, 1967, Panama's Ismael Laguna decisively whipped Nar- vaez and was awarded a unani- mous decision by whopping mar- gins. As a result of the third riot, a proposed title fight between light- weight champion Carlos Ortiz, a Puerto Rican-born New Yorker and Laguna may not be held in New York or may be put off for some time. The fight had been considered a sure sellout A Garden source, who asked not to be identified, said, "We can't go with that or any main event with a Puerto Rican for some time after this one." But, Harry Markson, boxing di- rector of the Garden, said he and matchmaker Teddy Brenner were going ahead with plans to pair Tiger with Roger Rouse, the No. 1 contender from Anaconda, Mont., in the Garden in September. Rouse had been promised a bout with the winner within 90 days but presumably would be satisfied with a September date. In the aftermath of the bottle- throwing outbreak Tuesday in which 11 persons were injured, chairman Edwin B. Dooley of the New York Athletic Commission de- clared "the Garden owes it to the public to give adequate protection to the public if it is to remain in the business of promoting fights under the commissioner's jurisdic- tion. "If they cannot do that, maybe they should close up the balcony. They might need 20 to 40 extra men at times up there and in the mezzanine although the Garden did strengthen its police staff for the Tiger-Torres fight." "We had extra police and we thought this was adequate based on 40 years of experience in the Garden," said Markson. "But if we need more then we'll add more." By The Associated Press Slugging dominated action in both leagues last night as the Orioles belted seven home runs in their game while Detroit was com- ing back strong with a grand slam and two single blasts. St Louis and Atlanta both took their games on led off homers in the ninth and the long ball took the Giants over the Cubs as well. Willie Horton belted a pair; of home runs and Jim Northrup crashed a grand slam following three walks in the third inning as the Detroit Tigers defeated the Washington Senators 8-1 last night. Joe Sparma won his fourth game- without a loss, pitching a three-hitter and striking out 10. He gave up a leadoff homer to Fred Valentine in the fourth. Pete Rose drove in one run and scored another and Tony Perez drove in two as the National League leading Cincinnati Reds won their fifth straight game, 3-1 over the Pittsburgh Pirates. Sammy Ellis, 4-2, yielded nine hits, 'but the Pirates got to him only in the second when they tied the game at 1-1 as Bill Mazeroski singled, advancedon a wild pitch and scored on Donn Clendenon's single. American League leading Chi- cago White Sox bombed Jim Kaat, who had beaten them nine straight, in a three-run fourth inning and went on to defeat the Minnesota Twins 5-4. Joel Horlen boosted his record to 5-0 but needed help from Bob Locker in the eighth after Har- mon Killebrew blasted his fifth homer and Bob Allison and Zoilo Versalles singled. Another run scored before Locker put out the fire by striking out Earl Battey. The Baltimore Orioles crashed seven home runs, four of them in a nine-run seventh inning, and outslugged the Boston Red Sox, 12-8. The Red Sox belted three homers-two of them a pair of two-run shots by Carl Yastrzem- ski-and the total of 10 was just one shy of the major league record for homers in a game by both teams. This was set by New York and Detroit June 23, 1950. Joe Torre's leadoff homer in the ninth inning powered the Atlanta Braves to a 4-3 victory over the New York Mets. Hank Aaron tied the score 3-3 in the sixth inning with a two- run blast after Denis Menke slap- ped a solo homer in the fifth in- ning for the Braves' first run. Leon Wagner's grand slam home run and a two-run shot by Fred Whitfield staked Cleveland to an early lead over New York and the Indians held on for an 8-7 victory over the Yankees. Behind 8-2 in the seventh, the Yanks scored five times on a three-run homer by Tom Tresh, a solo shot by Mickey Mantle and a pinch single by Charlie Smith. o' I Major League Standings -I AMERICAN LEAGU W L3 Chicago Detroit Kansas City New York Cleveland Baltimore Boston Washington Minnesota California 19 15 15 13 13 13 13 13 12 14 8 10 15 14 14 15 16 16 16 19 E Pct. GB .704 - .643 114. .500 5?. .481 6 .481 6 .464 6zt .448 7 .448 7 .429 7 .424 8 Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Atlanta San Francisco Philadelphia x-Los Angeles New York x-Houston x-Late game NATIONAL LEAGUE WV L Pct. GB 24 10 .706 - 17 11 .607 4 16 12 .571 5 16 13 .552 5/2 16 14 .533 6 16 15 .516 6/ 13 16 .448 8% 11 18 .379 10/- 10 17 .370 10 t 9 22 .290 131/2 not included. A FUTURE IN ELECTRONICS at the HEATH COMPANY WORLD'S LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF ELECTRONIC KITS BENTON HARBOR-ST. 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PENGUIN BOOKS INC 3300 Clipper Mill Road Baltimore, Md. 21211 M YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 12, Boston 8 Cleveland 8, New York 7 California 7, Kansas City 3 Detroit 8, Washington 1 Chicago 5, Minnesota 4 TODAY'S GAME Baltimore at Washington (n) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 4, Chicago 2 Atlanta 4, New York 3 Cincinnati 3, Pittsburgh 1 St Louis 3, Philadelphia 2 Los Angeles 7, Houston 0 (5th) TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Philadelphia (n) Pittsburgh at Atlanta (n) Sain Francisco at Houston (n)i KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR * NO WAITING " 8 BARBERS * OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Near the Michigan Theatre Only game scheduled Only games scheduled Purdue Favored as Big Ten Golfers Meet Here for 72-Hole Tournament " Purdue will be a favorite when Big Ten golfers gather for the Conference championships which begin tomorrow over the tough Michigan golf course, but Ohio State and the host Wolverines will be important factors in the pic- ture, too. The test run of the second an- nual Northern Collegiate 72-hole tournament here, proved to be even more than that it is shaping up into a major collegiate tourna- ment which top college teams will be eyeing closely in the future. The Boilermakers won the rug- ged two-day test of a difficult test and cold weather, with Florida, a top southern team, as runner-up and the Buckeyes and Michigan trailing. Although Dave Oakley of Flor- ida won the individual honors with a 78-77-74-71-300, the Boil-+ ermakers showed remarkable con- sistency in fashioning a team score of 1,539. Coach Sam Voinoff commented at the conclusion of the meet, "We won because we were consistent. We didn't have any bad scores." And then he added, "It was a pleasure to beat a strong southern team-it will give Big Ten golf a real boost." Purdue's team effort ran 389- 401-381-378 for its 1,539 total with Florida just seven strokes away with 384-404-386-372-1,546. Although Jeff Parry of the Buckeyes made a hole in one on the 175 yard fifth hole, last year's champions couldn't catch the leaders as they finished 388-398- 390-377-1,562. Michigan grabbed an early lead as John Schroeder, last year's co-. champ with Alex Antonio of the Buckeyes, fired a 70 first round and his teammate John Richard came in with 71, but they, too, fell off the gruelling pace. Mich- igan State, another strong con- tender in the Conference meet, turned in a 1,570 mark. R E POR T T O Y O U T H -.2 of YOUR NEXT CHALLENGE... Growth. Change. These are bywords at Consumers Power. We offer the chal- lenge of harnessing the computer and the atom. Of developing better ways to do our job. Above all, of providing the best service at the lowest possible cost. Consumers Power Company is one of the largest electric and natural gas utili- ties in the nation. We serve 1.4 million customers in 67 of the 68 counties of Michigan's Lower Peninsula. We spend more than $100 million a year on ex- pansion, to keep pace with rising needs for energy in a dynamic area. interested in challenge? Then we're in- * It does all the work, but on Saturday night which one goes to the party? Once upon a time there was an ugly little bug. It could go about 27 miles on just one gallon of gas. It could go about 40,000 miles on just one set of tires. And it could park in tiny little crevices no big- ger than a bug. It wag just right for taking father to the train or the children to school. Or for taking mother to the grocery store, drugstore, dime store and all the enchanting places mothers go when everyone else is working. The ugly little bug was just like one of the family. But alas, it wasn't beautiful. So for any important occasion the poor ugly little bug would be replaced. By a big beautiful chariot, drawn by 300 horses! Then, after a time, a curious thing 'happened. The ugly little bug (which was made very sturdily) never got uglier. But the big beautiful chariot didn't exactly get more beautiful. In fact, in a few years its beauty began to fade. Until, lo and behold, the ugly little bug didn't look as ugly as the big beautiful chariot! The moral being: if you want to show 4K 4 [. nl~ A" phVSiC[E a > t