Friday, June 18, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven I Fridy, Jne 1, 171 TE MIHIGA DALY Pge Eeve b95 i1 By The Associated Press C PHILADELPHIA - Villanova University said yesterday it will forfeit its 1970-71 basketball re- cord and its second - place finish in the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association championships if it is true that its star player, Howard Porter, signed a profes- sional contract last December. The Rev. Robert J. Welsh, Vil- lanova president, wrote NCAA Executive Director Walter Byers that Porter should have a hearing to explain his position. Records in U.S. District Court in New York disclosed Wednes- day that the 6-foot-8 Porter had signed a contract with the American Basketball Association last Dec. 16. Welsh wrote Byers that in view of the court evidence-pro- duced when the ABA's Pittsburgh Condors sued Porter and the A U S T I N Chicago Bulls of the National Basketball Association for breach iA ND of contract-W"We must presume, unless Howard Porter can dem- 1209 S. Uniersiy 663-7151 onstrate otherwise, that Villa- ______s ____ nova was not eligible to' com- W .OrJDYf~Y' .0DY4E.* ca Tonight ! CHICAGO ROCK BAND 208 W. Huron ODYEY+ODYSEY, DY54Y. Sony TC-$W Now at a New Low Price 1 ,-rH1ri BUYS Ann Arbor-East Lonsin 618 S. Moin 769-4700 Quality Sound Through Quality Equipment invites you to try -the steak that brings the fine flavors of Spanish cuisine to Ann Arbor. Try it with one of our excellent wines, in the relaxing country atmosphere of THE LORD FOX SPORTS ROUND-UP a ready to forfeit hoop season pete" in the tournament last March. "In the absence of any addi- tional information, Villanova University will and should for- feit its record in the season and tournament and any receipts to which it would otherwise be en- titled," Welsh's letter said. Villanova finished the year with a 27-7 record, one of the best in its history. It received $66,000 as its share of the NCAA tourney receipts. NFL, players agree MINNEAPOLIS - National Football League club owners and the NFL Players' Association jointly announced yesterday final agreement has been reached on a four-year "collective bargaining contract." The agreement was announced after representatives from both sides met all night and most of yesterday to iron out a wordage disagreement on a contract agreed upon Feb. 28. The players contended owners had changed the .wording of the February agreement. They filed the unfair labor charge, which was upheld by the NLRB May 26. Major League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING - 115 at bats - Oliva, Minn., .380; Murcer, N.Y., .359; Ka- line, Det., .329; Buford, Balt., .311; B. Robinson, Balt., .310. RUNS - Buford, Balt., 47; R. Smith, Bost., 42; Yastrzemski, Bost., 42; Oliva, Minn., 40; Campan- eris, Oak., 37; Tovar, Minn., 37. RUNS BATTED IN - Killebrew, Minn., 41; White, N.Y., 43; Petro- celli, Bost., 43; W. Horton, Det., 40; F. Roinson, Balt., 39. HITS - Oliva, Minn., 82; Murcer, N.Y., 78; Tovar, Minn., 78; R. Smith, Bost., 72; B. Robinson, Bait., 70. DOUBLES - Ceniliare, Bost., 17; Northreup, Det., 15; W. SHorton, Det., 14; Rud!, Oak., 14; T. Conig- liaro, Calif., 13; Campaneris, Oak., 13; Cardenas, Minn., 13; Oliva, Minn., 13. TRIPLES - Clarke, N.Y., 4; Un- ser, Wash., 4; Schaal, K.C., 4; Ca- rew, Minn., 4; 8 tied with 3. HOME RUNS - Oliva, Minn., 15; Cash, Det., 14; W. Horton, Det., 13; R. Jackson, Oak. 12; R. smith, Bost., 12. STOLEN BASES - Patek, K.C., 19; Otis, K.C., 16; Campaneris, Oak., 1.5; Alomar, Calif., 14; Pin- son,. Cirve., 12. PITCHING - 7 Decisions - Cuel- lar, Balt., 10-1, .909, 2.67; Blue, Oak., 14-2, .875, 1.42; Siebert, Bost., 9-3, .750, 2.45; Coleman, Det., 6-2, .150, 4.11; DalCanton, K.C.,,6-I, .750, 2.99; Drags, K.C., 6-29 .750, 2.04; Palmer, Bait., 9-3, 1750, 2,40. STRIKEOUTS - Blue, Oak., 133; Lolich, Oct., 112; Blyleven, Mine., 94; McDowell, Cieve.,89; Bradley, Chic., 13. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING - 115 at bats - W. Davis, L.A., .357; Torre, St.L., .349; Brock, St.L., .345; Garr, Atl., .343; Beckert, Chic., .340. RUNS - Bonds, S.F., 52; Brock, StL., 51; Garr, Atl., 45; W. Davis, L.A., 40; Cash, Pitt., 40. RUNS BATTED IN - Stargell, Pitt., 57; B. Aaron, All., 53; Tore, St.L., 45; Cepeda, Atl., 42; Cardenal, St.L., 41. HITS - Garr, AtL, 91; W. Davis, L.A., 90; Brock, St.L., 89; Torre, St. L., 87; Beckert, Chic., 83. DOUBLES - Brock, St.L., 18; M. Alo, St.L.,15; Staub, MtI., 14; Sanguille, Pitt., 14; W. Davis, L.A., TRIPLES - Harrelson, N.Y., 5; Clemente, Pitt., 5; Milian, Atl., 5; W. Davis, L.A., 5; Speier, S.F., 5. HOMERUNS - Stargell, Pitt., 21; H. Aaron, AtL, 19; Bench, Cin., 16; Bonds, S.F., 15; B. Williams, Chic., 14; L. May, Cin., 14; Cepeda, At1., 14. STOLEN BASES Brock, St.L., 20; Harrelson, N.Y., 13; M o r g a n , Boust., 12; Garr, Atl., 11; Bonds, S.F., 11. PITCHING - 7 decisions - Gul- lett, Cin., 7-2, .779, 3.12; Carlton, St.L., 10-3, .769, 3.00; Ellis, Pitt., 10-3, .769, 2.11; Dierson, Boost., 10- 3, .769, 1.10; J. Johnson, S.F., 6-2, .750, 1.38. STRIKEOUTS - Canton, St.., 119; Stonsman, Mtl, 122; Jenk- ins, Chic., 114; eaver, N.Y., 112; Holtzmsan, Chic., 90. NEXT TUESDAY-JUNE 22 Lewis Milestone's classic anti-war film All Quiet on the Western Front Winner of two Academy Awards (1930) -- BEST PICTURE and BEST DIRECTOR auditorium a 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. angell hall 75c presented by the ann arbor film cooperative P~anrd e lea .Woket - OPEN EVERY SAT. & SUN. 10 to 6 or later 6780 JACKSON RD., ANN ARBOR (About 4 mi. west of Ann Arbor. 194 west take ZeOebRd. exit to Jackson Rd., then west 1 mile) Antiques, junk treasures-anything and everything that's sell- able. Furniture, dishes, toys, bottles, jars, old guns, old knives, c books, postcards, prints, engravings. Good variety, different every o week. SELLERS WANTED. Rates: table $5 or booth $10 per day inside, outside set-up $5 per day. Open 7 a.m. to sellers. NO RESERVA- TIONS NECESSARY! COME BUY! COME SELL! COME! 04-- 4q00 MYNAR ANN AROR MICHIGAN 769851 EARLY SUMMER SALE SUITS, SLACKS, SHOES Fine Men's Imported Sportswear "The players have indicated that they will withdraw the un- fair labor practice charge now pending before the NLRB" NFLPA attorney Leonard Lind- quistsaid. He did not divulge the exact area of the wordage dispute, but it reportedly dealt with injury grievance procedures. UCLA takes net title SOUTH B E N D - UCLA clinched its second straight NC- AA tennis titde yesterday after grabbing three of the four posi- tions in the singles semifinals. Stanford's Roscoe Tanner join- ed Jeff Borowiak, Jimmy Con- ners and Haroon Rahim of UCLA in today's semifinals. The Bruins, entering Thurs- day's quarterfinals in doubles, had 29 points, while challenger Trinity, Tex., trailed with 25. Trinity, however, had just one doubles team remaining while the Bruins had two doubles teams in addition to the singles players. Reds ink 15-year-old CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati Reds disclosed yesterday that they have signed 15-year-old Manual Rosario, a pitcher from the Dominican Republic. "I can't ever remember sign- ing a 15-year-old before, said Howsam, pointing out that regu- lations prohibit major league teams from signing players be- fore they graduate from high school. However, the rules do not cov- er Latin American players. Rosario, two months from hi 16th birthday, said he will con- tinue with his schooling although he will report to Cincinnati's farm team for rookies at Brad- enton, Fla., Howsam said. Cavs to get new arena CLEVELAND - Nick Mileti, owner of Cleveland's profession- al hockey and basketball teams, announced plans yesterday to build a new $17 million coliseum in Richfield Township in Northern Summit Countyk Mileti said work on the colise- um, which will hold 18,000 fans for Cleveland Barons' American Hockey League games and 19,- 500 for Cleveland Cavaliers' Na- tional Basketball Association competition, is to start immedi- ately. It is to be completed in the fall of 172. ThiS W k[MP1 j1.50 8 folk legacy rec. artist SARA GREY banjo U uaccom-nnied AMERICAN & BRITISH ISLES 14 1411 ill STREETI 540U ILTMOUTH RD. NO 8-9387 Open 11 a m.-2 pm. 4 p.m.-0 p.m.