SPORTS Feeling G orwa-dd! Ex-Piston Coach, G.M. Notes Changing Times HARLAND ABBEY Special to The Jewish News T J ewish News readers think fit: they ride Life-cycles, climb Stairmasters and trek Nordic- trails, all to look svelte and live longer, healthier, happier lives. They're committed — physically and financially — to working out. And FEELING GOOD reports it all. Whether it's biking clothes or wellness classes, organic vitamins or sleek skis, your health-related products and services come in first in FEELING GOOD. For information, call Dharlene Norris or sales representative at (313) 354 6060. - FEELING GOOD IN-PAPER SUPPLEMENT Issue Date: December 28, 1990 Ad Deadline: December 21, 1990 FIGHT THE BIG "F"... Film to Video Transfer Transfer Movies 8mm-16mm to VHS or Beta • 401-600 FEET $39.00 • 1-200 FEET $20.00 • 201400 FEET $26.00 • 601-800 FEET $52.00 801-1000 FEET $65.00 VISA' FUDITURE FADING STOPS ULTRA VIOLET Film over 1,000 feet add 6C a foot. Tape $8.00 Addi9onal C CM-TURN c ikivAERA r 3017 N. Woodiivard (3 Blks. South of 13 Mile) 8, =711 00-67k Fri. 10-8 Daily BUY—SELL—TRADE Relationship Problems? 288 5444 Depressed? Ca114489-1511 for AN IMMEDIATE APPOINTMENT PROGRESSIVE COUNSELING Where Your Progress Is Our #1 Priority CAROL E. MANN, Director 58 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1990 up - MastorCard to 99% Seymour Zate 537.7900 4;jamt Solar Sales, Inc. – Since 1969 — AMERICAN SOCIETY' Help us keep winning. he playing career of Bob Kauffman, one of the few Jews to have played in the National Basketball Assocation's modern era, aptly illustrates how times have changed. Kauffman, who also served briefly as coach and general manager of the Detroit Pistons in the late 1970s, said he couldn't get into the college of his choice despite being 6-foot-8, weighing 240 pounds and averaging 23 points per game for his Scarsdale, N.Y., high school. "They said my grades were `questionable,' recalled Kauffman, "so I was turned down by Wake Forest." But the coach there, "Bones" McKinney, suggested he go to nearby Guilford College, boost his grades, play some basketball and then transfer to Wake Forest. Recruiting of high school stars has changed tremen- dously since then. Now a player of Kauffman's poten- tial would be welcomed at any major college. And if the player's grades are a little — or even a lot — below standard, there's a team of academic advisers and graduate students available to help him become eligible to play. Kauffman followed McKinney's advice and benefited from the coaching at Guilford. But McKinney soon left Wake Forest and Kauffman stuck it out at Guilford, which ranked in the National Intercollegiate Athletic Association's top 10 for two seasons and was No. 1 in Kauffman's senior year. Kauffman was the third pick in the college draft in 1968, after Elvin Hayes and Wesley Unseld. Drafted by Seattle, he was then traded to Chicago before being dealt by the Bulls to the Buffalo Braves for Bailey Howell in the ex- pansion draft. Kauffman, a center and power forward for the Braves, provided solid mus- cle plus rebounding and double-figure scoring for four seasons and was a three-time All-Star. But he best recalls a regular-season game "when I was matched against Kareem Abdul- Jabbar and scored 44 points. "That night I could have drop-kicked the ball and it Bob Kauffman: Wake Forest reject. would have gone through the hoop." Eventually traded to the Atlanta Hawks, a degenerative hip condition forced Kauffman to retire. He's had one hip replace- ment and expects to have another replaced in 1991, but despite walking with a cane, he still plays in old- timers' games. After retiring, Kauffman served as assistant general manager at Atlanta before becoming the Pistons' G.M. in 1977. "I had to coach the Pistons for 58 games (in the 1977-78 season) after the regular coach (Herb Brown) was fired," he remembered. "Bill Davidson was an ideal owner, but . . . When the time came to pick a new head coach, I wanted him to hire either Chuck Daly, who's the Pistons coach now, (or) Bernie Bickerstaff or Al Bianchi. All were assistant coaches then and all are head coaches now. "But Davidson wanted to hire a college coach named Dick Vitale." After that falling out, Kauffman, whose coaching record with the Pistons that one year was 29-29, returned to Atlanta, where he is in- volved in marketing Court- side magazine, sold in NBA cities; the Rinkside magazine familiar to hockey fans and Ski Impact magazine. Kauffman said he believes academic standards were higher when he was in col- lege. "The rules now are an attempt to make studies im- portant; that's supposedly what you're in college for. Today, Kauffman coaches two of his four daughters. ❑