, - - - - --------- ------- w THE MICHIGAN DAILY I T, Tuesday, June 23, 1 970 0 -W I. IV Page Eight 0 ,. / HO HUM: ZZI P 5fr419uni M4- C *...VS ! FBy The Associated Press CHICAGO - The New York Mets rallied twice on homers-- y, one by Tommie Agee in the fifth inning and a three-run tie breaker by pinchhitter Donn Clendenon in the eighth to over- ,,, power the Chicago Cubs 9-5 yesterday, Agee's ninth June homer pow- ered a four-run uprising and Clendenon's seventh of the-sea- son wrapped up a three-run spurt. Fergie Jenkins, whose five- game winning streak and 21 1-3 scoreless inning string ended, had held the Mets hitless and allowed only one on base-when he hit Cleon Jones in the first inning - until one out in the fifth. HOUSTON - Don Wilson, troubled by a sore shoulder most of the season, fired a three-hitter and retired 20 con- secutive batters as the Houston head coplets adarng freh:nd Astros downed San Diego 4-1. head) completes a darin Aohawnd The tall right-hander allowed te first round of the Wimbledon Lawn a homer to Clarence Gaston in England. Ashe defeated his British op- the first inning and a one-out .o move into the second round. single to Larry Stahl in the sec- SERVING TH E PEOPLE ond. Stahl was thrown out steal- ing and Wilson retired every San Diego batter until pinch hit- ter Al Ferrara singled with one out in the ninth. John Edwards drove in the tying run against loser Dave Roberts, 5-4, in the second with single following hits by Bob Watson and Marty Martinez. The Astros went ahead in the fourth on Watson's single and Edwards' double. Singles by Denis Menke, Wat- son and Martinez accounted for apeal deied WASHINGTON (P)-The Su- preme Court declined 8 to 0 yesterday to give former neavy- weight champion Cassius Clay permission to go to Canada to fight Joe Frazier, his successor. The plea, made by Clay's law- yers and publicly disavowed by the former champion, had been denied June 10 by Justice Hugo L. Black. Clay was convicted three years ago of refusing induction into the Army. He is free on bail while appealing, but one condi- tion is that he not travel aut- side the United States. Cubs another run in the sixth, and Joe Morgan hit his second home run of the season in the seventh. ATLANTA-Wes Parker, Bill Sudakis and Bill Grabarkerwitz socked home runs last night as Los Angeles trimmed Atlanta 4-2 and moved into second place in the National League West Divi- sion one-half game ahead of the Braves. Right-hander Alan Foster, 4- 7, logged his third victory of the year over Atlanta, withWlast-out help from Jim Brewer. Parker hit his sixth homer in the fourth inning to draw the Dodgers even at 1-1. Then Su- dakis belted his fifth homer in the fifth after Tom Haller had singled, and Grabarkerwitz led off the eighth with his seventh homer. gTAT Now Showing ! Vol. LXXX, No. 34-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Tuesday, June 23, 1970 Ten CE IXO SI'G TO S BILL C B LLOT 18-YE R ARTHUR ASHE (missing reverse spin slice during th Tennis Championships in E ponent 6-3, 6-2 and 6-1 t Laver, Asile win in Wimbledon I. -z' WIMBELDON, England (/) - Rod Laver of Australia and Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va., led a procession of seeded play- ers through the first round of the Wimbledon Tennis Cham- pionships yesterday as both the Australia and U.S. contingents came through without incident. Laver, a nonpareil redhead from Australia who is seeking his third title in succession and his fifth altogether, took just one hour for a 6-2, 6-0, 6-2 romp over George "Butch" Seewagen of Bayside, N.Y. Ashe, rated by many as Lav- er's chief threat, opened his bid by downing Graham Stilwell of Britain 6-3, 6-2, 6-1. Stan Smith of Los Angeles, the U.S. No. 1 and the seventh seed here, also advanced, but had difficulty be- fore subducing Jaime Fillol of Chile 7-5, 2-6, 6-3, 6-4. Clark Grabner, the ninth seed Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East from New York, also needed four sets before defeating Har- ald Elsenbroich of West Ger- many 6-3, 6-3, 3-6, 6-1, but Dennis Ralston of Barkesfield, Calif., advanced without swing- ing his racket when Nicola Pie- trangeli of Italy scratched. The Australians, with five seeds, had even less trouble. Rio soccer celebration kills 44 RIO DE JANEIRO )(A)--Te joyous celebrations of Brazil's World Cup soccer victory over Italy in Mexico left toll of at least 44 dead in Rio alone. Although police and hospitals did not initially report an ex- traordinary number of accidents Sunday night, official informa- tion issued later said 1,800 per- sons were treated ,in the four main public hospitals of Rio between midnight Sunday and noon yesterday. Laver, inevitably the top seed showed the way against Seewa gen while John Newcombe, sec ond seed and last year's runner up, was the victor in anothe. Australia-U.S. battle when h defeated Roy Barth, of Say Diego, Calif., 6-2, 6-3, 6-4. Roy Emerson, the 10th seed and like Laver and Nemcombe former winner here, had ar equally easy passage over Ana- toly Volkov of Russia 6-4, 6-3 6-0 while Ken Rosewall, the veteran Aussie who was tiwee finalist in the 1950's and who i seeded fifth this year, beat fel- low countryman Charles Dible3 6-3, 7-5, 6-4. U.S. widens air strikes WASHINGTON (P) - U.S. warplanes are playing a wider role in the Indochina war, striking as deep as 100 miles inside Cambodia against new communist troop and supply lines, the Pentagon disclosed yesterday. These new raids - well beyond the 21.7 mile limit for U.S. ground troops - be- gan about a week ago and are being carried out with the "careful and per- sonal coordination" of Cambodian a n d South Vietnamese military officials, a Pentagon spokesman said. The spokesman, Jerry W. Friedheim, said they have been on an almost daily basis depending on the weather. Friedheim said the bombing runs were begun "in the last week" when it became clear communist forces had successfully re-established their supply lines further west of the sanctuary areas along the South Vietnamese border. These air interdiction raids, as Fried- heim described them, have been against North Vietnamese troop and supply lines mostly a1o n g Cambodia's river system. They have not been in support of allied ground operations, he said. e a1 n e I July 4 CAMP-OUT RACE-IN Spend Friday night July 3 under the stars in the scenic Irish Hills and wake up Saturday to the biggest names in auto rac- ing. Andretti, Foyt, and Unser lead the pack at the "Michigan Twin 200's." Special student rate $4.50, available at the track or call 971 -4210 for further information. -ait-oavi - mx Rally, march set for tonight About 30 members of various radical campus groups march around the Univer- sity telling students of plans for a protest tonight against the widening of U.S. air strikes in Cambodia. A march and a rally are tentatively set to begin at the corner of South and East University Avenues at a time to be announced. WAS yesterc ing age test on The the 196 nearly been re The courts viding year-o not be In knocke ahead the sta lower Presii ment be poss ly so t nectior congres be uph The court validity test by registry The election beginn: who a extend million Nixor voting position a consi by stat He b 1965 V only to so that country The recomn literac3 and fo require election The tests a registry ana, M1 ia and WELCOME STUDENTS! Let us style your hair to fit your personality.. i 8 BARBERS, no waiting t OPEN 6 DAYS The Dascola Barbers Arborland-Campus Maple Village MAY AFFECT LSA CONVICTIONS Con tent(ion statute ITECH"iCOLOR"UN UnMM rists OM SOWS AT: I Baltimore New York Detroit Boston Cleveland Washington Minnesota California Oakland Kansas City Chicago Milwaukee W 44 40 33 30 29 29 West 40 37 R 37 23 4 24 ? 21 t L 23 26 30 :33 34 37 21 27 30 40 42 44 Pet. .658 .606 .524 .478 .460 .439 .655 .578 .552 .365 .364 .322 B 3i/z 9 12 13 14% 6 1$ 21 I t.. Yesterday's Results Baltimore 9, Boston 8 Kansas City at Oakland, ine. Minnesota 4, Milwaukee 3 Other clubs not scheduled Today's Games Detroit at Washington, night Kansas City at Oakland, night Chicago at California, night Minnesota at Milwaukee, night Baltimore at Boston, night Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE East W L Pct. GB Chicago 35 29 .548 - New York 34 31 .524 114 Pittsburgh 34 35 .494 3Y2 St. Louis 32 33 .493 3% Philadelphia 30 34 .474 5 Montreal 24 42 .364 12 West Cincinnati 48 20 .711 - Los Angeles 38 30 .556 10 Atlanta 36 29 .552 10'.4 San Francisco 31 36 .461 161 Houston 29 40 .420 19' San Diego 30 40 .413 20 Yesterday's Results New York 9, Chicago 5 Philadelphia 6, 3, Montreal 0. 2 St. Louis 6, 0, Pittsburgh 1. 1 Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 2 Houston 4, San Diego 1 Cincinnati 13, San Francisco 6 Today's Games Montrealat Philadelphia, night New York at Chicago St. Louis at Pittsburgh, night Los Angeles at Atlanta, night San Francisco at Cincinnati, night San Diego at Houston, night BARBER BILLIARDS BOWLING MUG STAND MICHIGAN UNION OPEN REGULAR HOURS DURING BREAK Friday & Saturday-8 P.M. "COME TOGETHER" or "THE PLASTIC MOJO BANDAID TALKING BLUES" An original play by Jon SIade ..r By EDWARD ZIMMERMAN Daily News Analysis. A federal court opinion handed down May 29 may have a dramatic effect on the 107 students who were arrested and charged with contention in the LSA sit- in last September. A three-judge panel in Detroit ordered a change in the wording of the state con- tention statute to assure the law's con- stitutionality. It is possible that because of this new ruling that the convictions of most of those arrested in the LSA sit-in and the General Electric recruiter clash last Feb- ruary could have their convictions re- viewed again or over-ruled. If such a situation occurred, it would be up to the county prosecutor to decide whether he wants to re-arrest those charged with contention under the old statute and charge them under the re- vised law. In the LSA incident, students took con- trol of the building to protest the refusal of President Robben Fleming and the Regents to reconsider the structuring of a University discount bookstore. State and local police and Washtenaw County sheriff's deputies rushed the building in the early morning, arresting and hauling off in buses-107 people who stayed in the LSA Bldg. The contention statute previously read, "No person shall-create or excite a dis- turbance or a contention .. The three federal judges, George Ed- wards, Thomas Thornton and Fred Kaess, ruled that the words "excite" and "contention" should be deleted from the statute. They felt the words had to be deleted in order for the statute to remain con- stitutional, one of the judges said. He de- clined to give further details about the reasoning behind the decision. The case which brought about the change in the wording of the statute was based on an incident which occurred last fall in Detroit. Thirty welfare mothers gathered in front of a welfare office pro- testing what they said were low alloca- tions for their children's school clothing. They were arrested for interfering with th reised the business of the welfare office. The case was cited as Detroit Metropolitan Welfare Rights Organization et al vs. Wayne County Prosecutor William Ca- halan, the man who ordered the arrests. The lawyers who handled the case be- fore the three-judge panel were Robert Bartell and Allen Houseman. Although the ruling on the wording of the statute has come down, the decis- ion as to the guilt or innocence of the welfare mothers still has not been reached. i Eves 6:25, 9:05 r,1- r W - k1 $ ctirA alng NOW SHOWING Matinees 1:00, 3:40 NGCGTHEATRE CORPORATION M-Thur. 8:15 oniy A NATIONAL GENERAL COMPANY Fri. 6:30. 10:00 Sat. 1:30, 5:30, FOH 9:30 FO VILLE . 1:00, 4:30, 375 No. MAPLE RD.-7691300 8:15 I- z 0 "'A I R PORT' is a great film all the way!" -ChicagQ o iy Newt A ROSS HUNTER Production BURT LANCASTER -DEAN MARTIN JEAN SEBERG - JACQUELINE BISSET -CEORGE KENNEDY HELEN HAYES - VAN HEFLIN - MAUREEN STAPLETON - BARRY NELSON -LLOYD NOLAN A u rl iCTi *V I DANA WYNTER BARBARA HALE0 Mon.-Thurs. Fri.-Sat . All Dav Eves. ~Eves. ~Sun day $2.25 $2.50 $2.25 Matinees Monday thru Saturday $1.75 a wadleigh-maurice, Itd. production technicolor@ from warner bros. PASS LIST SUSPENDED