- hursday, July~l ~LIIMCItAN)XL I GAME EIGHT TODAY: a. a2B~Fischer, Spassky draw REYKJAVIK, Iceland (P) - The seventh game of the world chess championship ended in a draw yesterday, leaving Bobby Fischer with a 4-3 lead over Boris Spassky. The *draw came after Spassky's 49th move in the game that be- gan and was adjourned Tuesday after 40 moves by each player. Less than an hour after the Soviet titleholder resumed play with his sealed 41st move, both players decided to call it a draw. Each got half a point to add to the previous score of 31/-21/ Fischer, a grandmaster from Brooklyn, N.Y:, needs 121/2 points to take the championship away from Spassky. The Russian can retain it with 12 points. After Spassky made the 49th move, implying a perpetual check situation, the two players looked at each other, s h o o k hands, rose and walked off the stage. The crowd in the exhibi- tion hall gave them a round of applause. Spassky opened the resumption of play with a pawn to -king's rook four. Experts said this move, which he had sealed in an envelope at Tuesday's adjourn- ment, assured Spassky of the draw. Seven moves later Spassky was settled into the perpetual check situation that made the draw inevitable. When referee Lothar Schmid stopped the clock, total playing time, including the first day's play, was 5% hours. The challenger had lost his psychological advantage o v e r Spassky Tuesday by playing a poor end-game which g r a n d- masters said cost him a win and two-point lead. They thought his arrival 15 minutes late yesterday was de- signed to rattle Spassky, sitting alone on teh green-carpeted pod- ium. Fischer took 31/ points from the last four games. Spass- ky took only half a point. Spassky had opened the tame Tuesday moving his king's pawn two squares forward. It was the first time in the match he nad en to him by his body'-ard not opened with his q u e n ' s Saemundur Palsson. Normally pawn. - very fussy about what he eats It was thought this was design- and drinks, the American told ed to shake the 29-year-old chal- Palsson there was no ice for his lenger up a bit. It didn't. water. The game developed into the "But don't worry," he said. Najdorf variation of the Sicilian "Everything's perfect." Palson defense - a Fischer favorite said that Fischer was all smiles. which seldom results in a draw. "Bobby had a great strategic Spassky lashed out, sacrificing concept by -move 11," said his two pawns and a bishop to clear representative here, Fred Cram- the center of the board for an er. attack on Fischer's king. But Spassky began a slow retreat, Fischer, at the 11th move, in- perhaps seeing no mate. Al- troduced an innovation which one though his pieces were scatter- expert said was beautiful. ed, his queen out of play and Spassky though for 35 minutes. his king exposed and uncastled, At this stage, Fischer loped off Fischer refused a queen swap stage for a drink. This was giv- at the 18th move. Professional League Standings Holy frisbee! Howard Gutowitz, Flint's flying saucer whiz, shows how it's done during the finals of the State Frisbee Tournament in Flint Tues- day night. All in all, ten Michigan cities sent their finest flingers to participate in the competition. Ccrlson picked todirec ABA AmericansLeague W L f Detroit 51 37 Baltimore -0 38 Boston 45 41 New York 42 43 Cleveland 36 51 Milwaukee 35 52 West Oakland 56 35 Chicago 49 41 Binnesota 45 42 Kansas City 44 45 California 40 52 Tesas 37 53 Yesterday's Games No games scheduled Today's Games Detroit (l.olich, 17-6 and Colem,. 8) at Milwaukee (Parsons, 8-6 Ryerson, 2-1), 2, twinight Kansas City (Splittorff, 9-5 and son, 2-4) at Chicago (Wood, 15 and Bradley, 10-9), 2, twinight Boston (Pattin, 8-8) at New Yor (Stottlemyre, 10-11), night Cleveland (Tidrow, 6-11) at Balt (Dobson, 12-8) night Texas (Paul, 3-2) at California (Wright, 11-5) night Minnesota (Blyleven, 9-11) at (0 (Bine, 2-5) night Natiosal League East Pet. GB . W L Pet. GB .580 -- Pittsburgh 55 33 .625 -- .568 1 New York 49 38 563 5133 .523 5 St. Louis 45 43 .511 10 .494 7, Chicago 46 44 .511 10 .414 14? Montreal 40 47 .460 14't, .402 15t Philadelphia 31 57 .352 24 West .615 Cincinnati 55 33 .625 - .544 6. lHouston 51 41 .554 6 .517 9 Los Angle 47 42 .5280 033 .494 11 Alant a42 40 .462 141/ .435 163 San Francisco 41 52 .441 161/ .411 18 san Diego 33 56 .371 223 Testedy'sGaines No games scheduled Today's Games an, 12- Chicago (Jenkins, 12-9 and 1ooton, and 7-8) at Philadelphia (Reynolds, 0-6 and Champion, 4-11), 2, twinight Net- New York (Koosman, 7-5 and Mat- 5-10 lack, 9-5) at Pittsburgh (Briles, 9-3 t and Moose, 5-6), 2, twinight k St. Louis (Cleveland, 11-5) at Mon- treal (Torrez, 11-5), night timore San Francisco (Marichal, 4-10) at At- lanta (Reed, 8-10-) night San Diego (Arlin, 8-11) at Cincinnati ' (Billingham, 6-9) night aland Los g s les (Ost n, 10-7) at Houston (Foesch, 5-5) night NEW YORK . ( - Bob Carlson, a New York attorney, was named commissioner of the American Basketball Asso- ciation yesterday and imme- diately announced that the league would add one team for the 1972-73 season and operate as a 10-team entity. Speculation on the new fran- chise centered on either San Diego or Minneapolis, with the California city appearing to be the stronger contender. Carlson, 47, was the unani- mous selection of the league's Board of Trustees to succeed Jack Dolph. who announced his resignation June 2 for personal reasons. "I believe that a merger be- tween the two leagues the ABA and National Basketball Association is only a matter of time and NBA Commissioner Walter Kennedy will be the commissioner of the single ex- panded league," Dolph said last month. Carlson, legal counsel for the New York Nets, an alternate trustee for the Nets, a member of the ABA's merger committee and special counsel to the league on various legal matters, said he realized he was taking the commissioner's job on pos- sibly an interim basis. "Should the merger occur, I hope to go back to my law firm," said Carlson, a member of the association of Roth, Car- lson, Kwit, Spengler and Goo- dell, EMU THEATRE SUMMER PRODUCTION PRESENTS the powerful drama FIRE IlEItES JULY 27, 28, 29 AT 8:00 P.M IN THE AIR CONDITIONED Uirk Auditorium Reserved Seats at $200 Box Office Hours 12:45-4:30 Also 7:00-8:00 Performance Nights FOR RESERVATION DIAL 487-1221 IM- SHOCKER TO END THEM ALL Are we hbeaded for an Iultra-violent society where sex and terror gangs rule the streets, and where law-and-order becomes the most important political issue? Stanley Kubrick's amazing film "A Clockwork Orange" which rocked the world, and was voted best film of the year by the New York film critics, deals with this question. At State and Liberty NOW SHOWING, SHOWS AT: 1:30 - 4:00 - 6:30 9:05 p.m. Program Information 662-6264 Box office opens 1:15 pm. ahae a a an nIam op MAYBE A ONCE-IN-A-LIFETIME CHANCE TO SEE JEAN COCTEAU'S E1AUTY IFADTHE BEASTM A CLASSIC, EXQUISITE AND BAROQUE FANTASY! French dialogue-English subtitles. First campus showing in 35mm. TONIGHT - JULY 27th -ONLY! -7 and 9 p.m. TUESDAY, ANOTHER CHANCE TO SEE KEN RUSSELL'S AUGUST 1st o en in .OVe 7 & 9:30 p.m. FIFTH ENGAGEMENT THIS YEAR ! THURSDAY ALAN BATES in PHILIPPE de BROCA'S AUGUST 3rd The King of earts 7 & 9 p.m. Campus cult smash! Wild, Raffish Satire! I all showings in AUDITORIUM "A", ANGELL HALL-$1 tickets on sale for al of each evening's shows at 6 p.m. outside the auditorium. 7