'' -44 5 4 f I 4 4 jr IA -44[- Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 20, 1970 I., 'U Six stars black Syracuse "OBSCENE, LEWD, ;Lk e !Iai1 ,/ A , no SYRACUSE, N.Y. P)}-- The 1970 Syracuse Univer- sity football team, expected to be a rejuvenated power this fall, might have suf- fered drastically yesterday when it was learned six black varsity lettermen and a sophomore were not invit- ed to play this season. Among the group is the Or- angemen's leading ground gain- er the past two seasons, senior Al Newton. a six-foot, 231- pound fullback. Newton carried the ball 154 times during t h e 1969aseason, gaining 687 yards for an average of 4.46 yards a carry. Also included were Ducky Mc- Gill and Duane walker, two of the tested defensive men who Major League f Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE ot aske helped make the Orange de- fense the fifth best in the na- tion last year. McGill held one of the end posts and Walker was a back. James H. Decker, director of athletics at the university, said Head Football Coach Ben Schwartzwalder "held inter- views with all of them and told them personally they would not be invited back for this season." Decker indicated the decision was based on a long evolving problem within the team. During last spring's practice a controversy, shrouded in se- crecy by both players and the coach, reached a head when the six varsity lettermen and Rich Bulls, moving up from the freshman team, walked off the practice field and refused to re- turn. Their action was taken dur- ing a session in which Denver Bronco star running back and former Syracuse great, Floyd Little, was taking part as a temporary addition to the coaching staff. "Ben made the judgment per- sonally as to which of the play- ers would contribute to the team this year and which ones would not," Decker said. He said he did not know what problems might develop from such a decision, but indicated something had to be done. ,Rehearing for back Clay is denied Baltimore New York xlet roit Boston Washington xCleveland Minnlesot~a xCalifornia xOakland Kansas City Milwaukee Chicago x-late game East WV L 78 44 66 54 65 56 62 58 58 64 57 64 West 72 47 68 53 67 55 46 76 46 77 44 81 Pet. .636 .551 .537 .517 .475 .471 .606 .562 .549 .376 .373 .352 GH 11 12'. 15 20 20! 6x4 27%4 28 31 NEW ORLEANS (-) - T h e Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- peals refused yesterday to grant former heavyweight boxing champion Cassius Clay a re- hearing on his conviction for failing to submit to the military draft. The ruling also denies Clay's request for a re-hearing before the full court. Denial of the mo- tions for re-hearing cleared the way for an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court. The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld Clay's original conviction in a Texas federal court but the case was appealed and the Supreme Court ordered further hearings since new in- formation was presented show- ing that telephone wire taps could have played a part in the case. However, the district court concluded that the wiretaps did not contribute to Clay's convic- tion and the Fifth Circuit Court upheld that decision earlier this year. Chao for now The Daily Summer Sports Staff wishes to thank its loyal reader, wherever the poor devil may be for his unflagging sup- port. See you in the fall. 1 LASCIVIOUS, FILTHY, OR DISGUSTING." These are the words which Chief Assistant Prosecutor Casper H. Kast used to describe our books and magazines when he filed suit against us SFF FOR YOURSELIF AT THE FOURTH AVENUE ADULT NEWS . 217 S. Fourth Ave. Open daily and Saturday 10 A.M.-1 P.M., Sunday 2 P.M 11 P.M. (Look for our huge red-and-yellow blacklite paint- ed sign . . . don't be attracted to cheap imitators.) We are Ann Arbor's largest erotic bookstore, featuring an unspeakably complete line of paperback books, magazines, newspapers, records, cards, still photos of local models, and 8mm color and black-and-white movies, plus a marvelous selection of "novelties." Not to mention the individual movie viewing machines in the back. Note: the long-haired freak who manages this most excellent bookstore has recently installed a stereo system, and will eagerly assault your ears with all manner of raunchy de- cadent music. Peace.. .. PARTY TIME .00 r-T at ALBERT TERRACE Can be anytime... and the neighbors could care less. Their quiet evening of study goes undisturbed thanks to excellent sound conditioning and bi-level design. Reserve your apartment for fall semester then have a party ... anytime. Albert Terrace Apis. 1100 Geddes Resident manager: 761-1717 Hours: 12 noon-5:30 p.m. Managed by CHARTER REALTY 665-8825 DE D FFOR REP CHURCH KEO not included Yesterday's Results Baltimore 3, Milwaukee 2 Minnesota 3, New York 0 Chicago 13, Boston 5 Kansas City 2, Washington 1 Detroit at Oakland, inc. Cleveland at California, ine, Today's Games New York at Minnesota Only game scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE East. W L Pct. Pittsburgh 68 56 .549 New York 64 57 .529 Chicago 64 60 .516 St. Louis 57 66 .463 Philadelphia 54 67 .446 Montreal 53 70 .431 West Cincinnati 82 43 .656 Los Angeles 69 52 .563 Atlanta 61 61 .500 San Francisco 61 61 .500 Houston 55 67 .451 San Diego 48 76 .387 Yesterday's Results Montreal 8, Cincinnati 5 Atlanta 3, Philadelphia 2 Houston 9, New York 4 Los Angeles 4, St. Louis 2 Chicago 12, San Diego 2 San Francisco 7, Pittsburgh 4 Today's Gamnes Philadelphia at Atlanta Only game scheduled ER B Vol. LXXX, No. 71-S Ann Arbor; Michigan-Thursday, August 20, 1970 Ten Cents I R Tr Clean Air Race car Technician Richard Vanderberg makes a last minute check on a Stanford University propane gas powered entry in the cross- country Clean Air Race spon- sored by Cal Tech and MIT. (See story Page 7.) -Associated Press GS 4 101~ 12Y7 141 f 11 19u 331 Bonavena to fight Clay?? BUENOS AIRES (P-Former Argentine heavyweight cham- pion Oscar "Ringo" Bonavena said yesterday he has received an offer to fight former world champion Cassius Clay in Octo- ber at Atlanta, Ga. The 27 - year - old Bonavena, ranked as No. 1 heavyweight contender by the World Boxing Association, said he planned to fly to Miami this week, probably today, to discuss the offer. Bonavena's brother Jose al- ready is in Miami and has begun talks with an unidentified group of U.S. businessmen who hope to finance the bout, the boxer said. Bonavena said he would ask a minimum purse of $100,000 to meet All. II 11 SUBMARINES 342 761- S. State 1800 By Four repi County BI League and fare Right office in ti yesterday i $50,000 in r The mon winter clot: ents are on fused to al for budgeta bers of thr pointed out iff's depart A total t manded of t say this mc clothing, I stores, a training pi facilities. Charles Black Eco acted as a cupying the Thomas terian Chu because of : its congreg, dent Robb( Republican are reporte "They go but we wa to do right Yesterda3 several rep to discuss that the c forced to c discuss the The boar did not, E enough mei making bod the two groi last night board could The repr to the boar to agree to groups and further ar groups of $4 The state determinati until Sundt "until the p Heavy Duty Steering. and Suspension Parts BALL JOINTS " IDLER ARMS 0 TIE ROD ENDS ct ABM WASHINGTON (P) - Defenders of President Nixon's Safeguard antimissile system repulsed a final Senate attack yesterday 53 to 45. The vote climaxed a three-week debate marked chiefly with contention over Safeguard's usefulness as a bargaining chip in arms talks with the Soviet Union. The Nixon administration holds that now that attempts to limit Safeguard's Collins By The Associated Press John Norman Collins was convicted yesterday.-of first-degree murder in the slaying of Karen Sue Beirieman, an 18- year-old freshman at Eastern Michigan University. The dark-haired, 23-year-old defend- antdisplayed no emotion as he heard the verdict. Collins' mother and sister were led from the courthouse in tears. The verdict came 1171/2 hours after the case went to the Circuit Court jury at 11:35 a.m. Friday. During that time, the six men and six women jurors spent 27 /2 hours locked in a guarded room. Another 5Y2 hours were spent rehearing testi- mony and judicial instructions., Defense attorney Neil Fink said he will appeal. He declared, "There was unspok- en evidence in this case that couldn't be combatted ... He was being tried for seven murders. We all know that." Miss Beineman was the seventh young woman killed in Washtenaw County in a period of just over two years. Park Terrace 848 Tappan at Oakland See Tom or Bonnie Woods Apt. 10, 769-5014 or answering service, 769-7779 clears hurdle expansion have been defeated, the entire system can be bargained out of existence -if necessary to win concessions on mu- tual arms limitations. The final round of this year's Safe- guard battle came over an amendment by Sen. Edward Brooke (R-Mass.) to stop geographic expansion of the system to two new sites and use all of the re- quested $1.35 billion on the two sites approved last year. That vote out of the way, and with two other anti-expansion plans already rejected, the Senate turned to the fir'st of dozens of other amendments to the $19.2-billion military procurement bill. This is a bid by Sen. Eugene McCarthy (D-Minn.) to require a state governor to obtain presidential a p p r o v a l before authorizing use of arms and live am- munition by National Guard troops called to quell disorders. Other issues still to be decided include the so-called end-the-war amendment to set a Dec. 31, 1971 cutoff for U.S. military involvement in Indochina, and an amend- ment to end the draft and create an all-volunteer army. The vote on the Brooke amendment involved several switches on both sides of the issues. Bulletin Amid torn paper, broken pencils and overturned glue bottles, The Michigan Daily last night suspend- ed publication for the duration of the summer half-term.- Informed sources say the alleged newspaper will start up again on Sept. 2. Egypt -and TEL AVIV (11) - The Israeli military ance of pom command displayed yesterday what it definitely a termed "conclusive proof" of Egyptian said. missile deployment within the standstill He said zone along the Suez Canal in violation the Soviet- of the Middle East cease-fire. hours befo Sen. Margaret Chase Smith (R-Maine)., who refused to vote for any Safeguard funds last year because of her lack of faith in the reliability of the system, voted to limit it last week but refused yesterday to vote for the Brooke amend- ment. Brooke had defended this amendment as a logical and reasonable compromise which he believed the Senate could sup- port and the administration could live with. Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird joined Nixon supporters in the Senate in saying Brooke was wrong. "the ultimate in campus living" 0 delux one-two-three bedroom apartments A senior Israeli staff officer showed newsmen aerial photographs which he said were of four SAM2 missile batteries all within 18.6 miles of the canal. "There is not all our proof, but it is all we can show at this time," the officer said. He asked not to be identified. The photographs were displayed several hourstafter State Department spokesman Robert McCloskey in Washington said there was "no conclusive proof" of the Israeli allegations. "Mr. McCloskey is entitled to his own opinion," the Israeli officer said,. "Perhaps this does not change the bal- effect at ni these move: "in some ca The new covering ri Israeli-held the central The phot sites in an lake and ju The U.S- stipulates t up within of the cana " garbage disposals * locked storage * resident manager * fully furnished and carpeted e private underground parking free 0 24-hr. emergency maintenance service " each apartment equipped with its own burglar alarm system