Page Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Soturdcay, June 6, 1970 Four THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, June 6, 1970 Chiefs NEW YORK UP) - Mike Gar- rett, the No. 1 running back for Kansas City's Super Bowl champions, said yesterday he w ill formally announce plans next Monday to quit playing pro football after the 1970 sea- son a n d begin a professional baseball career. Garrett, who throughout his standout career in the Ameri- can Football League has main- tained he would leave the sport when his original five-year con- tract ran out, told The As- sociated Press "I intend to play baseball and will negotiate with the Los Angeles Dodgers.' Garrett was selected 81st in baseball's annual free agent Garrett to try baseball AT FLOOD TRIAL draft by the Dodgers yesterday on behalf of their Bakersfield, Calif. team in the California League. Garrett currently is in New York City with his agent, Al Ross, and said he would ex- plain all his plans Monday at a 3 p.m., EDT, press conference. Garrett immediately stepped into the Chief's starting line-up in 1966 and gained 801 yards rushing and 175 pass receiving his rookie year. In 1967, he join- ed the select 1,000-yard club by gaining 1,087 yards rushing and also caught 46 passes for 261 yards. Garrett was in the top 10 in both rushing and receiving last season, gaining 732 yards for a 4.4 average on the ground and catching 43 passes for 432 yards. He scored a touchdown on a five-yard run in the Chiefs' 23- 7 Super Bowl victory over the Minnesota Vikings. At the time he was pursued by both the R a m s and the Chiefs, it was generally con- sidered that nothing could lure Garrett from Los Angeles. The Chiefs seemed to agree w i t h that estimate by making the Heisman.Trophy winner only a 20th round selection. The Chiefs, however, persuad- ed Garrett to play in Kansas City on the lucrative five-year pact. He often has spoken about not playing beyond that period and last July in training camp said he was considering a ca- reer in politics after his con- tract ran out. Garrett, who is 26, played 38 games for the USC baseball team in 1965 and hit .302 with six home runs and 20 runs bat- ted in. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE * * * NBA, ABA said to be near merger completion DALLAS UP)-Merger negotiations between the American Bas- ketball Association and the National Basketball Association are so close to completion that Congressional approval is expected to be asked by the end of June, the Dallas Times Herald said it learned yesterday. The two professional leagues have been authorized by the courts to continue merger negotiations, and merger committees are expected to complete the talks in Atlanta. June 17-18, the newspaper said. "I anticipate that the merger committees will get together in Atlanta," Joe Geary, owner of the Texas Chaparrals of the ABA, said. "And we think we are close enough together to where merger negotiations between the two league will be consummated at that time." Geary said. Playe rs NEW YORK (A) - John Ga- herin, the labor relations' ne- gotiator for the major league club owners, testified in t h e Curt Flood case yesterday that the owners had negotiated in good f a i t h in an attempt to modify baseball's reserve sys- tem before the suit was institut- ed. Gaherin also characterized the relative bargaining strengths of the clubs and the players in negotiations "as about as equal as any situation can produce." Gaherin pointed out in testi- mony for baseball's defendants in the $3 million antitrust suit that the owners had recognized their obligation to bargain col- lectively with the players over the reserve system during 1967. "Did the owners ever assert it was not a subject for collec- tive bargaining?" asked attor- ney Sandy Hadden. "No," replied Gaherin. Ga- herin then said there had been a period when the two parties engaged in a joint study and, finally, in August, 1969, t h e Players Association had asked that negotiations be opened on the subject of the reserve clause and related rules. Under cross examination Ga- herin admitted that the owners never had put forward a. pro- Personality scratched at Belmont NEW YORK M)-Personality, heavily-favored to add the Bel- .. mont Stakes to his Preakness victory, was scratched late yes- terday afternoon from this third leg of the Triple Crown because of a cough that began earlier in the week. Trainer John Jacobs, making posal to modify the key provis- ion of the reserve system - the option nenewal clause that binds a player to the club that signs him until he is traded, sold or released. He also agreed that no other business contained such a con- tract between employer and em- ploye but took exception with attorney Jay Topkis that the form of t h a t contract put a player in "servitude." Gaherin also s a i d under cross examination that the owners had made no specific proposals to change the option renewal clause or any other of the matters in which the Play- ers Association made formal proposals. Baseball's defendants are expected to call one more witness before resting, an econ- omist. benefits cited LECKurt )eiter& ____ ____ ____ ____A. LEE KIRK. ARBOUR TO COACH BLUES N-th etarcflE~P h ire Bu rnsC Good old soccer .*.. .. .something for everyone The World's Soccer Championship is now being contested in Mexico City, and there is nothing else like it in the world of sports. Beside it, the World Series and the Super Bowl look like side shows at the country fair. Yet, here in the USA, no one seems to care about soccer, while in all the rest of the world, it is THE number one sport. People in this country cannot understand what people every- where else see in soccer, while the rest of the world just cannot understand how we could call that gridiron madness "futbol." Soccer never caught on in this country, although a few years back, a group of daring promotors dropped a fortune trying to create a national soccer leage. Collegiate soccer is widespread, but there is fan interest in only a few places and a goodly num- ber of the better players are foreign students. The average American boy still plays his games on sandlots and blacktop. To most Americans, soccer seems like the dullest sport' they know. A contest with more than four goals is high- scoring and good scoring opportunities are few and far between. Much of the action takes place away from the goals, because the field is so big. Soccer by its nature seems to Americans to be a game oriented towards defense, and de- fense is something alien to our temperament. There are, however, a great many things that soccer has going for it. It is just about the most grueling sport around. The game is made up of two forty-five minute halves, and virtually no substitution is allowed. That adds up to an in- credible amount of running around, often on legs battered and bruised from fouls and tackles by the opposition. You have to be mentally as well as physically tough to endure the punish- ment. Soccer is also a game that everyone can understand and everyone can play. There is not the emphasis on specialized skills in soccer that there is in sports such as baseball and American football. Soccer is played with the feet and the head, mostly the feet, an din countries where soccer is a way of life, every five year old can do things with the ball that would amaze you. Soccer is a game of the people, all the people. All you need play it is a field and ball. Everyone who plays gets a piece of the action-hogging the ball just won't work. In much younger and happier days, I played a good deal of soccer. All the fourth and fifth graders in my elementary. school were formed into teams, and we had a regular league at Tecess. There were only ten men on a team instead of eleven, and my team had six girls. I was the goalie and three of my four defensive backs.were girls. They did all the work, I gave less than a goal per game, and we won the championship and beat the All-Stars, a feat still unmatched. Soccer was a great game to play. Everybody loved it, nobody minded having girls on the team, and it was good clean fun. If Americans would start playing soccer, they might find themselves enjoying playing it, if not watching it played. But all this still leaves one aspect of soccer unexplained-- the rabid fan. Soccer probably causes more deaths and violence than any other sport, and the victims are not the players, but the fans. Soccer fans assault refs, throw everything but the stadium foundation at the refs and/or visiting team, battle each other, and in the case of Honduras and El Salvador, they can even set off a war. Most Americans, myself included, cannot quite understand this fanaticism, although I imagine that it helps let off steam and vent represed emotions. The Met fanatic looks like Mr. Peepers beside even a tame soccer partisan. The game itself is to me is fun to play, but not teriribly thrilling to watch. Still, there is an aura and atmosphlere of excitement which surrounds a soccer game that makes it a truly unique sport. 1 "X LAX Si K/k,.. 4t C0 iXX Ut ik. Baltimore New York Washington Detroit Boston xC leve land East :3a 30' 24 '0 West I. 17 99 25 25 Pc't. .67 3 .566 .480 .473 .479 .426 Minnesota 3? 15 .68 xCalifornia 31 19).62t Oakland 28 24 .5:0 Kansas City 19 31 .38 Chicago 19 32 .37: Milwaukee 15 35 .30 x-late game not included Yesterday's Results Oakland 4, Detroit 2 Baltimore 3, Milwaukee 2 New York 10. Chicago 1 Boston 4, Kansas City 2 Minnesota 2, Washington I Cleveland at California, inc. 81 '(1 38 80 it3 G13 51 10 11 10 1- 4 sty 141 15 G13 414 414. 51> 8 12 14 151"> By The Associated Press The Minnesota North Stars of the National Hockey League announced yesterday that Char- lie Burns, who led the club to their highest finish in three NHL seasons, will not be re- hired to coach next season. However, North Star General Manager Wren Blair said that Burns has been signed to a two- year contract as a player. Sa wchuch buried PONTIAC, Mich. (A) - Ter- ry Sawchuk's seven children wept quietly yesterday after- noon as their 40-year-old fa- ther was buried while battered and scarred veterans of t h e National Hockey League look- ed on. Sawchuk, a goalie for t h e New York Rangers, died Sun- d a y of complications follow- ing surgery for removal of his gall bladder. Sawchuk was hospitalized after a scuffle with teammate-roommate Ron Stewart,ewho was an honorary pallbearer at the funeral. An investigation into the fight continues in New York. In St. Louis, the NHL's Blues named 37-year defenseman Dale Arbour as coach, replacing Scot- ty Bowman, who quit to devote full-time to his general man- ager's job. Burns, 34, took over the coaching job from Blair last De- cember 30 and sparked the ex- pansion team to a third-place finish in the NHL's West Divi- sion. Ironically, it was probably Burn's 2-20-8 record when he was strictly a bench coach that cost him a chance to coach again. The North Stars had slipped into fifth place when Burns himself on the active player list on March 1. Skating primarily with the penalty killing unit, Burns' tough defensive play sparked the North Stars to a 9-5-3 rec- ord from that point and a play- off berth. Terms of the two-year con- tract for Arbour, who began his - 1 ./. t4_1U...L3XXOthe announcement in the press box at Belmont Park, said he professional career with Detroit f . , in 1953, were not disclosed.felt 'that i the horse's present Arbour played on three Stan- condition he could not do his ley Cup championship teams- best. In fairness to the fans and Detroit, Chicago and Toronto- racing, I want to make an- before joining the Blues as a nouncement now." third round selection in the _ league's expansion draft. A native of Sudbury, Ontario, he was elected to the West Di- vision NHL All-Star team the past two season. ,J UMBO Y V ( O / M -M-m-m-m, yummie! PO I~TTERA giant hamburger of 114 lb. U.S. Govt. pure beef topped with let- tuce, tomato, mayonnaise, onions, fJ pickles and ketchup . SpringSale/ I EEOYaR p ngWest of Arborland v Sunday, June l ---*---- I 9:00A.M.-3:00OP.M. ° 21Hill _________ NATIONALsLEAGUE' East LARRY KRAMER and MARTIN ROSEN present KEN RUSSELL'S film of Di H. LAWRENCE IN LOE"; COLOR by Deluxe united Artism DIAL 8-6416 (Z Tj 1 OA Chicago New York St. Louis Pittsburgh Philadelphia Montreal Cincinnati Los Angeles Atlanta San Francisco San Diego W I, 27 20 25 26 9" 25 25 28 21 29 17 33 W~est 38 15 30 21 29 20. 25 29 ?4 29 24 3'? Pett. .574 '493 .479 .472 .420 .340 .717 .588 .592 .463 ,453 .429 Yesterday's Results Montreal 3, Atlanta 2 Cincinnati 5, New York 4 Houston 8, Philadelphia r Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles 0 San Diego 3, St rLouis 2 Chicago 12, San Francisco 8 SPECIAL JUNE STEREO SALE Hundreds of "Specials" 0 receivers 0"changers 0 speakers 0 hi fi 0 musical instruments HI-Fl STUDIO 121 W . W a shsfgton d German Restaurant-668-7942 PRESENTS 00 the' the phantom of theI FLOATING OPERA one dolar 330 Maynard, 665-0606 TONIGHT doors open 8p.m.* Tonight, Saturday-June 6 Eves Matinees 6:25, 9:05 H00aI1FaI-i--I 1:00ET3:40Y "'A IR PO RT' is a great film all the way!" -chico Daily News dir. CHARLES WALTER H956) A ROSS HUNTER Production i A quick-paced musical starring Bing Crosby, Z BURT LANCASTER -DEAN MARTIN Grace Kelly, and Frank Sinatra. Louis Arm- JEAN SEBERG JACQUELINE BISSET - GEORGE KENNEDY I strong provides the sound for Cole Porter's HELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN - MAUREEN STAPLETON BARRY NELSON - LLOYD NOLAN " N "E"4 ""'EE - show stopping score. DANA WYNTER - BARBARA HALEro. . Dn.TEursBAr-SaRAHALED "A souffle for people not tired of eggs." Mon.-Thurs. Fri.-Sat. All Day Eves. - Eves. ' Sundav __ $2.25 $2.50 Sunday MONDAY THRU SATURDAY MATINEES $1.75 SHORT: Excerpts from Safety Last -__ _ (Harold Lloyd) 7 & 9:05 ARCHITECTURE 662-8871 75C AUDITORIUM I ;:;:j " beh we hr 4* Today's World Cup Games Group I Russia vs. Belgium Group 11, Uruguay vs. Italy G;roup III Rumania vs. Czechoslovakia Group IV Peru vs. Morocco PTM 'I *k WNGCTHEATRE CORPORATION A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY SHOWING FoH VILLGE 375 No.-MAPLE RD.-7694300 MON.-FRI.- 8:15 only SAT.-SUN- 1:00-4:30-8:15 RESTRICTED Under 1 8 reguires i I i RESTRICTED Under 18 requires accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian love, peace, muic 4 II'hi8 830 Dinner served until 2am. (closed Mondays)-21I N. Main-663-7752 (righ accross from the l PostOfie OBSERVERS WANTED for Color Vision Experiments You must be Red-Green Color Blind PAM MILES City Folk & Folk Rock SUNDAY, 5 P.M.- COMMUNAL DINNER 11 d spy as 031 " NOW SHOWING! SHOWS AT: 1:00-3:00- 5:00-7:00-9:05 P.M. The most electrifying ritual ever seen! 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