I I * S 4. Ar Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, July 8, 1970 Tiger By The Associated Press Former Michigan star Elliot Maddox opened the tenth inning with a home run over the left-field fence to lift the Detroit Tigers to a 4-3 victory over Boston af- ter the Red Sox had won the opener, 8-4. Reggie Smith got the Red Sox out of the blocks in the opener by blasting a first-inning homer off Tiger starter Earl Wilson. Successive singles by Carl Yas- trzemski, Rico Petrocelli, George A I in doubt CHARLESTON, S.C. (1P} - Cassius Clay's scheduled return to the ring here tomorrow night was put in doubt yesterday. The Charleston County Coun- cil voted unanimously yesterday to refuse a contract for the use of the 4,000-seat county hall for an exhibition bout by Clay, de- posed heavyweight champion. The council acted after being advised by legal representatives that no deposit had been placed by the promoters of the match to secure the contract for the county hall. Promoters admitted this left the future of the charity bout in doubt. The 28-year-old Clay, also known as Muhammad Ali, was to step into the ring for the first time in more than two years to spar three rounds apiece with two opponents Thursday. Clay was to receive only ex- pense money for his benefit ap- pearance. Proceeds were to go to a charity for underprivileged children. Clay was to have sparred three rounds with Jeff Merritt ofwNew York and three rounds with Joe Bunger of England. Ten amateur bouts also were on the card. split; Birds, Mets win (ZAP irl t ttn Dat Scott and B i ll y Conigliaro brought in two more runs. Rico Petrocelli belted a two- run homer in the third and the Red Sox added three more in the ninth with help froni slop- py Tiger fielding. Jim Northrup walloped two home runs to help the Tigers close the gap to 5-4 going into the ninth, but his efforts were to no avail as the Red Sox wiped out the Tigers' hopes with their ninth inning uprising. In other American League action, Baltimore strengthened their hold on first in the East by beating the. Yankees 6-2 in 10 innings,- Cleveland moved out of the cellar and Washington moved in as the Tribe swept a pair from the Senators, 7-3 and 7-5, and Milwaukee shoved the White Sox temporarily into the West basement by winning the first of two from the Pale Hose, 4-3. Brooks Robinson gave the Orioles the win as he belted a grand slam homer off after the Birds had loaded the bases off Yankee ace reliever Lindy Mc- Daniel with a walk, a single, and an error. Red-hot Ray Fosse paced the Indians to their sweep with a homer, a triple, and four RBI's. Craig Nettles and Eddie Leon each drove in three runs as the Indians moved a half-game ahead of Washington. Pinch-hitter Ted S a v a g e clouted a homer in the bottom of the 12th to lift the Brewers past Chicago. In National League action, St. Louis found out that the inten- tional walk is a two-edged sword. The Cardinals decided to walk Ken Singleton to load the bases in the bottom of the ninth, but reliever Sal Campisi walked Ron Swoboda to force in the de- ciding run as the Mets won, 4-3. In the sixth, starter Mike Torrez unloaded a wild pitch while giving an intentional pass to help the Mets score their first three runs. Pittsburgh stayed one - half game back of New York by edg- ing out Philadelphia, 4-2, and Chicago clubbed Montreal, 10-7. In West Division action, the Cincinnati express rolled on as the Reds beat .San Diego, 3-0, San Francisco belted Atlanta, 8-5, and Los Angeles crunched Houston, 7-2. Gary Nolan and Clay Carroll combined for a seven-hitter to pace the Reds, while Dick Dietz' tnree-run homer ii f t e d the Giants past Atlanta. Dodger pinch-hitter L e n Gabrielson singled in the tie-breaker and the Dodgers breezed home. Miss Brazil suits up for beauty tilt- MIAMI BEACH (A) -- Miss Brazil's national costume at the Miss Universe Pageant this year is a soccer uniform. It bears the No. 10 of the uniform worn by Pele, star of Brazil's world champion team. Vivacious Elaine Thompson of Rio de Janeiro will wear the costume of the pageant Wed- nesday night. It replaces the traditional multi-colored Bra- zilian "Baiano" costume with a hat adorned by fruit. "I have seen Pele play many times," Miss Thompson said. "He is great." Vol. LXXX, No. 40-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Wednesday, July 8, 1970 Ten Cen GE ER L A GER I GLF, Europe cut short The best laid plans oft go astray, somebody said. And for several thousand American stu- dents vacationing in Europe this axiom proved true. Students from Detroit (right) sitting in a Paris suburb yesterday were among those waiting for a spe- cial airlift home after their sponsoring company, W o r l d Academy, Inc. filed for bank- ruptcy. FRO Us G u I k Swing your partner dosey-doe. Jack Nicklaus isn't doing the Virginia reel, he's giving a few pointers to young James Makovich at St. Andrews where the British Open begins today. Nicklaus is the favorite. Down with Brown BagsI CHANGE NOW!I Yes, if you want to change your old routine of the same old lunches, try the Michigan Union buffet. By E The director of Wells, yesterday d of Union facilities. The move cam theater performed Union by members crtic Society (SDS spokesman said th function of any gro Wells claimed of unpleasant peri priate" and added General Manager space to groups er Wells alleged I Womens Lib's par dicated last night from the Union. Student Govern President Jerry D claims that "he al power to determine claims that-his pC nating against a re In the theater an actor representin conference while u the background. TI of a Cambodian w speech, Nixon also r, Wells contended of order and said Union space becau what we expect." During a meetin GLF secretary Jim ards of conduct the GLF to follow to rights. Wells repori would have to fit Wells then decid ly from the Unior said last night th Thursday meeting Later yesterday "is designed to prot sexual exploitation that Mr. Wells is a as he is by our the to protest against GLF has also hi a planned midwest Robben Fleming ha be bad for the Univ the use of Universit GLF says they pla Fleming's ruling. Freehan, Oriole trio head AL All-Stars Major League? Standings AME'RICAN LEAGUE Bait imore New York Detroit Boston Cleveland Washington xMinnesota xCalifornia xOakland xKansas City xMilwauke xChicago East W L 51 30 44 36 43 35 41 39 36 44 37 46 West 50 26 48 32 45 36 29 50 29 53 28 54 Pct. .632 .550 .544 .5x8 .450 .443 .658 .600 .556 .367 .353 .339 G a--late game not included Yesterday's Results Boston 8, Detroit 4, 1st Detroit 4, Boston 3, 10 inn., 2nd Baltimore 6, New York 2 Cleveland 7, Washington 3, lst Cleveland 7, Washington 5, 2nd Milwaukee 4, Chicago 3- Chicago at Milwaukee, 2nd, inc. Kansas City at California, inc. Minnesota at Oakland, inc. Today's Games Boston at Detroit Minnesota at Oakland Kansas City at California Washington ;it Cleveland New York at Baltimore Chicago at Milwaukee NATIONAL LEAGUE East 9? 14 4 15 4 7 14 22%~ 24 25 GB 6 11 12zd 1- ' 17 20l. 511; 28'4 By The Associated Press Detroit catcher Bill Freehan was the only Tiger selected to the All-Star team, according to final vote totals released yes- terday. The American league champion Baltimore Orioles placed three men in the starting line-up. Oriole first-sacker Boog Pow- ell emerged with the largest vote total, 1,007,930, to beat out his nearest rival, Tiger Norm Cash, by better than a five to one- margin. Baltimore rightfielder Frank Robinson topped the American League's voting for outfielders, and Davey John- son will replace the injured Rod Carew at second. Detroit's Dick McAuliffe was second in the voting for the key- stone position, but his doctor advised him to pass up next Tuesday's All-Star game and rest his knee, which was injured last season. In the only really tight con- test, Chicago's Luis Aparicio edged out Boston's Rico Petro- celli for the shortstop berth by only 11,000 votes. The ageless Aparicio is having his best sea- son since leading the White Sox to the pennant in 1959. Minnesota's slugging handy- man, Harmon Killebrew, beat out another resurgent veteran, Oriole Brooks Robinson, for the third base slot. Joining Frank Robinson in the outfield are Washington's gentle giant Frank Howard and Boston's Carl Yastrzemski. Left out of the starting line-up are the league's three leading hitters,, all of whom are outfielders. California's Alex Johnson, New York's Roy White and Minne- sota's Tony Oliva all failed to break into the top three in the voting, and the Tiger's Willie Horton, probably the hottest player in baseball in June, also missed out. Oriole pilot Earl Weaver, who will manage the A m e r i c a n Leaguers in Cincinnati, can easily have a strong bench but only a limited number of places for his heavy hitters. Weaver will announce the remainder of the squad, reserves and pitchers. tomorrow, and will name his starting hurler on Monday. Many complaints were made about the computerized ballot, as the fans chose the line-ups for the first time since the 1950's. Many players who are having fine seasons were left off the ballot, which was printed up be- fore the season opened. Players such as Rico Carty, Al Kaline and Alex Johnson had to rely on write-in votes, and only Car- ty was able to break into the starting nine by virtue of write- ins. Michigan Union serves a buffet luncheon in a relaxed atmosphere. Eat at your leisure with a selection of meat, salads and desserts to suit the most discriminating tastes. The price is only $1.92 plus tax. TRY IT SOON FOR A CHANGE Private rooms available by reservation PHONE 764-7535 to exist in S. Monday through Friday, 1 1 :45-1 :00. The CONGRESSIONAL INVESTIGATION: Torture cells alleged GABRIEL TACCHINO Young French Pianist DIRECTLY FROM PARIS FOR HIS ONLY AMERICAN APPEARANCE THIS SUMMER will pe heard in the second recital in the SUMMER CONCERT SERIES-- THURS., JULY 16 at 8:30 Raekham Adtru Vi SAIGON (MP) - American officials have known about the "tiger cages" used by Saigon authorities for political prisoners, an embassy spokesman said yesterday, but possess only limited power to do anything about them. The use of the cages-actually. stone compartments 5 by 8 feet-was dis- closed a f t e r American congressmen visited Con Son, a prison island run by the Saigon government. The ,spokesman could not say whether American officials had urged abandonment of the cells, but he as- serted American officials repeatedly had suggested that the South Vietna-. mese improve prison conditions on the island, 140 miles southeast of Saigon in the South China Sea. Reps. August F. Hawkins (D-Calif) and William R. Anderson (D-Tenn) said in Washington they found about 400 prisoners crammed into the stone compartments, three to five persons in each. The two legislators were members of a 12-man fact-finding team from the House of Representatives that just re- turned from Indochina. The study team's only staff member, Thomas R. Harkin, submitted his resignation, charging that the group suppressed its findings of inhumane treatment in the prison. Harkin said Rep. Donald Clancy (R- Ohio) and other members of the team had argued that the prison findings would be highly embarrassing, would overshadow the rest of the trip and be played out of proportion by the media. Harkin said findings that lime is thrown on prisoners. so cramped for space that they cannot stand were stricken from the team's report to the House. Hawkins and Anderson also reported that women's cells were filthy and that prisoners complained of beat- ings and inadequate water, food and medicines. Rep. G. V. Montgomery (D-Miss), chairman of the committee accused Harkin of blowing the prison findings out of proportion. "The majority of the committee members were concerned over the pos- sible reaction the report would have on the North Vietnamese and their treatment of American prisoners of war," Montgomery told newsmen in Washington. Harkin said "this argument cut more deeply than any other" because he has friends who are POWs. But he said maximum pressure to improve South Vietnam's prison conditions would make the U.S. position more credible in dealing with Hanoi on American POWs. Con Son, often known by its French name, Polo Condor, was established by the French in 1862 and now has some 9,000 mainly political prisoners. The South Vietnamese government has stated that the "tiger cages," created by the French, have been abolished. The two legislators visited the island e tnam Thursday to inspect the prison com- pound and only by entry through a secret gateway were able to see the cages. Frank E. Walton, chief public safety corrections adviser to the Saigon gov- ernment, "accompanied the congress- men on their tour and opposed their visiting the cages, according to Don Luce, an interpreter with the group. New York P'ittsbuirgh Chicago $t. Louis Philadelphia Montreal w 45 46 40 39 34 33 West L 36 38 40 42 47 49 Pct. .555 .548 .500 .488 .418 .402 G Cincinnati 59 23 .72 Los Angeles 49 32 .60 Atlanta 41 39 .51 San Francisco 38 42 .471 Houston 34 49 .40 San Diego 32 53 .37 Yesterday's Results Chicago 10, Montreal 7 Pittsburgh 4, Philadelphia 2 New York 4, St. Louis .3 Los Angeles 7, Houston 2 Cincinnati 3, San Diego 0 San Francisco 8, Atlanta 5 Today's Gamnes St. Louis at New York, day Montreal at Chicago, 2, day San Francisco at Atlanta Los Angeles at Houston Pittsburgh at Philadelphia San Diego at Cincinnati 1 6 3 5 9 4 (air-conditioned)- PROGRAM TICKETS: $5.00-$4.00-$2.50 Fantasy in G minor. ..Bach-Liszt Sonata, K. 310............Mozart Scherzo No, 1 in B minor, Op. 20.......... Chopin Scherzo No. 2 in B-flo minor, Op. 31...........Chopin Mouvement Perpetuels, No. 3........Poulenc Sonata No. 3, Op. 28 ... Prokofieff ANGEL RECORDS II at UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY Burton Tower Ann Arbor, Mich. 48104 Hours: 9:00 to 4:30, Mon. thru Fri., Sat. 9:00to'12:00 (Also 1 1 hours before performance at Rackhom Auditorium) THIS SKETCH by a former inmate of the Con Son Island political prisoners reportedly were beaten with a whip whil an iron rack and hands tied behind their back.