t '3 F I .9 4 4 ,{ A f T Page Twelve THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 12, 1970 ELLIOTT £ Mexicans take Win fans fiesta *E MEXICO CITY (1P) - Mexico ~ gained the W o r 1 d Soccer Cup quarter-finals yesterday for the first time in history and provided the whole country with one mam- moth fiesta. The host nation beat Belgium 1-0 before 112,000 delirious, bon- go-drumming fans in the Aztec Stadium to tie with Russia at the top of Group 1. The winning goal against Bel- gium came in the 16th minute on a hotly disputed penalty convert- ed by Gustavo Pena, the Mexico captain. England, the defending cham- pion, and Italy also gained Sun- day's quarter - finals. England BUMP E edged Czechoslovakia 1-0 on a bit- athleticd terly disputed penalty goal by Al- Sam Fah lan Clarke in the 49th minute. It listens i was Clarke's first championship match. Italy moved into the quarter-4 finals for the first t Iinm e in 32 years by playing a scoreless tie with Israel. In yesterday's other game, in which no quarter-final berth was at stake, tiny Morocco held highly favored Bulgaria to a SAN FR 1-1 tie. the Oakla Mexico, England a n d Italy Finley was round out the quarter-finals for porarily y which Russia, Uruguay, Brazil, ing order. West Germany and Peru had U.S. Dis previously qualified. ald S. Lev Sunday's quarter-final pairings said the N pit Mexico or Russia against Uru- team could guay in Mexico C it y, Italy vs. federal ban Mexico or Russia in Toluca, Bra- a petition zil vs. Peru in Guadalajara and A San F West Germany vs. England in Le- judge had on. sion late Since both teams are tied on approve th goals scored and goals against, Finley, ow Mexico and Russia will toss today land Athle to determine their Sunday op- B u t le ponents. The winner meets Uru- Trans - Na guay in Mexico City. The loser Inc., tryin meets Italy in Toluca. stopped a )F, continued mig#W###mim#gg; thahe u Major League 1111 Standings team coul I IbThe ba AMERICA LEAGUE been sched' DS I0 POST L'J Ar A6F D-ali Vol. LXXX, No. 27-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Friday, June 12, 1970 Ten Cents CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (N - Chalmers B. "Bump" Elliott, former head football coach at Michigan and a standout play- er for the Wolverines in the 1940's, yesterday was named athletic director at Iowa. He replaces Forest Evashevski, who resigned last month; culminating a simmering feud in the athletic department be- tween Evashevski and head football coach Ray Nagel. Elliott, 45, will take over July 1 at an annual salary of' $27,000, $500 shy of that commanded by Evashevski. In approving Elliott's appointment, the State Board of Regents also approved the naming of Francis I. "Buzz" Graham as associate director: of intercollegiate athletics. Graham has served as business manager of athletics and was ap- pointed acting athletic director after Evashevski stepped down. Elliott was one of 30 candidates NIGHT EDITOR: under consideration for the ath- PAT ATKINS letic director's post at Iowa. At a press conference in Iowa City yesterday afternoon, Elliott Elliott, who has served as as- said his chief objective will be sociate athletic director at Mich- "pulling together of not only the igan since 1968, coached the Wol- staff but the administration on verines to a 51-42-3 record dur- one set effort to have an out- ing his nine-year stint as coach standing athletic program at beginning in 1959. Iowa." His t e a m won the Big Ten Asked about t ie dissension championship in 1964, t h e n within the athletic department, thrashed Oregon State 34-7 in the he replied, "If we are all trying l Rose Bowl. to win at Iowa then we have to It was Elliott's second appear- FLE I G CITES B 0 I I FOR 'U, I GAY LIB I -Associated Press ELLIOTT becomes a Hawkeye, accepting the position of director at Iowa. He tells what it's like to newsmen, while hr (r), chairman of the board in control of athletics n. COURT RESTRAINT )rder halts Seals sale Baltimore New York Detroit Boston Washington Cleveland East w 38 33 27 26 25es 22 West L 19 24 26 26 29 31 Pet. .667 .579 .509 .500 .463 .415 GB 4 J/ 81 9 1 . 14, Minnesota 34 17 .667 - California 34 23 ,596 Oakland 31 26 .543 Chicago 21 35 .375 1 Kansas City 20 34 .370 Milwaukee 17 39 .3031 Yesterday's Results Washington at Kansas City, rain Baltimore 9, California 1 Cleveland 6, Oakland, 5, 10 inn. Detroit 6, Milwaukee 2 Other clubs not scheduled Today's Games New York at Kansas City, night Boston at Minnesota, night Washington at Chicago, night California at Detroit, night Milwaukee at Cleveland, night Oakland at Baltimore, night 2% 6 19%1 day be f Downey. Attorney asked in Court peti allowed f satisfy cre Nora grani for j DETR( drilled a home run inning tie troit Tige Milwauke Northru season an slam, cam John O'D who had after star loaded the Elliot N out walk, Norm Ca Brabende hits, stru the stage The Tig the seven Northrup on a sac Brabende second. Maddox first run in the thi ANCISCO (/P) - Sale of rd Seals to Charles O. s blocked at least tem- esterday by a restrain- trict Court Judge Ger- in issued the order and National Hockey League d not be sold until a nkruptcy referee acts on filed earlier yesterday. rancisco Superior Court scheduled a court ses- yesterday to formally he sale of the team to vner of baseball's Oak- etics. egal maneuvering by tional Communications ig to k e e p the team, ny immediate takeover. erior Court session was until 10 a.m. Monday ie effect of the restrain- and a new offer for the d be studied. nkruptcy hearing has duled for 1:30 p.m. Mon- o r e referee Sheridan ys for Trans-National the U.S. Bankruptcy ition that more time be for Trans-National to editors. hrup shaps td slam Tiger win OIT (P)- Jim Northrup two-out grand slam n, snapping an eighth and powering the De- ers to 6-2 victory over e last night. p's eighth homer of the [d eighth career grand ne off Milwaukee reliever' onoghue, a left-hander, just entered the game ter Gene Brabender had t bases. Maddox received a one- Al Kaline singled and sh drew a walk before r, who allowed only four ck out Horton, setting for Northrup. gers had tied it at 2-2 in th without a hit after walked, went to second rifice and came in on r's wild pickoff throw to drove in the Tigers' with a run-scoring single ird. v F NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pet. GB Chicago 29 22 .569 - Pittsburgh 28 29 .491 4 New York 27 29 .482 4% St. Louis 25 27 .481 4% Philadelphia 24 31 .436 6% Montreal 20s35 .363 11% West Cincinnati 42 16 .724 - Atlanta 31 23 .555 9 Los Angeles 31 25 .554 10Y2 San Francisco 26 31 .456 16 Houston 26 33 .441 17 San Diego 26 34 .433 17% Yesterday's Results Chicago at San Diego, inc. St. Louis at Los Angeles, inc. Atlanta 6, Philadelphia 4 Montreal 8, Cincinnati 4 Other clubs not scheduled Today's Gaines Houston at Montreal, night Atlanta at New York, night Cincinnati at Philadelphia, nighit Chicago at .Los Angeles, 2, twi-night Pittsburgh at San Diego, night St. Louis at San Francisco, night June 16 & 11 at Arborland 10 a.m. to 9p.M. Owens-Illinois, Inc. will pay one cent a pound for all your old (but clean and empty) bottles and jars, if they are separated by color and free of metal. It's a good chance for you and your organization to earn extra money and help your community. When you return empty bottles and jars to us, you lighten the load on your refuse disposal system. You also reduce the opportunity for those bottles to litter your parks and roadsides. We'll make new bottles from your discards . . . any number. All bottles collected at Arborland will be recycled through our glass furnaces at Charlotte. CASH FOR YOUR OLD BOTTLES The petition said the Seals were worth between $6 million and $8 million and that the club had li- abilities of $3.8 million. Attorneys told Levin that Jerry Seltzer of Oakland, who owns -the Roller Derby, h a d offered $4.5 million for the Seales. A written offer was shown in court. work togethher. Ithink this can be done and will be done." Dissension was evident last month when Nagel was fired the same day Evashevski resigned. However, he was reinstated four days later after being reprimand- ed for past conduct and failure to cooperate with university officials and the Board in Control of Ath- letics. The row between Evashevski and Nagel blossomed recently af- ter the disclosure that the state auditor's office was investigating expense accounts filed by assis- tant football coaches. ance in the West Coast classic. In 1948, playing fullback, he led Michigan to a win over Southern California. Elliott, a native of Detroit who grew up in Bloomington, Ill., got started in coaching as an assist- ant. at Oregon State in 1948. He wecnt to Iowa in 1952 as an as- sistant to Evashevski, then head coach of the Hawkeyes. He returned to Michigan as backfield c o a c h in 1957, being promoted to head coach in 1959 with the retirement ofBennie Os- sterban. By Emphasizi would have tive appropi Fleming yes time Gay I quest to ho homosexuali In a letter ment Counc Fleming We the conferer proposed coy ly negative University. "Unless o public supp reaction to Fleming said Fleming's sharp contr rejection of mentioned practices an would not b Earlier ye Assembly's (SRC) expr of GLF to I an attempt their resolut measure bef mittee on V) the top facu Assembly. "We made tion that S has certair Smith, assis student affa the students In a meet: its intention "I am not final answer said. "The before when will get hot. Wednesda has approac to hold a co responded t a letter stati conference t in nature ax those people terest in thi not provide Police, sunbathers clash Some 8,000 beachgoers clash with police at a park in Pontiac, Mich. Police entered the park yesterday to arrest two students for the possession of alcoholic beverages. The people around the students then came to their assistance in resisting arrest. At least one police officer was injured and over 25 people were arrested. arrested SANTA BARBARA, Calif. ('P) - Gov. Ronald Reagan put the National Guard on alert yesterday for possible use to quell week-long disturbances in the Isla Vista region near the campus of the Uni- versity of California at Santa Barbara. The governor acted after Santa Bar- bara C o u n t y supervisors declared the county a "state of disaster" and urged Reagan to order the National Guard for the second time in Isla Vista. Meeting in emergency session, the board voted unanimously to request the Guard following a wild night in which 375 arrests were made. About 650 arrests have been made in the last week, mostly for violations of a dusk-to-dawn curfew. Some 600 guardsmen were called into Isla Vista by the governor last February after the local Bank of America branch was destroyed by fire. They remained four days. "I think the National Guard would be more acceptable to the community" than local law enforcement o f f i c e r s, said George H. Clyde, chairman of the county Board of Supervisors. Reagan issued a statement in Sacra- mento saying he had "authorized the commander of state military forces, Maj Gen. Glenn C. Ames, to place National Guardsmen on alert in the event they are needed to maintain law and order in the Isla Vista area of Santa Barbara." A spokesman said the guardsmen would be available at the call of mutual aid officers in the area who had asked the supervisors to declare a state of emer- gency. The demonstrations began last week in protest of indictments returned against 17 students in connection with the bank burning and riots. Throughout the dem- onstrations, the protesters-most of them students at the University of California campus here-have said they were fed up with the establishment, the war and social conditions. In the last two days many demonstra- tors also have said they were protesting "police brutality" against those arrested. Police have denied using any brutality. The latest disruptions at the university began last weekend when students at- tacked a bank for four straight nights, 'Los Siete' minus one Six Latin Americans are on t r i al in San Francisco on charges of killing a policeman ,and wounding his partner in , 1969. Their trouble with au- thorities has led to the slogan, "Los Siete de la Raza," (the seven of the race). The seventh member of the group has not been captured by the police. New York police where intro- duced to Los Siete on Wednes- day when the slogan was on a note claiming that the Weather- man faction of SDS had bomb- ed the N.Y. police headquarters. See story on Page 2. -Associated Press Guard alerted af~ter 375 breaking windows, knocking out street lights with stones and trying to set the building afire. Despite the curfew, a crowd of several hundred students openly waged war on the local branch of the Bank of America, a target of disturbances extending back to February. Last night, the curfew for the troubled area of campus remained at 7:30 'p.m. while curfew for the rest of the campus was 11 p.m. No violence on the campus was reported early last night. n Santa Barbara