Wednesday, June 27, 1973 Page Fifteen THE SUMMER DAILY I F-. .} F ::g Wednesday, June 27, 1973 THE SUMMER DAILY Page Fifteen U, I I THE BLACK STUDIESABSTRACT Harold Cruse: Walter Rodney: Henry Davis: "the most often heard ... scholarship "'The Black Studies justification for emanating from the Abstract' will be 'Black Studies"' was capitalist epicentre scholarly, angry and ... the Black Studies grew up with special aggressive." should be related to characteristics, ''programs for social beyond ...limitations change." Page 1 of bourgeois intellectual endeavour." Page 2 I I1 Sports of The Daily I Published by CAAS at The University of Michigan Ann Arbor campus Copies may be obtained from Administrative, Office 1100 South University 764-5513, 14, 17 Students-.50 Non-students-$1.00 ..j LAST 2 DAYS STARTS FRIDAY! MUST END THURSDAY! Peter O'Toole & Sophia Loren in "Mon of Lo Mncro" (PG) JULIET WED & THURS AT 15 - 3:45 ANDREWS : 6:15&8:45 . . . 603 E. LIBERTY3 DIAL 665-6290 ENOX LODERS.. HAMMERSTEIN - - T IS If you can't beat 'em ... BOSTON-Billy Martin, whose slump ridden Tigers have dropped 11 of their last 13 decisions, called American League President Joe Cronin yesterday to request that John Rice's um- piring crew be dropped from working games involving the Tigers. "Those umpires cost us three games in our weekend series in New York and two others earlier in Anaheim," he said. Martin added that if Bill Haller could be prohibited from working Tiger games while brother Tom caught for the Tigers at the request of Earl Weaver, then the Tigers could request the absence of the John Rice crew. Beats getting a right handed pull hitter. Clyde's debut to be short ARLINGTON-Texas Ranger Manager Whitey Herzog indi- cated yesterday that schoolboy phenom David Clyde "won't go nine innings even if he is pitching a shutout" in his major league debut tonight against the Minnesota Twins. Herzog is sure that Clyde will fare well, but if he doesn't he will be given another chance. Herzog is worried about some things however. "I don't even know if he can pitch from a stretch because he didn't have to do that much in high school," Herzog says of a man who throws no-hitters like they were strikes. The Satchel Paige Dept. SAN FRANCISCO-f you think the Tigers have pitching problems, catch this. The Giants, whose poor pitching took away from them the first place position their batting had captured, re-activated pitching coach Don McMahon, 43. MacMahon has a career won-lost record of 88-86 with an earned run average of 2.99. The Giants have been hurting so badly that Juan Marichal was called upon to due a relief stint last Sunday. Marichal had been taken out of rotation earlier this month. The NL secret PHILADELPHIA-A report by scientists at the Franklin In- stitute here says the baseball being used in the National League this season favors the batter and works against the pitcher. The Institute- did exhaustive testing of the ball used in 1972, and the one being thrown this season. The study was made for the Philadelphia Inquirer. Until the 1973 season, major league baseballs underwent final processing at a small Chicopee, Mass., company. This company was exclusively responsible for glueing the horsehide cover to the innards and sewing the cover together. This season, in what is believed to be an economy move, the balls are being put together by a company on the island of the Republic of Haiti. Part-time player gains NEW YORK-Ron Blomberg of the New York Yankees, the major leagues' only .401 hitter, has moved into the top six in balloting for the first base position on the American League All-Star team, but still has a long way to go to catch the leader, Dick Allen. Blomberg, not listed on the All-Star ballot, has received 31,649 write-in votes to stand sixth among AL first basemen, according to the weekly figures released yestterday by the Baseball Com- missioner's office. Allen, of the Chicago White Sox, remains the leader in voting for the All-Star Game, to be played July 24 in Kansas City. Allen has received 216,146 votes-the most of any American Leaguer-for a sizeable lead over John Mayberry of Kansas City, at 158,799. Leaders at all positions remained the same this week. Boston catcher Carlton Fisk continued as the top vote-getter with 201,532, while Kansas City second baseman Cookie Rojas, Oakland shortstop Bert Campaneris and Baltimore third baseman Brooks Robinson joined Allen in the infield. Reggie Jackson of Oakland held a slim lead over Bobby Murcer of the Yankees among the outfielders, 191,400 votes to 183,321. Amos Otis of Kansas City was third and Frank Robinson of California fourth, The Aaron watch MILWAUKEE-Henry Aaron said Monday he doubts he will break Babe Ruth's major league career home run record this season. "I will have to play too many games, and I'd be hurting not only myself but I don't think I'd be helping the team," the Atlanta Braves star told Milwaukee Sentinel sports writer Lou Chapman in a telephone interview. U.S. 6, Japan 2 OMAHA, Neb.-Mark Barr pitched and batted the United States to a 6-2 victory over Japan Monday night in the college baseball championship series. The U.S. squad leads the seven-game rivalry 3-0. Barr, a junior right-hander who pitched Southern California to the College World Series championship June 13, held the Japanese to five singles and allowed one earned run. Barr also homered to open the third inning for the first run of the game. He connected off Japan's left-hander Nobuo Yano On tab The Tigers begin a six game home stand. The Mil- waukee Brewers are the Tiger opponents and Billy Martin is bringing his avaitor's cap for the event. - . . Wimbeldon wears on..,. Consult your television guide for the sporting events in your viewing radius Have a pleasant and healthy vacation. m e o777iopt Lk - modp t74,," tr: / / t.... 4.. 4 4 C.lY 4 i/r4 ! / 6 Vt/L t,: / l 4 l..rCJC/L 4 / C mom THANK YOU, MICHIGAN DAILY! If, as you said, our showing of 'the King of Hearts last week was for the 93rd time, we are pleased to present the 94th, to accommodate the many people turned away last week. Tomorrow evening, June 28th at 7:30 & 9:30 p.n. Alan Bates and Genevieve Bujold in Philippe deBroca's (English Subtitles) WILD RAFFISH COMEDY! Perfect for exam time blues! A Scottish private is sent to find a time bomb left in a French town evacuated except for the inmates of an insane asylum,'who he lets loose and subsequently thinks are the townspeople. Set during World War I this marvelous anti-military film examines the sanity of insanity or vice-versa. 0 0C 0 0 0o6 aS COMING-July 10, 11, 12-THREE BIG DAYS "THE CLASSIC COMEDIES": The Marx Brothers in "ROOM SERVICE," W. C. Fields in "THE FATAL GLASS OF BEER" and Chaplin in "THE VAGABOND." July 17 Hitchcock's "FRENZY." ALL SHOWING IN AUDITORIUM A ANGELL HALL $1 Tickets for al of each evening performances on sale outside the auditorium at 6:30 p.m.t For a copy of our summer half-term schedule, wRrite .P.O. Box 8, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48107