Thursday, June 17, 1971 THE. MICHIGAN DAILY Daily Classifieds DIAL 8-6416 "1970'S MOST ORIGINAL (Continued from Page 5) MOVIE ACHIEVEMENTS"-------- Page Seven Porter accused -Cueogo zine HYPNO-THERAPY-To help you toe PERSONAL weight and stop smoking. Douglas Beltz, 761-0440. CFtc THE ONLY place in Ann Arbor 1 s buy her rdiamond engagement ring. CHECK IT. AUSTIN DIAMOND SUMMER: DETROIT DEPARTURES 1209 S. Univsersity 663-7151# 3 5/3-610 Del/Ams/Det Departed IFta 4 5 6-625 Det/Ams/Det DepartedE 5 5 16-8 16 Det Ams/Det Departed WEDDING INVITATIONS -Mod or Tra- 6 6 25-8 29 Det/Ams/Det Full ditional Style. Call 761-0942 anytime. 6a 6 26-8 27 Det/Lon Det Full Free Marriage Certificate with order. 7 7/1-8 15 Det Ams/Det $2091 IFtc I 8/1-9 2 Det/Ams/Det Full SUMMER: NEW YORK DEPARTURES BILLIARDS & TABLE TENNIS 9 5 27-6/24 NY/Lon/NY DepartEed OPEN I IA 51. MON.-SAT. UNION 10 7/12-811 NY/Ams/NY $268 CF3I In appreciation of the sttudent re- YOU GET what yots pay for. sponse to our original schedule, we{ Love, Tom and Harry are offering the following additional CFtc flights: 5o 6/20-7/27 Det/Amstt/Lou/Det 82191 LANDLORD INHUMANE! 9a 6 9-8 14 NY Lo Ams Det Dptd Adorable Tiger kitten - Free to good 11 7 8-9 5 NY Ams/NY $2091 home. Call 761-6521. DF35 WORLD WIDE CHARTER BYE BYE STEVIE 211 South State Street We Hate to See You Go. Ann Arbor, Michigan The Edit Staff of Dial: "ON-A-TRIP" The Bee Mid-West 66-2-8747 0031 Open only to U of M students, facul DEAR EARTH PIG- ty. otaff and immediate families. Please hssy your Seas from sot. We'll 7t giv "otsbetter deal aod for sure - - better beds. "LSAT, ATGSB and GRE Board Exams." love, Tom and Harry Kaplan tutoring classes now being C.S. If you need extra patch kits, formed for June, July, and August please stop in at Wave of the Future, exams. Call (313) 851-6077 colect. your original, complete waterbed- 14F41 of earl PHILADELPHIA W) - Howard Porter signed a professional bas- ketball contract on Dec. 16, 1970 while he was still playing college ball for Villanova, the Philadel- phia Inquirer reported yesterday. It was the latest development in the case surrounding Porter, who signed with both the Pitts- burgh Condors and the Chicago Bulls and only became the Bulls property Tuesday when the Con- dors agreed to surrender their rights to him. Frank Dolson of the Philadel- phia Inquirer wrote yesterday of examining the documents in the Condor's original suit against the Bulls. He said they showed Porter signed with the American Basket- ball Association last Dec. 16, that the contract was assigned by the ABA to the Condors last Jan. 22, and that April 18, 1971, Porter wrote to the Condors! "I am writing at this time to inform you that after careful re- view of my situation I have de- cided that I do not wish to play basketball in the American Bas- ketball Association under the terms of the document dated De- cember 16, 1970, which document' you have in your possession." Less than a week later the 6- foot-8 Porter, by now the NCAA tournament's Most Valuable Player, signed with the Bulls, who had selected him in the Na- tional Basketball Association draft. If the NCAA should rule that Porter was a pro since Dec. 16, inking 1970, then it could wipe out all of Villanova's victories achieved while he was playing for them and also wipe out its second- place finish to UCLA in the NCAA tournament. The documents are contained in Case 71 CIV, 2587, Federal Court for the Southern District of New York, International Sports Inc. The Pittsburgh Condors vs. How- ard Porter et. al," Dolson wrote. They show Porter signed a con- tract with the ABA providing a total salary of $350,000 pay- able at the rate of $50,000 a year for seven years, an "unrefund- able bonus" of $15,000 for signing and an Eldorado Caballero Cadil- lac "or other similar automo- bile, plus a further $10,000 bonus May 1, 1971. "I hereby acknowledge that the payment of the bonus of $15,000 provided for pursuant to the contract between me and the ABA dated Dec. 16, 1970, has been paid to me by the ABA," said one document bearing the signature Howard Porter. The Bulls and the Condors did not reveal their settlement, In New York, Federal Judge Edward C. McLean refused to seal the papers in the case, leaving them open to inspection to any group or individual de- spite arguments against that by Porter's attorney. The attorney, Richard G. Phil- lips of Philadelphia, argued that refusal to have the paper sealed "could do irreparable damage" to Porter and his "alma mater." dire"orof M *A*SH METFGOLDWYN-MAYER presents BREWSTERMCCLOUDsmgBUDCORT SALLY KELLERMAN - MICHAEL MURPHY Co-stamng WILWAM WINDOM and RENE AUBERJONO ISWa nossM NN store. CF -' - --- Dre'%dyFX RTATMA Fr ucdbyOUDLE -._._.._ ._...._. _ _..P__ .OT--O---APHY_.. hy RichardRA HY y Leed L e Incc 500OedtANAMMM 5 d4 5R 50 PAINTING JOBS DESIRED. 5 years ex- Editorial and Cmmercial. Fast adn eNAVsIs'aaME aO perience. Free estimates. Reliable, rel Reliable Service. Call 761-9452. CFtc terences. Cal 662-4736. FD DOUBLE- YOUR PLEASURE with dou- hle knit osuts, sportscoats and slax flfront Marty's, 310 0. State S1. Met ILIGHT CARPENTRY, Redwood feoceo, F R E E.thle floors, painting and odd ,lobs. Would You Like to Know Your Fasting Blood Sugar? BLOOD DONORS The Student Health Service Laboratory, Room 226 URGENTLY NEEDED ' will be running this test on Wednesday, June 23; Rh. $10 & $12 Rh negative only Thy dtttly, to 24e, sdtu Fti J y, 2 lit IW ft I urs ay, June /,; ana rray )uea ewe 8:00 and 10:00 A.M. PLEASE DON'T EAT after 10:00 P.M. before you come in to have your blood drawn. Phone 764-8305 for an appointment Mon 1Tues. Thurs oFri. 9-4, wed 1-7. 18-21 years old need parent's ---- ----- - - ---- -- -------------- - .__ kWIK'"N ' i SHIRTSKLEEN 34C 740 PACKARD with dry cteonin with complete laundry. order and dry cleaning facilities KWIK 'N' KLEEN has a cool idea coming up. Watch for the grand announcement! M 4higan Com unty Blood Cnter A B h o 404 W. Michigan. YpsilantiPU 15.1 511 Ftc OPENS NOON MON.-SAT.A E.M. SUN. AIR CONDITIONED LANES-UNION OF31 NEW YORK 1P) - The Ameri- Creative Photography can Basketball Association play- wEDDINGS and portraits. Professional ers are in favor of a merger with quality at at tu trates. Call 0 vd the National Basketball Associa- Loehe rt7 760053 for opyinmentso ore portfolio. Ftc Lion, Zelmo Meaty, president of DRY CLEANING Mon-Fri.: 7:30a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Saturday: 7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY Mon.-Sun.: 7:30 a.m. to 10:00p.m. Washers only 35 and 25 cents, Dryers only 5c Bort Carleton SAN DA 'LS Also See His New "-Selection of 9~56N ~RAWHIDE MOCCASINS SANDALS Also a PRICED Selection FROM of Hand Bags $16.00 CAMPUS MAST'S SHOP 619 E. Liberty I TV RENTALS-Satisfaction Guaranteed. Free delivery, aervice, and pick-up. Call Nejac, 662-5671. 6Ftc Litter doesn't throw itself away; litter doesn't just happen. People cause it-and' only people can prevent, it. "People" means you. Keep America Beautiful. ' odvertising conoributed sfr the pubic good Choose a Hairstylist without risking a bad haircut NOW 4 SHOPS * ARBORLAND *.MAPLE VILLAGE " LIBERTY OFF STATE " EAST UNIV. AT SO. UNIV. THE DASCOLA BARBERS the AMA-Players' Association, an- nounced yesterday. Beaty, a former player with Atlanta in the NBA and now a center for the ABA's Utah Stars, said at a news conference that a merger of the two leagues would be in the best interests of the ABA players. "The minimum salaries, per diem and pension aenefits we have achieved in the ABA are not presently comparable to those achieved by players in the older league and would not be attained as quickly without the stability of a merger," Meaty said. The NMA Players Association, beaded by Oscar Robertson of the Milwaukee Bucks, is op- posed to the merger. "The ABA has nearly doubled the number of playing jobs in pro basketball," Beaty said, "but without merger some teams I believe, would find it difficult to continue operations. Thus quite a few of these opportunities for players to play pro- basketball would be eliminated." Commissioner Jack Dolph of the ABA said "I'm extremely pleased and proud of the ABA Players Association and the ac- men favor aro merger tion it took. We in the ABA- players, owners and the league office-have an excellent rela- tionship and the common goal of bringing the best possible bas- ketball to our fans." Larry Fleischer, attorney for the NBA Players' Association, said, "We'll continue to be op- posed to merger. "We're sorry the ABA players took this position. We think it is shortsighted. But our fight is with the owners, not with the ABA players." Fleischer said the NBA play- ers are against merger until they gain the "right to freely nego- tiate for themselves." Lawyer insists Sharman can sign eontract SALT LAKE CITY (M) - An attorney for former Utah Stars Coach Bill Sharman said yester- day that, in his opinion, Sharman is free to sign a contract with an$ basketball team he wants. The Stars said Tuesday they're looking for a coach to replace Sharman. But they also said that if the Los Angeles Lakers try to sign Sharman, they will face legal action. Roger McDonough, one of Sharman's attorneys, said he felt the Stars' statements about letting Sharman go and looking f "r a new coach amount to a pub- lic repudiation of the contract. The Stars' prime candidate to succeed Sharman is believed to be Joe Mullaney-who was fired by the Lakers earlier this month. TV RENTALS $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: TV RENTALS 662-5671 00 MAYNA Rp ANNAMsOR ?"69$511 EARLY SUMMER SALE SUITS, SLACKS, SHOES Fine Men's Imported Sportswear a L