'age Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 24, 1972 ; ROZELLE RAPS: Huron Lounge presents )HONKY TONKv~ ANGELS Friday & Saturday 9:30-1 :30 COUNTRY AND WESTERN MUSIC at HURON HOTEL 124 Pearl--Ypsilanti 485-4375 Ervin nixs Commission WASHINGTON {A) - Sen. Sam Ervin said Friday that Congress should free all professional sports team owners to take their team.s anywhere and free play- ers to strike any deal they want. The North Carolina Democrat testified hefore a Senate com- merce subcommittee against a bill which would create a Fed- eral Sports Commission, He said such an agency "Could stag- nate professional sports and in- stitutionalize many of the bar- barian player-management prac- tices which now exist throughout the sports system." National Football League Com- missioner Pete Rozelle and Na- tional Hockey League President Clarence Campbell also testified. They added their names to the list of major sports figures gen- erally opposed to the commission idea. "I have concluded that pro- fessional. football is the m o s t over-supervised,. over-examined. and over-regulated business in America today," Rozelle said. abrthe ann a "r hnc.prt~e ALI MacGRAW and RICHARD BENJAMIN in GOODBYE, COLUMBUS Based on the novella by PHILIP ROTH ("Portnoy's Complaint") Directed by Larry Peerce Songs by The Association -A SLICE OF JEWISH SUBURBIA- TUESDAY-JUNE 27th-ONLY! auditorium "a", angell hal--7 & 9 p.m.-35 mm-COLOR-"R"-$1 COMING THURSDAY-SEVEN James Bonds in CASINO ROYALE. Ridiculous If football cannot solve i t s own problems regarding fans, television, players, stadium au thorities he said, "the sport it- self will bear the penalty." Ervin opposes another bill which would allow the merger of the American and National Bas- ketball Associations. He said it would create another monopoly similar to baseball anddfootball with their common diaft o players and reserve-type claus- es which bind a player to one team. The draft and the clause should be specifically outlawed, Ervin said. "Piratis is as American as apple-pie," Ervin said, it that means one basketball player can jump to another league after completing his contract. The contract should be observed by the player, however, he said. The commission would siper- vise terms at drafting amateir athletes, televising of games and franchise transfers from one city to another. Hut, Ervin went on in refer- ring to franchise transfers, "if one city loses a team, another gets one." Spots is a business, he said, and should he treated like all the others. "I have more faith in the economic marketplace decidiinu this issue than a sorts oommis- - . . This is Newsprint. H s, ' Harm less looking, isn't it?- i I i sioner," Ervin said. "We don't have a federal mov- ie commissioner settling c on- tractual matters between stud- ios and the stars and that shouldn't be the case in sports," the senatoi said Basball Comnissioner Bowie Kuhn opposed the proposed com- mission as "not necessary or de- suma le as far as baseball is con ceined He added" do nt feel that I have failed to reflecr the interest of the public in car- rying out my duties Riek and Bob singingCdenm signing blues SAN FRANCISCO (M.')- A fed- eral judge ruled Friday that Rick Barry has a valid contract with the Golden State Warriors of the National Basketball Associa- tion. U.S. Dist. Court JuIdge Alfonso Zippoli issued a preliminary in- junction which prohibits Barry, a star with the New York Nets of the American Basketball As- sociation, from playing for any team except the Warriors. three-year court battle for the The ruling is the latest in a services of Barry. Judge Zirpoli ruled that Bar- ry's contract with the Warriors is binding and valid and that the Warriors would suffer "irre- parable and permanent injuries" unless Barry plays for the NBA team. Barry signed a five-year, $1- million contract with the War- riors in 1969, which said he would return when his ABA commit- ments ended. But he also signed a new ABA contract in 1970 with the Nets, which contained the phrase " subject to such legally binding obligations as Barry may now have with the Warriors." Meanwhile in St. Paul, Minn. a news conference has been ten- tatively scheduled for Tuesday to announce the signing of Na- tional Hockey League star Bob- by Hull by the new World Hock- ey Association, a WHA spokes- man said Friday. The spokesman said Hull would sign a contract for $1 million for joining the league. T ha t afternoon, he said, Hull and the owners of the Winnipeg Jets of the WHA, Ben Hatskin, will ign a team contract worth a report- ed $1.5 million in Winnipeg. Man. The spokesman said Hatin and Hull will fly from Winnipeg to St. Paul Tuesday. Al so scheduled to be present for the signing is Gary L. Lavidson, pre- sident of the WHA. FRIDAY & SATURDAY MALTESE FALCON HUMPHREY BOGART, PETER LORRE, SIDNEY GREENSTREET in a dynamite film - mystery, suspense a n d ''Bogy." 7:00 & 9:05 P.M.-75c A & D AUDITORIUM (on Monroe, between Haven and Toppon) All by itself, this innocuous square of paper hardly seems important., But every week about 170,000 pounds of newsprint comes into Ann Arbor as news- papers or to be made into newspapers. Well-packed, that would make a square pile 20 feet on a side and 10 feet tall, solid newsprint. After the news is read, the paper is buried and both are forgotten. But the pile of old newsprint will grow until it no longer can be ignored. Fortunately, there is a solution. Old newsprint can be recycled and made into paper products, thus sparing the landscape and trees that would other- wise have been cut. In Ann Arbor the Ecology Center has a recycling station on South Industrial Highway, off Stadium, just south of the Coca-Cola bottlers. It's open from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednes- day thru Saturday. For more information, you can call the Ecology Center at 761-3186. Advertising contributed by the Michigan Daily .