THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, May 26, 1970 THE ICHGAN AIL Tueday May26.197 I lt ., ,.... ...f .. . M' nine closes with flourish BIG TEN BASEB FINAL STANDIN W L Ohio State 13 1 Minnesota 15 3 Wisconsin 8 7 MICHIGAN 7 7 Michigan State 7 7 Purdue 8 10 Illinois 8 10 Iowa 6 9 Indiana 7 11 Northwestern 2 14 aa daily spori NIGHT EDITO LEE KIRK ALL The regular baseball seasonI qGS ended to soon for Michigan's' Pet. GB young diamondmen, but they may .929 - return to the battles one nore7 .833 1 time before they can finally hang .533 51, up their spikes. .500 6 The Wolverines capped a late-' .500 6 season spurt by sweeping two1 .444 7 games Saturday afternoon from .444 7 Purdue. 14-1 and 6-5, giving them' .400 71 2 six straight triumphs at the finish. .389 8 The victories were doubly sweet,] .125 12 as Saturday was dedication day! for Ray Fisher Stadium. renamed5 and refurbished in honor of the: former great Wolverine baseball' coach. Ohio State, which finished atop' the standings with a 13-1 record,, had to cancel doubleheaders with the Wolverines and Michigan IR: State due to the unrest earlier this month on the Columbus campus. They are trying to arrange to have Lloyd Graff, ex-Daily Sports Editor, and the former Risa Levine were wed in Charlotte, N.C. this past Sunday. Since his graduation, Mr. Graff has copped out on the wonderful world of sports and is currently in business with his father. the games made up before NCAA district play begins. If the games are not resched- uled, the Big Ten could rule that Ohio State must forfeit all four games, and the championship would then go to Minnesota. If the games are replayed, Buckeyes would need two wins to clinch a tie for the title. Third-sacker Mark Carrow hit' a two-run homer and catcher Tom Lundstedt added a three-run shot1 and four RBI's to pace the Wol-1 verine hitting barrage in the opener. Rozelle testifies in Flood case NEW YORK (AP1)-Curt Flood's lawyers are expected to complete presentation of his $3 million an- titrust suit against baseball in Fed- eral Court today. Pete Rozelle, commissioner of professional football, was the only witness in Monday's abbreviated session. He was under subpoena from Flood's lawyer, Arthur Gold- berg, former United States Su- preme Court Justice. Rozelle told the court about football's player-option contract, which operates quite differently than baseball's reserve clause. Flood, former St. Louis Cardinal. center fielder who refused to ac- cept his trade to the Philadelphia Phillies, is suing baseball for $3 million in an antitrust suit, chal- lenging baseball's reserve system. Majpr League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastj BALTIMORE WINS, TOO Free han's' homer beats Yanks Baltimore New York Detroit Boston Washington Cleveland Minnesota Califonia Oakland Kansas City ChicagoCit Milwaukee W 30 24 19 2$ 18 14 West 27 22 17 L 13 20 22 23 24 12 14 20 24 26 '26 Pet. .697 .545 .487 .450 .439 .368 692 .659 .524 .415 .381 .325 GB 9 11 13Y 1 6V 114 By The Associated Press DETROIT - Bill Freehan led off the ninth inning with his eighth home run of the season last night, giving the Detroit Ti- gers a 4-3 victory over the New York Yankees.; Freehan lined an 0-2 pitch from reliever Steve Hamilton into the left-center field stands after the Yankees had tied the game with a run in the top of the ninth. Les Cain, 3-2 had clung to the lead since the fourth inning, when Jim Northrup's single, a walk to Norm Cash and Willie Horton's towering three-run homer sent the Tigers in front 3-1, against Stan Bahnsen. sBobbyMurcer cut the deficit in half When he hit his sixth homer Yesterday's Results Baltimore 6, Cleveland 2 Detroit 4, New York 3 Boston 5, Washington 3 Kansas City 7, Chicago Minnesota 6, Milwaukee 5 Today's Gamnes Cleveland at Baltimore, night New York at Detroit, night t Chicago at Kansas City, night Washington at Boston, night Milwaukee at Minnesota, night Oakland at California, night in the fifth and the Yankees caught up in the ninth on a walk to Ron Woods, John Ellis' single. a one-out walk to pinch hitter Ron Hansen and Horace Clarke's sacrifice liner to left. Orioles roll BALTIMORE - The Baltimore Orioles scored all their runs in the first two innings last night and rolled to a 6-2 victory over Cleveland behind the six-hit, pitching of Dave McNally. Paul Blair rapped a two-run, two-out double in the opening in- ning after losermBob Miller, 1-2, issued two walks, and scored on a single by Brooks Robinson. I McNally, 8-2, opened ainother ENDS WEDNESDAY Shows at: 1-3-5-7-9 P.M. three-run rally in the second with a single, moved to third on Don Buford's double and scored on a single by Chico Salmon. * * *' Royals romnp KANSAS CITY - Dave More- head hurled a five -hitter last night as the Kansas City Royals extended their winning string to four games with a 7-1 victory over the skidding Chicago White Sox. The loss was the White Sox' fifth in a row and ninth in 10 games. Fire-balling left-hander J i m Burton, who earlier last week set a varsity strike-out record, mowed. down six Boilermakers and yielded but four hits, and he topped his sterling season by putting in an encore performance in the second game. With two men out in the sixth and the tying run on base for Pur- due, Coach Moby Benedict called in his tireless southpaw, who lured the next batter into grounding the ball back to him. In the seventh and final frame, Burton whiffed' the side, upping his 'season total to 119 in only 81 innings. The Wolverines finished (?) at 7-7 in the conference and 17-19 overall. WELCOME STUDENTS! Let us style your hair to fit your personality . . . . 8 }ARBERS, no waiting * OPEN 6 DAYSt The Dascola Barbers Arborland-Campus Maple Village WOW! A three - piece Treasure Chest chicken dinner, plus french fries, for only 79c! Larger take-home orders also. Try a box soon!! JMILINH©PEEOY ®ERYICE West of Arborland DIAL 668-6416 Ending Wednesday _ -W&N~im TV RENTALS ~10 per month F FREE Service and Delivery ---NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED--- CALL: Nejac TV Rentals 662-5671 SERVI NG BIG 10 SCHOOLS SINCE 1961 COME ONE! COME ALL! To Celebrate THE JOY OF THE COUNTER-CULTURE in front'of the WED,, MAY 27 ROTC Bldg. 1 A.M.-1 P.M. O includes: Personal Confrontation with ROTC personnel Wm. Guerrilla theater Liberation Political Raps Liberation Leaflets Pickets vC"_?t < '!t "">, t)C_ " tC:""t<"""> < G o"! "?+C A N SHOWS TODAY AT 1:00-3:40-6:25-9:05 FEATURE 15 MINUTES LATER -PRICE LISTED BELOW- I STARTS WEDNESDAY I "You will enjoy 'AIRPORT' immensely, and you will find yourself talking about it enthusiastically to your friends."- enve PsOt THE NOVEL " OF THE YEAR PICTURE Student Headquarters .1 NATIONAL LEAGUE East I I I WHEN IT COMES TO KILLING,... MAMA KNOWS BEST! I .Ii I SAMUEL ZAR 5OFF N uavrTY Shelley WINTER S AS Bloody *TARRlING PAT DON DIANE MINGLE-" STROUD VARSI COLOR .AMERICAN 01 ar MOVIELAB INTERNATIONAL nctow LX-0 ATRIMOD FILM PRESENTATION AJOSEP" SRENNER ASSOCIATES RELEASE 2nd FEATURE 1IW1 Canadian Experimental Film THURSDAY "Women in Love" MUSIC COMPOSO 6 CONOUCTED BY FROM HE NOVEL B Y WRITT(N FOR INE SCREEN & DIRECTED BY PRODUCED V ALFRED NEWMAN+ ARTHUR HAILEY -GEORGE SEATON - ROSS HUNTER A UNIVERSAL PICTURE . TECHNICOLOR * Produced rn TODD AO' ALL AGES ADMWTTED - -----.1 VG Gneral Audencel Sound Track Album excIxsuety on DECCA ECORDSI L also havaIabie on S-T',ck and1 Cassette Tape! MONDAY THROUGH THURSDAY EVENINGS...,... .$2.25 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY EVENINGS ....... . .... . . $2.50 ALL DAY SUNDAY..............................$2.25 MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY MATINEE ..,..,.....$1.75 Pass List Suspended This Attraction No Ladies Day Prices In Effect Daily Classifieds Get Results hr 1~ . .. THlE MINX-SAN STERLING IMEIUMMII'1l IPAAALSIMHCTREIA CAMeEST FILMS RELEASE In CO LOR is 0 SALE ENDS FRIDAY, MAY 29!. " I 4 F'IFTH' For'um FIFTH 4VENUU AT LIBERTY Dit OWNTOWN ANN ARBOR LJJ INFORMATION 769-9700 Wed. and Thurs. at: 7:15 and 9:00 Try Daily Classifieds ,j ! - _ I HEDGE AND DONNA: NEW-SPECIAL NOO AL NOW ON SALE CIRCUMSTANCES .. . There are now four Hedge and Donna LPs. They are: Hedge and Donna, Hedge and Donna 2, All the Friendly Colours. And now the brand new Hedge and Donna LP; Special Circumstances. WE SALUTE The University of Michigan COED with a 10% Discount 0 t All four are now on sale through Friday, May 29 i ONLY 3EACH on any in the Ann purchase Arbor Store WEDNESDAY, MAY 211h from 9:30 A.M to 5:30 P.M Set ycur sights on this:The computer industry is only fifteen years old and already there is 15 billion dollars worth of computer equip- ment in use. By 1975, that will double. creating more than 500,000 new computer-related jobs. F . .. - ons O fficer- Poiao S ud es r FNefInstitute of lnrma 5- Scences I 17515 est Nine Mile Road Se Michigan 48075 ( 352-1901) 1 would ikeadditional information on your { ,_, og, a . _ - a . ALL HEDGE & DONNA OVER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK WATCH FOR IN STORE Ur.I:I'IAE fS CANING a I® U U I