Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY' Thursday, June 12, 1969 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY f I _ { Wills returns to Dodgers in six player trade I--- Daily (lassileds LOS ANGELES W) - Infielder Maury Wills came back to Los Angeles yesterday in a three-cor- nered trade involving the Dodg- ers, the Montreal Expos and the Chicago Cubs. The Dodgers traded Ron Fairly and Paul Popovich to the Expos for Wills and outfielder Manny, Mota. Montreal then swapped in- fielder Popovich to the Cubs for center fielder Adolfo Phillips and relief pitcher Jack La Mabe. Montreal then announced La Mabe would go to its Vancouver, B.C. farm club. "We think our trade will help us. That's why we made it," said Vice President Al Campanis of the Dodgers. "We are trading two players, who are not playing, for Wills, who we expect to play, and Mota who will play against lefthand pitchers." The key figure in the switches, as far as the Dodgers were con- cerned, was Wills, their 36-year- old former captain. He was dealt daily sports~ NIGHT EDITOR, JIM FORRESTER to Pittsburgh by the Dodgers af- ter a fallout with owner W a 1 t O'Malley during the 1966 season. Along with Mota, he went to Montreal in the expansion draft last winter. Wills, the shortstop who set a record of 104 stolen bases for Los Angeles in 1962, has been used at third base by Montreal. He was disappointing at bat. "We needed more stability in the infield," Campanis said. "We feel the young talent we h v e will blend in with the experience." Fairly and Popovich have seen little action. Fairly, an outfielder and 11-year man in the majors, all with Los Angeles, has been at bat but 64 times for .219. Fairly is 31. Popovich, a utility infielder who came to the Dodgers from t h e Cubs in 1968 and figured to win the short-stop job this year, was a victim of Los Angeles' youth movement as Ted Sizemore won the job. Popovich is 28. Popovich will fill in for the Cubs Glenn, Beckert at second base until the injured regular re- turns to the lineup. Mota, 31, broke into the big leagues in 1963 with Pittsburgh and remained with the Pirates un- til drafted by Montreal. Phillips went to the Cubs in 1967 from Philadelphia. He is 26.' * * * NVCAA cindermen may compete ,with Russians in AAU meet By The Associated Press t ContGinued from Page 5) PERSONAL MALE STUDENT seeks quiet female roommate. 764-5080. 82 F28 LIVELY APT, needs 4th girl for July and Aug. $30.00 per month. Own room 769-0389. 53 F28 LOST: gold wire rim glasses in black case. Washington. Liberty area. Please call 971-7782. 54 F26 * LOS ANGELES-United States college undergraduate track BE IN HARMONY WITH THE UNI- and field stars may be able to compete against the Russians after all.: VERSE-have your piano tuned. Grin- Hilmer Lodge, chairman of the Amateur Athletic Union's track, nell tuner. UM student. discount, and field committee, said yesterday that he has asked the National Call Kim. 769-5651. 55 F28 Collegiate Athletic Association to sanction the AAU national meet. LEARN THE FACTS before you buy-- "Since the NCAA has permitted its athletes to compete in our there is more to a diamond than meets the eye. Austin Diamond, 1209 previous meets this year, I can see no reason why it should not s. University, 663-7151. F give us a sanction for this one," said Lodge. SCUBA GEAR-2-72.2 cu. ft. U.S. Div- ers Co. tanks. 2-Conshelf IV Single- * SAN ANTINO, Tex.-The U.S. team won its first Counsel Inter- stage regulator. 2-Cam-E-Ze back national du Sport Militaire gold medal since 1964 yesterday by taking ner use wrelease Neor1con tio the top three places in thet 4,000-meter cross country run in the final both. Original price $280.00 Call Ron event of the sixth Modern Pentathlon CISM Championship. or Scott after 6 p.m. 761-2680. FD Spec. 4 Rich Aleshire of Los Angeles won the grueling run by Creative Photography covering the Ft. Sam Houston course in 13:25. First Lt. Bill Metheson WEDDINGS and portraits. Professional of Eagle Rock, Calif., was second in 13:43, and 2nd Lt. Charles L. quality at student rates. Call John Evans at 769-0868 or 761-3690 after 6 "Chuck" Richards, Tacoma, Wash., was third in 13:52- p.m. for appointment to see portfolio. Richards' run gave him a total of 1,069 points-enough to take F to, 41~ the over-all CISM gold medal in individual standings.T Aleshire moved from fourth to second place in individual stand- ings to take a silver medal. In third place over-all was Mario Medda of Italy, who was fourth in the run in 13:55. The U.S. team took top CISM honors with a total score for five events of 14,328. Switzerland was second with 13,398. Italy was third with 13,396, Germany fourth with 11,904 and Brazil fifth with 9,717. 0 MOSCOW-Tigran Petrosyan, defending champion, and chal- lenger Boris Spassky adjourned the 21st game in their world cham- pionship chess series Wednesday night on the 41st move and will complete it Thursday. Spassky leads 10.5-9.5. The series is due to run to 24 games. SAN FRANCISCO SLUGGER Willie McCovey tries to boogaloo his way out of a jam between second and third base. But his New York partner was uncooperative in the dapce instruction and tagged McCovey out, even though an onlooking infielder attempts to imitate the San Franciscan's soulful strut. The Giants ended the Mets' 11 game winning streak yesterday 7-2. LEAVING THURS., June 12 for camp- ing, hiking in Wyoming. would like couple or singles to share expenses and experiences. Call Sandy, 665-5864 immediately. 51F25 '63 TRIUMPH TR-4. Good condition. new top, good tires, body solid-no rust, fine mechanical shape. $900 or best offer. Tom, 761-3812. FA SPEEDREADI NG! DO-IT-YOURSELF COURSE No classes to attends HALF-PRICE THRU JULY 1 ONLY Money-back guarantee. Complete course now only $20. Send cash. check, or money order to: Speedread, International 212 Prudential Plaza Chicago, 111, 60601 F30 BASEBALL ROUNDUP: Maury Wills Tigers win in 10th on Price's hon EIer. 4-2 Azcue deserts Red Sox during Minnesota series By The Associated Press DETROIT-Jim Price's two-out' double capped a two-run rally in the 10th inning that vaulted the Detroit Tigers to a 4-3 victory over Seattle last night. John Kennedy put the Pilots ahead 3-2 in the top of the 10th with a homer off Pat Dobson, but the Tigers came back iii the bot- tom of the inning. Al Kaline started the rally with After Tom Matchick flied out, Diego Segui relieved John O'Don- oghue, and Price lashed a doublel off the left field wall, driving in Cash., Mike Hegan drove in the first two Pilot runs, tying the game both times. His run-scoring singl6 made it 1-1 in the third, and his seventh homer made it 2-2 in the sevently. 5 victory over the Baltimore Ori- oles last night. Pete Richert retired the first two Angeles in the 14th, but Jay Johnstone singled and Jim Fre- gosi bounced a ground rule double into the right field stands. Satriano then batted for pitch- er Pedro Borbon and singled to, right, driving in two runs and enabling the Angels to beat by just a few minutes the Baltimore ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (P)- Boston catcher Joe Azcue jumped the American League team last night and flew to his home in Kansas City, Red Sox officials an- nounced. A Boston spokesman said Azcue had been moody about not being played regularly and had asked Red Sox officials to trade him. The Red Sox obtained Azcue along with pitchers Vincente Romo and Sonny Seibert in a trade early this season 'for Ken Harelson, Dick Ellsworth and Juan Pizarro. The spokesman said Azcue left the team about 4 p.m., several hours before the Red Sox were to play the Minnesota Twins Wed- nesday night. He said Dick O'Connell, Red Sox general manager, Haywood Sullivan, vice president in charge of player personnel,' and manager Dick Williams would discuss Az- cue's decision today after the team flies back to Boston. "Azcue has done this before when he hasn't been playing,' thqe spokesman said. "I understand he did it with Cleveland and when he was with Kansas City." In 19 games with the Red Sox, Azcue batted .216. Counting seven games with Cleveland, he was batting .240. Azcue was the third major i leaguer to leave his club this sea- son. Willie Horton failed to show up for Detroit's three-game series at Minnesota June 16-18. Horton lost his salary for the games he missed. Philadelphia's Richie Allen also jumped his club without permis- sion and was fined $1,000. 'One puInel LOS ANGELES (P) - Profes- sional basketball player Dennis Grey, who claims Lew Alcindor slugged him and broke his jaw, sued the UCLA All-American for $750,000 yesterday. Attorney Paul Caruso filed the civil suit in Los Angeles Superior Court on behalf of Grey, 22, a rookie center last season with the Los Angeles Stars of the American Basketball League. The suit also named as plain- tiffs the Milwaukee Bucks of the National Basketball League, who signed the UCLA star for a re- ported $1.4 million on a multi-year contract, the NBA and its presi- dent, J. Walter Kennedy. Grey, 6-8, from San Diego, is still hospitalized with the broken jaw wired. run-scoring double added two runs in the fourth. Hunt's single, McCovey's run- scoring double and Lanier's two- run single made it 7-0 against re- liever Tug McGraw in the sixth. Hunt had three hits and two runs scored. Mays had three hits and two runs batted in. * * * Cards stomped CINCINNATI - Vada Pinson homered and singled for t h r e e runs and Lou Brock lashed a double and a single for three more as the St. Louis Cardinals maul- ed the Cincinnati Reds 10-5 last night. ENTREPRENEURS: I have an interest- ing financial situation that may in- Jim "Mudcat" Grant relieved trigue you. Write P.O. box 285, Ann St. Louis starter Mike Torrez in Arbor. F25 the third inning and scattered WANTED-Male vocalist for rock group. seven hits the rest of the way to Call 769-3321. F26 earn his first victory with the IF You HAVE a darkroom or know Cardinals. someone who has one that I can Pinson hit a two-run homer in use, please call Nancy, 761-7718. Wil- the first inning, scoring behind ling to pay if necessary. 20 Curt Flood, who had doubled. Joe EXPERT TYPING of all kinds of Torre capped the three-run in- papers. Call Kathy Kohn at the iMchgan Daily, 764-0562 or at home. ning with a solo homer. 769-3566. P17 A walk and doubles by Torrez and Brock produced two runs in COUPLE SEEKS other couple to swing the second. with. Write Box 69. / 31F25 a single. Pinch runner Ron Woods city curfew that would have made went to second on a sacrificedropped the 14th the last inning no mat- third -on Norm Cash's single and BALTIMORE-Tom Satriano's ter what happened. home with the tying run as Jim two-out two-run single gave the The Angeles forged ahead 5-4 Northrup singled. Califomia Angeles a 14-inning, 7- in the top of the 11th on a two- -_-- --_- - -out single by Aurelio Rodriguez and Jim Spencer's double. 1 ' But the Orioles tied it in the bottom of the inning on singles air sndwiched around a sacri- The flareup came during a prac- would miss play for 2%, months, fice. tice pickup game at a high school including summer camp due to be- * * last Saturday. News of the episode gin Monday. was not revealed until Sunday. Alcindor was not available for Grey was in surgery for 2% hours. comment. n ATLANTA-Knuckle-baller Phil Charging assault and battery,Ng Caruso said he wanted to file the Alcindor received all-American nihkro won his 10th game lat action before Alcindor left the designation in each of his three led the Atlanta Braves to their jurisdiction of the court. years at UCLA, often retitled as first 1969 victory over theChi- The suit asked for $500,000 Lew-CIA. In his senior year he punitive damages, $250,000 gen- was named the Most Valuable cago Cubs, 5-1. erativ damagesor2pain0and su- College Basketball Player in the Niekro, who has lost four times, eral damages for pain and suf- o retired the first 15 Cubs he faced fering and special damages to pay nation. before Randy Hundley broke up for medical expenses and possible Alcindor's stardom began while the no-hit bid with a leadoff home future losses. he was still playing high school run in the sixth inning. General Manager Jim Hardy of ball in New York. Hundreds of Niekro retired the next six Cubs the Stars said his club has no part colleges and Universities offered in order before Ernie Banks sing- of the suit, although it might have the T1% " giant scholarships when leed in the eighth. Niekro did not cause. he completed his high school 1 walk a batter and struck out countedI In the fourth, hits by Pinson, Flood and Tim McCarver account- ed for three more runs and push- ed the score to 8-3. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $7.50 Rh positive, $10 and $12 Rh negative. Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., 9-4; Wed., 1-7.1$-21 years old need 'aaP arian :'n 'Sfi ''..io5'cdA}: 1.{:Oti or'C+i ?'.'S?'', 9Sr+-..'.JR"u eS i ._.c.'.. _ .. ...:: :?."+.j.S: L h :.3; }L?:::K":ti{:i', t," I Sparent's permission. ! Michigan Community Blood Center I ZAJUR LEA UE S AND NGS404 W. Michigan, Ypsilanti. MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS 4,491-* 483-1894 AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE GIRL SINGER looking for band-blues, acid rock. 769-3612. F25 A Baltimore Boston Detroit New York Washington Cleveland Minnesota Oakland Chicago Seattle Kansas City California East W 140 36 29 29 29 is West 30 27 23 24 24 19 L 17 19 23 30 31 34 24 24 2s 30 32 35 Pet. .702 .655 .558 .492 .483 .346 .556 .529 .451 .444 .429 .340 uast GBW L Pct. GB GB Chicago 37 18 .673 - - New York 29 24 .547 7 Pittsburgh 27 29 .482 10 2 S2St. Louis 27 29 .482 10% 12 Philadelphia 19 32 .373 16 12% xMontreal 13 37 .260 21%/ 19% west Atlanta 33 21 .611 -- Los Angeles 43 23 .574 2 - San Francisco 30 24 .556 3 % Cincinnati 27 23 .540 4 6 Houston 28 31 .475 7Y' 7 xSan Diego 24 34 .414 11 S x--Late game' not included 11% x- Yesterday's Results Atlanta 5, Chicago 1 Montreal at San Diego, inc. San Francisco 7, New York 2 Philadelphia 3, Los. Angeles 0 Pittsburgh 13, Houston 8 St. Louis 10, Cincinnati 5 Today's Games Chicago at Atlanta, night Philadelphia at Los Angeles, night Montreal at San Diego, night Pittsburgh at Houston, night St. Louis at Cincinnati, night Only games scheduled. Grey's career might suffer, Har- dy said. He said the former Cali- fornia Western University player, career, with Alcindor finally giv- ing the nod to John Wooden and UCLA. Owners-players battle in NHL postponed MONTREAL (P) - There will+ be no more fireworks over the contentious reserve' clause at the3 annual National Hockey League meetings - both sides in the1 owner-players council battle have sheathed their weapons until a later date. At a joint news conference yes- terday, Charles Mulcahy of theJ Boston Bruins, representing the owners, and Toronto lawyer Alan Eagleson, executive director of the NHL Players Association, said fu- ture discussion has been postpon- ed until a Toronto meeting July 15-16.] The players have been seekingi abolition of the reserve clause,7 which binds them to one club un-J til sold or traded in favor of the option clause used in football con- tracts.- Under the option clause, a play-1 er plays out the final year of his' contract, after previously notify-1 ing the team, at a reduced salary! and then is free to make a deal for his services with another club. 3 The joint statement said the' players had requested certain changes in the matter of endorse- ments, but no agreement had been reached on that subject either. The meetings continued w i t h the intra-league draft, a further nudge toward additional expan-t sion. The intra-leaguedraft is an in- ternal affair where the 12 bigt league clubs draft from each 1 other after each has filed a pro- tected list of 14 players, plus two goalkeepers. The draft price is $30,000 and the rules stipulate that no club can have more than three draft claims against it. Tuesday night the clubs each filed their protected list with the league President Clarence Camp- bell. The combined lists contain- ed several surprises. Such well known names as Dick Duff of Montreal; Pierre Pilote, Marcel Pronovost and Floyd Smith of Toronto; Dean Pren- tice and goalie Terry Sawchuk of Detroit; Eric Nesterenko of Chi- cago, and Elmer Vasko and Leo Boivin of Minnesota were missing from the sheltered circle. The Chicago Black Hawks, who finished in the cellar for the first time in 13 years. were first to take advantage of the draft. They reacquired colorful center Lou Angotti and obtained goalie Tony Esposito. Esposito is a brother of P h i1 Esposito, Boston's record-breaking center. The 26-year-old netmind- er was drafted from the champ- ion Montreal Canadiens, for whom he played 13 games 1 a s t season and posted a 2.73 goals- against average. Angotti, 31, was obtained from the St. Louis Blues, who o n 1 y Tuesday secured him from Pitts- burgh in a three-player transac- tion. He was a sparkplug for the Hawks three years ago hwven they won the circuit's regular season wards Dean Prentice from Detroit title. and Glenn Sather from Boston, Chicago also picked up Howie plus goalie Al Smith from Toronto Menard, a center, from Los An- and defenseman Bob Blackburn geesd from the Rangers. In all 22 players switched teams during the draft. The draft price ,is $30,000. Seventeen of the play- ers were drafted and five others were purchased during the draft. The Minnesota North Stars, last-place finishers in the West division in 1968-69, had f i r s t choice and they selected D i c k Sentes, a 22-year-old right winger from the Canadiens. He played for Cleveland of the American League last year, scoring 16 goals and collecting 13 assists. The North Stars also acquired Grant Erick- son, a left wing, from Boston, and Charlie Burns, a center, f r o m Pittsburgh.! Forbes Kennedy, a center who led the league in penalty min-I The Blues, champions of the West Division, also were extremely active. They acquired four for- wards-Andre Boudrias, Wayne Maki and Bob Schmautz from Chicago and Ron Anderson from Los Angeles. The Canadiens obtained goalie Jack Norrie from Chicago and for- wards Jean-Guy Gendron from Philadelphia and Larry Mickey from Toronto. The Detroit Red Wings, seeking to improve a porous defense, got Matt Ravlich, a veteran rear guard from Chicago. Toronto got Marv Edwards, a goalie from Pittsburgh, and Boston picked up Bill Speer, a defenseman, from the same club. eight. The Braves, beaten the first four times they played the Cubs, jumped to a four-run lead in the first inning when they chased Chicago starter Bill Hands. Mike Lum and Sonny Jackson singled, Hank Aaron walked and Orlando Cepeda cracked a two- run double. Aaron scored on Dar- rell Evans' sacrifice fly and Ce- peda dashed home on Felix Mil- lan's single before Rich Nye came on and snuffed the outburst. Aaron added another run in the fifth with a homer, his 16th. ** * Mets mashed SAN FRANCISCO - The San Francisco Giants ended the 11- game winning streak of the New York Mets yesterday 7-2 as Gay- lord Perry pitched a four-hitter. Perry worked out of a bases- loaded jam in the first inning by striking out Ed Kranepool, then against five defeats. Perry lost his shutout when Kranepool homered in the sev- enth inning. Ron Hunt, Willie Mays and Wil- lie McCovey smashed key hits for the Giants as they snapped the longest winning streak in the majors this season. Perry was staked to a 2-0 lead' in the first inning on Hunt's triple, Mays' run-scoring single and Jim Davenport's sacrifice fly off loser Gary Gentry, 5-5. Singles by Hal Lanier and Bobby Bonds, an error and May's Yesterday's Results Boston 13, Minnesota 5 Chicago 4, Cleveland 3 California 7, Baltimore 5,14 inn. New York 5, Kansas City 4, 11 inn. Oakland 6, Washington 4, 13 inn. Detroit 4, Seattle 3, 10 inn. Today's Game Oakland at Washington, night Only game scheduled. Littler seen as darkhorse in National Open Tourney BUSINESS SERVICES Xerox copies PAPERS, ESSAYS, RE- PORTS, THESES. Perfect copies now only 7c on overnight service, use cor- rect-o-tape or unlimited erasures and yet be assured of copies that even look better than the original from the new Xerox 2400 .We supplyr20 weight copy paper free. Documents stored in office safe for complete safety on request. Immediate service during business hours 9c per page. Discount Photocopy Service, 1217 S. University. 769-0560. 8JTC EXPERIENCED - SECRETARY desires work in her home. Thesis, technical typing, stuffing, etc. IBM electric. Call Jeanette. 971-2463: 48Jte LOST AND FOUND LOST-BROWN, WHITE DOG. Medium size, with white tipped plumed tal, Wore harness when lost May 20. RE- WARD for return or information leading to return. 764-1299 '(days). Miss Cherry. 769-5177 nights. 8 A29 LOST-Black female kitten in vicinity of 422 Packard. 665-9880. 9 A26 LOST-,small spaniel puppy, white with light brown markings. Reward. Call 769-0029. A25 FOUND--6 wk. old black male kitten in Law Quad. Call 662-0050. A9 A HOUSTON to)-Bill Casper and Gary Player are furnace hot, Ar- nold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus are ice cold and in between is luke-warm Gene Littler, the man to watch in the 69th U.S. Open Golf Championship, starting to- day. He's the forgotten man of the tournament--the course is talon- made for him, he could take it all," former PGA title holder Dave Marr told a locker-room assem- blage as 139 pros and 11 amateurs put in final practice licks for the four-day, 72-hole test over The Chamvions, Cypress Club layout. Littler 38, the quiet man from San Diego, Calif., who is blessed with a perfect one-piece swing, could be the most celebrated dark- horse over to tee up a ball in this aged championship. He is the year's leading money- winner with more than $101,000 in official earnings. He is one of thre players who has won two tournaments. He has a steady, mechanical game that rarely de- velops flaws. Nobody's noticed him. He is very fond of the sprawling, tree-lined a n d snake-infested course-a 6,967-yard spread play- ing to a par 35-35-70-but he! typically shrugs . off his own chances. "Shucks, I'm not playing that 3 well," he said. "I've played only two tournament since the Masters and I'm not hitting the ball that flush. Still, I remember I was playing pretty bad when I went to Oakland Hills at Birmingham, Michigan, and won the Open in 1961." PETS AND SUPPLIES FREE KITTENS, days 764-8337, eve- nings 761-9249. Ask for Vivian. 8 T27 WANTED TO BUY WANTED 1966 or earlier issue of Play- boy, 50c per copy. Call weekdays be- fore 3, 769-5558. 3K26 FOR SALE. I HAVE a Maytag 18 lb. washing ma- chine which I bought last November. The kind the laundromats use for washing rugs. Heavy duty, best made. Make offer. Must sell. 769-3386. 26B27 BICYCLE FOR SALE: SCHWINN CON- TINENTAL IN GOOD CONDITION. $55 OR BEST OFFER. CALL RICH, 761-5201. B28 utes with 219 and was suspended Larry Hillman, a veteran de- twice, was obtained by the New' fenseman, was selected by the York Rangers -from Pittsburgh. Philadelphia Flyers from Mont- He played for Philadelphia and real's unprotected list. Toronto last year. T n nt n r Pittsburgh, fifth place in jLOS Angeles and OaKiand were which finished -in the only teams which did not add the West, got for- any players. r -U IWE'RE HAYING A PI CNIC!1 '-JOIN US !- On SUNDAY, JUNE 15, } from 1.:00-5:00 I fr c rhins. frnks. sod~ca.muic. Subscribe To FRIDAY, JUNE 13 6:30 P.M. THE MICHIGAN DAILY -International Dinner-Discussion(flm)-S "DEFENSE AND DOMESTI( NEEDS: A 1 I