Friday, August 17, 1973 Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Player Chib G AB R H Pct. Player Club G AB R H Pet. Carew Milan 111 431 71 135 .356 Rose CIn 121 501 19 173 .345 W. Horton Det 80 294 36 97 .330 Unser Phi 101 321 48 101 .315 D. May Mil 117 479 77 155 .324 Watson Htn 123 458 79 144 .314 Mureer NY 122 469 65 150 .320 Cedeno Htn 102 385 66 121 .314 M. Alon NY 111 447 58 139 .311 Maddox SF 104 412 55 123 .311 Otis KC 116 461 79 141 .306 Cardenal Chi 112 409 63 127 .311 Northrup Det 82 287 46 87 .303 T. Perea Cin 114 420 54 130 .310 T. Davis Bal 100 406 39 123 .303 Grubb SD 91 320 43 93 .306 Scott Mil 114 439 71 133 .303 Hunt Mon 109 392 61 120 .306 Munson NY 113 390 63 118 .303 Matthews SF 108 376 52 115 ,306 Rome Runs Home Runs R. Jackson, Oakland, 29; Mayberry, Stargell, Pittsburgh, 34; Evans, Atlan- Kansas City, 23; Otis, Kansas City, 23; ta, 34; DaJohnson, Atlanta, 32; Bonds, Fisk, Boston, 22; F. Robinson, Califor- San Francisco, 32; H. Aaron, Atlanta, nia, 22. 29. Page Eleven Runs Batted In R. Jackson, Oakland, 98; Mayberry, Kansas City, 91; Murcer, New York, 80; Otis, Kansas City, 77; Scott, Milwaukee, 71. Pitching 10 Decisions unter, Oakland, 15-3, .833; McDaniel, New York, 11-3, .786; Palmer, Baltimore, 16-6, .727; Splittorff, Kansas City, 15-6, .714;- Coiborn, Milwaukee, 15-7, .682; Blue, Oakland, 13-7, .650; Coleman, De- troit, 18-10, .643; Acosta, Chicago, 7-4, .636. Runs Batted In Bench, Cincinnati, 88; Evans, Atlan- ta, 86; Stargell, Pittsburgh, 85; T. Per- ez, Cincinnati, 82; Singleton, Montreal, 81. Pitching 10 Decisions Osteen, Los Angeles, 14-5, .737; P. Niekro, Atlanta, 13-5, .322; Seaver, New York, 15-5, .714; Brett, Philadelphia, 12- 5, .706; Stone, New York, 7-3, .700; Twitchell, Philadelphia, 11-5, .688; Sut- ton, Los Angeles, 15-7, .682; Bryant, San Francisco, 17-8, .680. Court nixes SD hold on Padres SAN FRANCISCO LM - The California Supreme Court yesterday denied a request from the city of San Diego that the transfer of the Padres baseball team to Washington D.C., be block- ed. In denying the petition for a hearing on the matter, the court made no comment. Last July 20, the court issued an order that any transfer of the National League club be held up until the court decided whe- ther it would take the case for consideration. The city had contended that S 4San Diego Superior Court Judge Eli H. Levenson was in error when he ruled that monetary damages were sufficient to com- pensate for loss of a major league team. Judge Levenson last month denied an injunction against the move and the city wanted to ap- peal his ruling. THE CITY HAS had an agree- ment with the Padres for the baseball franchise to remain in San Diego through 1988. But last May 28, Padre President E. J. Bavasi and principal stockhold- er C. Arnholt Smith indicated they intended to transfer all the team's assets to Joseph Danzan- sky of Washington, D.C. The 12 National League clubs must give approval for the $12 Photo by TERRY McCARTHY million deal. - - --- --- - ------- - - Shula'snew book raps Pete Rozelle T g. ~~ U . g Region Eight's Jerry K i n g hurtles through the air in yester- day's Junior Olympic long jump competition. For the complete lowdown see page 12. Note Special Show Times 2 d114 $. Univery 7 &95 HIT WEEK! Dial 668-6416 Sot. & Sun.- - at 1 :15, 3:45, 6:15 r n . .. I 3 :45 Wed., Sat., Sun. open at 12:45 Other(Days open at 6:45 PASS is a genuine masterpiece of staggering proportions." LIST -Edward Behr. Newsweek and IP_. Bargain Day is a rich, resonant film. . . a magnificent one." Suspended--Bruce Cook, The National Observer Admission For ALL Showst Is $2.50 X-Rated NEW WORLD FILM COOP presents EISENSTEIN'S "~;AIII22'Mastte rpiece IS QUITE SIMPLY, THE BEST AMERICAN FILM I'VE SEEN THIS YEAR! . Y. TIMES MIAMI 1Pi - Don Shula says in a book to be released soon that National Football League Commissioner Pete Rozelle mis- handled his move from the Bal- timore Colts to coach the Miami Dolphins in 1970. "Rozelle should have said pub- licly that I did not break my contract with the Colts . .." said Shula in his book, "The Winning Edge." "WHY HE hasn't defended me publicly, I don't know," Shula said. Shula said he obtained per- mission from Steve Rosenbloom, president of the Colts, to talk to owner Joe Robbie about the Mi- ami post. But the Dolphins were assessed a first-round draft choice for 1971 in what Rozelle calle citamnerne R o b b i e' s explanation of the ruling was that "Rozelle agreed that Shula had obtained permission from the Colts to talk to me, but he held that I needed permission to talk to Shula. Think about that for awhile. Shula could talk to me but I couldn't talk to him." "ARGUED Shula, "T h e r e weren't any undercover dealings, secret meetings or surprises to the Colts. I even informed them . of the talks all along. What both- ered me was that there had been incidents of this nature that had gone on before that were not punished by taking away a first draft choice. "I thought it was harsh be- cause it was a precedent-set- ting case," he continued. Shula said pressure from other owners who feared losing coaches to oth- er teams "may have been why Roselle took the action he did. "PROFESSI ONAL football wouldn't be where it is today without a Pete Rozelle," said Shula. "Yet I feel that he could have shown more concern for me in dealing with the accus- ations of decit by Colts' owner Carroll Rosebloom had made. "When he finally did penalize Rosenbloom, it should have been made public," Shula maintained. "Instead, Rozelle waited for a long period of time before reveal- ing at a Miami press conference that he had fined Rosenbloom $5,00Q for remarks against me. He later fined Rosenbloom for additional unfair and unjust re- marks. "WHEN HE fined him the sec- ond time, I asked Rozelle if it was going to be made public," wrote Shula. "Rozelle said that he would much prefer to let it drift out by word of mouth and eventually it would be known by all the owners." "IT'S ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD, SAVAGE AND CHILLING COMEDY!"-o'en.P;, y e'B a "'CATCH-22' says many things K Ip that need to be said again and Baftleship again! Alan Arkin's perform- ance as Yossarian is great!" -Joseph Morgensen. NEWSWEEK TIMES ONLY Tonight-Last Showings Catchi-22:8 & 10 p.m. Potemkin: 7:30, 8:45 MODERN LANGUAGES BLDG. & 10 p.m. DOUBLE FEATURE $2.00 Aud. 3& 4-Single Adm. $1.25 Double Feature: 7:30, I8. & 8:45 Onlyl