Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday. June 4. 1970 i Baseball--a bastion of reaction Eves. 6:25, 9:05 -Ci. Matinees 1:00, 3:40 By LEE KIRK 1HE GENERAL turmoil and confusion that is generally associated with the news these days is rapidly spreading into the docile confines of sports. Crises and court cases abound, and the sporting world is rapidly finding itself becoming a microcosm of our universal woes. And, surprisingly enough, the sport most afflicted is baseball, the national pasttime. Grievances that have long boiled, below the surface have finally "Flooded" over their banks, and a lot of dirty linen that management would have liked kept in the closet has been washed and hung out for all to see. Most conspicuous, is of course, former Cardinal outfielder Curt Flood's suit chal- lenging baseball's reserve clause. The reserve clause is a complex thing,,so complex in fact, that the Supreme Court once refused to hear a case involving it and instead declared that Congress should regulate baseball. What the reserve clause does in effect is to bind a player to a club that signed him for as long as that club wishes to have him around. When a club trades a player, he then can only play ball for the club to which he is traded or else t r a i p s e off to Japan. This all sounds like legalized slavery, which is exactly the effect it is designed to have. The reason that the clause has hung around in spite of this drawback is that baseball is now exempt from federal anti- trust laws because it is not legally rec- ognized as being interstate commerce. Foot- ball and boxing are interstate operations and are recognized as such in light of the law, but baseball, sacred and all-powerful, is not. Owners fear that if the reserve clause is declared illegal, ballplayers will desert their teams for the highest bidder. The owners contend that this would result in the rich teams getting the good players and the end of fan confidence in a game. This option clause will almost cer- tainly come to baseball, most likely as the result of Flood's suit. And when it does come, I have great confidence in management's ability to weather the storm. If fan confidence would be eroded by the end of the reserve clause, Commissioner Bowie Kuhn must be trying to wash it away. Kuhn, along with many press people as- sociated with baseball, have really unloaded on Astro and ex-Yankee pitcher Jim Bouton for his mini-expose book, "Ball Four." Although I haven't seen the book, the plethora of publicity it aroused even before publication will make reading it anti- climactic. Mickey Mantle comes away from the book tarnished idol, and other players as well as managers also emerge tainted. Tiger pitchers are said to be the biggest pep and pain pill users in the majors, etc., etc., etc. The upshot of it all came when Kuhn asked Bouton to pay a private visit to his office to discuss the book. After the meet- ing, Kuhn emerged to face the press. "I advised Mr. Bouton of my dis- pleasure with these writings," the com- missioner said, "and have warned him against future writings of this char- acter." He couldn't have been more pompous if he had tried. That he feels that it is within his domain as Commissioner of Baseball to tell ballplayers what to write is, to say the least, galling. In some ways, it's a pity Bouton didn't laugh in Kuhn's face, but if he had, his book might not sell so well. "'AIR PORT' is a great film all the way!" - Chicago Daily Newt A ROSS HUNTER Production AIRFORT" ,.BURT LANCASTER -DEAR MARTIN JEAN SEBERG - JACQUELINE BISSET-"GEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN -MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON - LLOYD NOLAN "PuNe , ,;, ( DANA WYNTER - BARBARA HALE © - - Mon.-Thurs. Fri.-Sat. All Day Eves. Eves. - Sunday $2.25 $2.50 $2.25 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY MATINEES $1.75 / a 41 Read and Use Daily Classifieds I I i Dinnerserved until 2am(closed Mondays)-211N. Main-663-7752 (gtevross from the old Poat Ofie AT Now Showing! v~SHO3WS AT: 1 :00- 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:05 A man called Norse" becmesan Indian warrior in the mos lctiyngrta ever seen i W ood sStock 3 record set-sound track SOCCER CHAMPIONSHIPS Special Sale- $8.95 Braz'l MEXICO CITY (P) - Right winger Jairzinho slammed in two goals in Brazil's 4-1 thrash- ing of Czechoslovakia yesterday and gave warning to the world that Brazil is back as one of the strongestteams in the World Soccer Cup championships. Brazil's other goals came from Pele-known as "the king" in South America-and Rivelino. In other group matches, West Germany, which lost to England in the 1966 World Cup finals, survived a hard time against Late Score Detroit 5, California 4, 11 inn. World Cup Soccer Yesterday's Results Group I Belgium 3, El Salvador 0 Group II Italy 1, Sweden 0. Group III Brazil 4, Czechoslovakia 1 Group IN West Germany ?, Morocco 1 L 9 & Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE routs underdog Morocco and wounc up a 2-1 winner. Wilfried Van Moer was th star in Belgium's 3-0 victory over El Salvador. Angelo Domenghini scorec Italy's goal in a 1-0 victory over Sweden with a powerful shot from 22 yards. Brazil, winner of the chain- pionship in 1958 and 1962, and England have been firm favor- ites for the Jules Rimet Trophy for months. The Brazilians slipped from favor following the firing 01 Jaoa Saldhana. But the South American masters proved to the world yesterday that they still are soccer's giants. The Czechs took an early lead and it looked as though an upset was in the making. But Brazil hit back with a free kick from Rivelino which swerved round a defensive wall and left goal- keeper Viktor grasping the air. Pele-probably the most fa- mous soccer player in the world and back to his brilliant best put Brazil ahead in the second half. Then came Jairzihno's twc goals, the second a right foot drive capping a 40-yard run in which he beat three men. S. Africa lets i n Hawaiian surfing star DURBAN (A) - South Africa has granted a visa to top Ha- waiian surfer Ben Aipa to com- pete in the "Durban 500" surf- ing contest July 4 and 5. There had been some question as to whether Aipa. a native Ha- waiian who is described here as having dark complexion and curly black hair, would be al- lowed into this country with its apartheid policy. Nonwhite athletes have been baned in the past and South African sports along with every- thing else are rigidly segregated Czechoslovakia T H IS W EEK HIF BY ONLY! Arbor * * * Reserve clause praised as essential by owners Ann 618S. Main St. LM U NEW YORK (I)-Two base- ball club owners, Francis Dale of. the Cincinnati Reds and John McHale of the Montreal Expos, testified yesterday in the Curt Flood suit that they would not have invested in the sport without their belief that base- ball enjoyed exemption from antitrust laws. The issue is a key to base- ball's defense in the Flood case, the sport contending that sub- jecting the rules and regula- tions of the game-known as the reserve system-to antitrust laws would drive away would- be-investors. Both were asked if they would have invested without those be- liefs. Dale said "I don't think we would have." McHale an- swered, "No." They also were asked by base- ball's Chief Counsel, M a r k Hughes, if they considered the reserve system reasonable and necessary to the efficient opera- tion of the sport. Both said they did. Dale, who also is a part owner of pro football's Cincinnati Ben- gals, was sharply cross examined by Flood's counsel, Jay Topkis, specifically with reference to his investment in pro football which operates without the re- serve system and little antitrust exemptions. "Does that render football an economically unsound invest- ment?" Topkis asked. "No," replied Dale. "The fact that the Bengals were not exempt from antitrust laws didn't deter you from in- vesting in them, did it?" Topkis asked. "No," Dale replied. Billboard" This Friday night will be staff and family recreation night at the IM Building from 7-10 p.m. C I ... 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"THE MIND BLOWER OF ALL TIME"- John Sebastian-Time Magazine PASS LIST SUSPENDED RIm RamDs I as "A m"ALLED HORSE" Also Starring DAME JUDITH ANDERSON Co-Starring JEAN GASCON MANU TUPOU Introducing CORINNA TSOPEI Produced by SANDY HOWARD Screenplay by JACK DE WITr Directed by ELLIOT SILVERSTEIN ASANDY HOWARD Production Music by LEONARD ROSENMAN PANAvISION'TECHNICOLOR A NATIONAL GENERAL PICTURES RELEASE mPOP__ neaa_ A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION GP '"o*u""" Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 1 Yesterday's Results Houston 5, Montreal 0 New York at Atlanta, ppd. Philadelphia 11, Cincinnati 4 Chicago 6, Los Angeles 5, 11 inn. San Diego at Pittsburgh, ppd. St. Louis 6, San Francisco 5 Today's Games Montreal at Houston, night New York at Atlanta, night Los Angeles at Pittsburgh, night Other clubs not scheduled _I I PRESENTS the FLOATING OPERA doing their own tunes Friday and Saturday -9 P.M.-one dollar 330 Maynard 665-0606 AMERICAN LEAGUE East W L Pet. Baltimore 34 16 .680 New York 28 23, .549 Washington 24 24 .50 Detroit 22 24 .478 Boston 21 25 .457 Cleveland s) 27 .413 West Minnesota 31 14 .689 California 31 18 .631 Oakland 26 24 .520 Kansas City 19 29 .396 Chicago 18 31 .367 Milwaukee 15 33 .313 Yesterday's Results Oakland 4, Baltimore 1 Cleveland 7, Milwaukee 6 Detroit at California, inc. Washington 5, Chicago 4 New York 5, Kansas City 3 Minnesota at Boston,appd. Today's Games Detroit at California, night Baltimore at Oakland, night Cleveland at Milwaukee, night Minnesota at Boston GB 0" 114 11 13 x I3t 13%z 15 17% Kansas City at New York, night Chicago at Washington, night Amusements HE EVENING STAR * * * Washngton, 0.C., Tuesday, January 2,17 THE PASSING SHOW obscene, No; FuennyAbsc Sy HARRY MacARTHUR Dram CriticmsoTetar Sweden, which used to be with deftness and style by Whatever you do is all right, wh headquarters for nude Miss Meineche. just so long as nobody else pai movies and sex movies, may ' You do have to be pre- gets hurt. bro declare war on Denmark pared to go along with com- "To desist from sexual mu over "Without a Stitch" This plete candor, maybe more pleasure," he adjures, "is not wea is the funniest satire on than you ever have seen or more moral than desisting upI Swedish sex films that you beard on the screen. You from picking flowers, read- late are likely to encounter in also have to be prepared for ing books, or skiing...." Un- him months, maybe even in a great deal of nudity and less you go along with this, L years. sex. both that which is con- you had better avoid deep sta Don't be put off by the sidered normal and that shock by avoiding "Without co publicity and advertising be- which is considered aberra- a Stitch." stud ing used to tout the new pic- tional. * * * * He ture at Loew's Palace. It is The sex is clearly simu- With this sage advice the ing not one of those "skin flicks" lated. but the nudity is not. doctor dispatches Lilian on a Th that belongs on Ninth St. It's And all you prudes had bet- hitch-hiking vacation with a an< a sharply comic entertain- ter be prepared for the .fact brand-new diary in which to lear ment that employs sex and that no healthy, young, red- record her new experiences thri nudity for a purpose rather blooded boy in the audience with life. She has some ex- two than for exploitation. is going to be repelled by the periences, too. F Alongside it, ''I Am Cur- sight of Anne Grete, who Her first ride is with a sou ous (Yellow)" looks more plays the girl who keeps get- movie cameraman. This a f than ever like a stag movie ting undressed. She just leads her right into movie sce made for male smokers. I sat might be the second most stardom, in a stag movie tw there in the dull morning beautiful girl in the world, made in Sweden for export vol laughing my head off while dressed or undressed. only, and if they wouldn't rea the voyeurs. who never . , show it there, you know this woi should have allowed them- Miss Grete plays a college is an experience. wer selves to be lured south of student named Lilian, who She goes on to Copen- bra New York Ave. by the ads, goes to a doctor because she hagen, where she meets an ech stalked out in boredom and has failed to achieve the ulti- architectural student named sha befuddlement. mate enjoyment in a sexual Lise. Lise spends a happy **encounter with her boy night with her, then intro- "Without a Stitch." is a friend, who is as clumsy in duces her to a new gambol- sort of "Candy" made with these matters as she is. The one man and two girls. He good taste and an alert sense doctor explains - this has doesn't appear to be quite of hunmor. It's not the cheapie pretensions of being a sex,- temain isfortred byndthes its title suggests, but a well- education film pretensons a suspicion is bostered by the made film. It has been hand- doesn't need-that it is more fact that director Meineche somely photographed in blessed to give than receive. quickly cuts to Germany. aIutely ere the featured act is a r of bosom-dropping ads wrestling in a pool of d. She is rescued by a althy German and winds being whipped to stimu- e his desires and whipping mto satisfy them. Lilian takes off, under- ndably, and this time. mes up with an English art dent on the way to Italy. puzzles her by not mak- a pass at her for days. en they get to Italy, meet old friend of his and she rms about another of those ee-way deals, this time o men and one girl. However, this account nds, "Without a Stitch" is unny movie, not an ob- ne one, largely due to the o women principally in- ved. Miss Grete, who is a l beauty, plays it with a nderful innocence, as if it re "Rebecca of Sunny- ok Farm." Miss Mein- e has directed it with rp and subtle wit. _r'.- Haspel: the light fantastic What other pin- cord looks so sophisticated, reacts so cooly to weather, and doesn't cost an arm-and-a-leg? Haspel does it again In Summer 70, with a lightweight Dacronv polyester blend tailored in a traditional three- button model with somewhat wider lapel and deep center vent Light blue or olive (they're both so great You'll want one of each). Priced at an easy-to- take $65 0 MAPTIM POgFN n oewr z I