Page 14-Wednesday, May 26, 1982-The Michigan Daily NFL settlement WASHINGTON (AP) - The chief negotiator for the players union in their contract talks with the National Football League listed the odds at "4-to-i against" yesterday of reaching a contract settlement before the termination of the current agreement on July 15. "The odds are 4-to-1 against a settlement before July 15," said Ed Garvey, executive director of the National Football League Players Association. GARVEY'S assessment, coming seven weeks before the current pact expires, was echoed by Jim Miller, spokesman for the owners' bargaining agents, the NFL Management Council. "I think Garvey is probably right. We the management council think a settlement is highly anlikely before July," Miller said. The union, which represents the league's 1,500 players, has been locked in contract talks with the NFL for over a year. Although the major stumbling block remains the players' demand for a fixed per- centage of each team's gross profits, other issues in- cluding free agency, increased benefits, security and medical examinations are unresolved. "THE OWNERS continue to stall on making a definite proposal. Each bargaining sessaion is the same," Garvey said. "We give them a proposal and they tell us to rework it and give them an alternative. Support the March of Dimes BWHo frCI FFOUNoAKONmM Rent a Car from Econo-Car We rent to 19 YR. OLD STUDENTSI Choose from small economical cars to vans. Special WEEKEND rates Pick up services upon request Baltim We accept day's cash deposits OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ECOO-CAR A GELCO COMPANY 438 W. Huron 761-8845 ANN ARBOR Odds bad for quick agreement We give them an alternative and they tell us to revise it again." Miller defended the owners stance during the talks. "It is difficult to make a proper offer until you know what the union really wants. If you make a proposal in one area and that is not there major thrust you can never get that money back once it is on the table," Miller said. MILLER ADDED that the Management Council will make a definite offer before the current contract expires. "The union will get our proposal before the July 15 deadline," he said. The two sides are scheduled to meet again on June 7 in Washington. No agenda has been set for the meeting. unlikely' GARVEY IS meeting in Washington this week with union representatives from the league's 26 teams. Three days of talks are being conducted at the George H. Meany Center for Labor Studies, a quiet 47-acre estate in suburban Maryland. "We wanted to get the representatives away from the pressure of the owners and the media before the crunch comes," Garvey said. "MOST OF THE player reps have never been in- volved in a strike before and we want them to know what is coming," Garvey said. Reminded that 21 representatives in the 1974 player strike were either cut or traded by the team they represented during the strike, Garvey said: "Most of these players realize they will probably lose their jobs. I would only hope the owners have progressed past the attitudes that led to the dismissal of so many player reps in 1974," Garvey concluded. The player representatives will hold a news con- ference today to announce their opposition to a bill in- troduced last week in Congress to exempt the league from antitrust laws and to overturn the Oakland Raiders antitrust verdict. The bill, introduced by California congressmen Fortney H. Stark and Don Edwards, would allow pro football to enjoy the same antitrust exemption currently enjoyed by baseball. ore right fielder Dan Ford reaches out to pick up the ball after knocking it down in the second inning of yester- Texas-Baltimore game in Arlington. The ball was hit by the Rangers' Leon Roberts. Ford held Roberts to a single. Ih -_________ %A'PI 6y.JUE 2 -Yom D1Ao -t ?i oT S 66z- Z~ZZ SCURES Baseball American League California 10, Boston 2 New York 8, Toronto 0 Cleveland 7, Minnesotal0 Baltiaore 10, Tea3 National League Cincinnati 4, Philadelphia 3 Atlanta 10, New York 2 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily