100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

May 12, 1966 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1966-05-12

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THUR.SDAY,'MAY 12, 1966-

PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MAY 12. 1966

New

York

Picks

Russell

Pistons Draft Ring,
Also Choose Darden

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK-To no one's sur-
prise, Michigan's Cazzie Russell,
the nation's top collegiate basket-
ball player, went to the New York
Knickerbockers as the No. 1 pick
in the National Basketball Asso-
ciation draft yesterday, and Oliver!
Darden, last year's Wolverine cap-
tain, was chosen by the Detroit
Pistons in the third round of the
draft. .
The Pistons, who had lost the
first pick to New York on the flip
of a coin, snatched Dave Bing of
Syracuse. Bing was the fifth high-
est scorer in the nation last year
with a 28.4 average.
Russell, who set several Mich-
igan records, was the country's
third leading scorer last year, and
was a three-year All-American,
said in Ann Arbor he would make
no decision about playing with the
Knicks until next week. He is also
considering an offer from the
Harlem Globetrotters.
The New York -Knickerbockers
really never hesitated in picking
Russell,

"We felt this was the guy all
along," said general manager Ed-
die Donovan of the Knicks. "After
we won the toss we knew this was
the man we wanted. He has a
strong body and great basketball
knowledge.
"We expect to try him at guard
although he has the ability to be
a forward. He's just a well-round-
ed player.
"I spent a couple of hqurs with
him at Ann Arbor about a week
ago and I have a feeling he will
play with us. I was very impressed
by him as an individual." .
The Pistons also wanted Russell
but settled for Bing .as the No. 2
pick among the 79 players selected
by the 10 clubs.
The pros naturally put the em-
phasis on size. Russell is 6-foot-
52 and 218 pounds. Bing is 6-3
and 185.
Darden could not be reached
for comment on whether or not he
intended to sign with the Pistons.
' Warriors Take Lee
Clyde Lee, Vanderbilt's 6-9 star,
was the third to be drafted in the

from Kansas, generally regarded
as one of the best big men in the
country. He averaged close to 10
rebounds a game in college.
The Los Angeles Lakers grab-
bed 6-4 Jerry Chambers of Utah,
who led his team in rebounding
and scoring for the last two sea-
sons. The Lakers also picked Henry
Finkel, a 6-11 star from Dayton,
who had been drafted previously
by Los Angeles in 1964 and Cin-
cinnati in 1965 but had returned
to college each time.
Los Angeles used a second-
round draft choice, acquired from
Chicago to get Finkel.
Barnett Chosen
Bill Russell, new coach of the
Boston Celtics, assisted general
manager Red Auerbach, the retir-
ing coach, in picking Jim Barnett
of Oregon as their first round
selection.
"We wanted Barnett and we
were lucky to get him," said Rus-
sell of the 6-4 athlete from
Oregon.
Philadelphia selected Matt Guo-
kas of St. Joseph's, Pa., in the
first round although Guokas said
Tuesday he had decided to play
another year of college ball.
Alex Hannum, new coach of the
76ers, said he thought he had a
50-50 chance of signing Guokas.
The player said in Philadelphia he
would make up his mind by
May 28.

irst
was a straight cash deal with the
Lakers.
Second Round
Second round draft choices were
as follows: Detroit chose Dorie
Murray of Detroit, New York tpok
Henry Akin of Morehead, Ky.,
San Francisco picked Joe Ellis of
San Francisco, St. Louis grabbed
Dick Snyder of Davidson, Neil
Johnson of Creighton went to
Baltimore, Cincinnati d r a f t e d
Jerry Wells of Oklahoma City, and
Los Angeles received Finkel, the
trade with Chicago and John
Brock from Southern California.
Other second round choices were
Leon Clark of Wyoming by Bos-
ton, Villanova's Bill Melchionni
by Philadelphia and San Fran-
cisco's Erwin Mueller by Chicago.
Six more Big Ten players be-
sides Darden were chosen in the
last five rounds of the draft.
Big Ten Draftees
Minnesota's Archie Clark and
Illinois' Don Freehan were both
picked in the third round-Clark
by Los Angeles and Freeman by
Philadelphia.
In the fourth round George
Peoples of Iowa went to Balti-
more, and Spartan Stan Washing-
ton was chosen by Los Angeles.
In the sixth round San Fran-
cisco took Northwestern's . Jim
Pitts and the seventh time around
Chicago grabbed Stan Curtis of
Michigan State.

4

2000 W. Stadium Blvd.

CAZZIE RUSSELL

OLIVER DARDEN

first round. He went to the San
Francisco Warriors. Although Lee
had agreed to play ball in Milan,
Italy, with an amateur team, he
said he planned to talk with the
Warriors in the near future about
pro ball. He indicated he would
consider any bids.
Coach Bill Sherman said "from
all indications" the club will be

selected Dave Schellhase of Pur-
due, who led the nation's major
colleges in scoring with a 32.5-
point average on 781 points in 24
games.
The Bulls had two picks in the
second round but traded one of
them to the Lakers. Dick Klein,
president of the new club, said it

LOSING YOUR MIND
WITH PSYCHAL
TROUBLES?
see
BEAVER BIKE

AV

Giants Blast Pirates, 6-1
Chicago Downs Baltimore
By The Associated Press appearance for Baltimore, balked
PITTSBURGH-Gaylord Perry home Bill Skowron with the win-}
pitched a six-hitter and Willie ning run in the 11th inning and
Mays hit his 514th career homer gave the Chicago White Sox a 3-2
as the first place Sap Francisco victory over the Orioles last night.
Giants rolled to their tenth Brabender, who came on in the
straight victory last night downing 10th got into trouble in the 11th
the Pittsburgh Pirates 6-1. when he walked Skowron andx
The victory was the fifth this was touched for a single by Gene
season for Perry, who has yet to Freese. Two outs later, he lost
lose. He struck out seven and his control again and filled the
walked three. Mays two-run homer bases by hitting Ron Hansen with
in the ninth provided the final a pitch.
Giant runs. Then, with Tom McCraw bat-
* * * ting, Brabender stopped his motion
White Sox Edge Birds as he was winding up and was
called for a balk and SkowronI
BAT 'TBThCFVD't. b

able to sign Lee. Schelihase Tenth
St. Louis, with the fourth pick Chicago, recently stocked with
took Lou Hudson, the 6-5 High- veterans from the expansion play-
scoring Minnesota ace who suffer- er pool, had to wait until 10th and
ed a broken hand during the sea- last to get a draft choice. The
son and was limited to 17 games. Bulls' new coach, Johnny Kerr.
He was the top scorer on the U.S.__
team in the World University
Games Tournament in Budapest

"Foreign Car spoken here"
AMIDAS has

D

SALES
and
SERVICE

last summer.
Bullets Pick Marin
Jack Marin of Duke, who scored
558 points in 30 games, was taken
by the Baltimore Bullets, who
were very happy to get the man
they regarded best after Russell
and Bing.
Cincinnati's first round pick was
Walt Wesley, 6-11, 235-pounder

NotreI
Tennis

rev ellts
Dame
Meet

MUFFLERS and PIPES
for most
Foreign Cars
* MGA
0 MGA Miniatures Sprite
* TR-3 * Opel '
* Fiat 1 100 and 1200
(mufflers only)
DAD 665-9169

:

zAl im nE uee ra ender,
making his first major league
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Baltimore 16 5 .762 -
Cleveland 15 5 .750
Detroit 14 9 .609 3
Chicago 12 9 .571 4
x-Californi a 13 10 .565 4
Minnesota 9 10 .474 6
x-Washington 8 13 .381 8
Kansas City 8 15 .348 9
New York 7 16 .304 10
Boston 7 17 .292 I~ljw
x-Late game not included.
YES'IEIUJAY-S RESULTS
Chicago 3, Baltimore 2 (11 inn)
Kansas City 6, Boston 5 (10 inn)
New York at Minnesota (rain)
Detroit at Cleveland (rain)
California 5, Washington 5 tie
(9 innings)
TODAY'S GAMES
Washington at California (n)
New York at Minnesota (n)
Detroit at Cleveland (nx)
Chicago at Baltimore (n)
Only games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
San Francisco 20 7 .741 -
Houston 16 11 .593 4
Pittsburgh 14 10 .583 41/2
Los Angeles 15 12 .556 5
Philadelphia 11 11 .500 6%
Atlanta 14 15 .483 4
New York 9 11 .450 71/2
Cincinnati 10 15 400 9
St. Louis 9 14 .391 9
Chicago 6 18 .250 12%/
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Hiouston 6, New York 4
Los Angeles 5, Philadelphia 0
San Francisco 6, Pittsburgh 1
Atlanta 8, Cincinnati 1
St. Louis at Chicago (rain)
TODAY'S GAMES
Houston at New York (n)
Los Angeles at Philadelphia (n)
San Francsco at Pittsburgh (n)
Atlanta at st. Louis (n)
only games scheduled

trotted home.
The White Sox. held to three!
hits through seven innings by
Dave McNally, rallied for two runs
in the eighth and tied the score
2-2.
Braves Top Reds
ATLANTA, Ga.-- Hank Aaron
snapped Atlanta out of a five -
game losing streak last night with,
a pair of homers that drove in!
five runs and sent the Braves to
a 8-1 victory over Cincinnati.
Aaron's blasts were his 10th
and 11th of the season, and gave
him 10th place on the all-time
home run list with 409. He had"
been tied with Duke Snider at 407.
Aaron hit a two-run shot over
the left field wall in the first
inning, and slammed a three-run
drive to the same spot in the fifth.
LA Shuts Out Phils
PHILADELPHIA - Don Sutton
of the Los Angeles Dodgers shut
out Philadelphia 5-0 on six hits
last night, collected three hits
and batted in the only run he
needed.
Sutton, showing near perfect
control as he struck out eight and
walked only one, gave himself a
1-0 lead when he singled in the
third inning after a double by
catcher John Roseboro.
The Dodgers then put it out of
reach with a two-run sixth inning
rally against Larry Jackson. Maury
Wills drew a two-out walk, Lou
Johnson followed with a single
and both raced home on Ron
Fairly's single against the right
field wall.

Golfers Face
1Michigan State
In Duall Meet
The Michigan golfers meet arch-
rival Michigan State this after-
noon at 2 on the University Blue
Course in the only home dual
meet of the season.-
In the Northern Intercollegiate
Invitational in which both teams
participated last Friday and Sat-
urday, Michigan finished third'
with a 1523 total. and State 11ol-
lowed in fourth place at 1533.
The Wolverines will be led to-
day by Captain Bill Newton, the
medalist in the Big Ten tourna-
ment last year.
Also scoring well for Michigan
is sophomore John Schroeder.
Schroeder paced the team in the
Miami Invitational in late March
and tied Alex Antonio of Ohio
State for medalist honors in the
Northern Invitational last week.
The other golfers competing for
Michigan will be Bob Barclay, Jim
Evashevski, John Richart and Chip
Groves.
Michigan State, under new
Coach Bruce Fossum, is led by
senior captain and two-time let-!
terwinner Ken Benson. Benson was
State's top scorer in the Big Ten3
tourney last year and also paced
the Spartans in the Miami Invi-
tational this year.
Backing Benson up are two more
lettermen, Fred Mackey and San-
dy McAndrew.
The bottom three berths on the
Spartan squad are up for grabs
with sophs John Bailey, Al Theiss,
Steve Benson and Jeff Chalmers
challenging upperclassmen Doug
Campbell, Mike Biber and Geoff
Lyon.E
4E
\ r

Rain caused the cancellatiou
yesterday of a scheduled dual ten-
nis meet between Michigan and
Notre Dame at Notre Dame.
The tennis team will return to
Big Ten action this weekend when
they face Ohio State and Wiscon-
sin in a double dual meet in
Madison
The Wolverines, the defending
conference champions, are cur-
rently in firm possession of first
place on the bases of matches won
in dual meet competition.
The Buckeyes and the Badgers
are both below the .500 mark in
the conference and should not
present a very strong challenge
to the Wolverine netters.
Roche Wmis
Italian Tenn us
Tournament
ly1 &T eAsociated Press
ROME-Young Tony Roche of
Australia became the giant-killer
of the new tennis season yesterday
when he defeated Nicola Pietran-
gell of Italy 11-9, 6-1, 6-2 for the
men's singles title in the Italian
International Tournament.
En route to his first major in-
ternational championship, the 20-
year-old Sydney left-hander beat
second-seeded Fred Stolle of Aus-
tralia in the quarter-finals and
defending champion Marty Mul-
ligan of Australia in the semi-
finals.
Downtown
HONDA
Wenk Sales & Services, Inc.,
i /
I~ ~ ~
I96i
!~P
ii A/ f,

!MUFFLER
3170 WASHTENAW RO
Just west of Arborland

a

I

..r..

NO 5-6607

605 Church

ANNOUNCING
LYZL Yi

ELEKTRA
announces
A GREAT NEW
ROCK ALBUM

A great new classical
record series from
Deutsche Gra mmophon
And at a price to fit every budget!

MOZART-Requiem, K. 626;
cond. Jochum H/HS-25000
BEETHOVEN-Piano Concerto
No. 3
MOZART - Bassoon Concerto
in B Major, K. 191. Flute Con-
certo in G Major, K. 313;
conds. Maerzendorfer, Paum-
gartner. H/HS-25002
SCHUBERT--"Death and The
Maiden." String Quartet No.
14 in D Minor; Koechert Quar-
tet H/HS-25003
GLUCK -- Orpheus and Eury-
dice ---- Highlights; K I a s e,
Streich, others H/HS-25005
TELEMANN-m-Concertos For 4
Violins; For Trumpet, 2 Oboes
& Harpsichord; SonatabFor
Viola do Gamba & Lute; Quar-
tet For Flute, Oboe, Violin,
Harpsichord. (With A. Scher-
baum, Trumpet) H/HS-25006
BRUCKNER--Symphony No. 9
in D Minor-Original Version;
cond. Jochum H/HS-25007

CARL ORFF-Carmina Burana,
cond. Kegel H/HS-25004
J. S. BACH-Violin Concertos
No. 1 in A Minor, No. 2 in E
Major; Romann Totenberg
H/HS-25008
DAVID and IGOR OISTRAKH
-J. S. Bach-Sonata in C for
2 Violins & Harpsichord, Tar-
tini-Trio in F for 2 Violins &
Harpsichord. Handel - Sonata
in F Minor for 2 Violins &
Piano. Benda-Trio Sonata in
E. H/HS-25009
J. S. BACH-Music for Guitar
and Organ; Andres Segovia,
Carl Weinrich H/HS-2510
MOZART-Fantasy & Fugue in
F Minor, K. 616. Andante in
F, K. 608. Adagio & Allegro in
C, K. 352; Richard Ellsasser,
organ H/HS-2501 1
D'INDY-Suite in Olden Style
for Trumpet, 2 Flutes and
Strings. SAINT-SAENS - Sep-
tet for Piano, Trumpet and
Strings H/HS-25012
MOZART -- Wind Serenades
No. 11 & No. 12; cond. Wino-
grad H/HS-25013
SCHUBERT-Piano Sonatas in
C Minor, Op. Post; in E Flat
Major, Op. 122; Beveridge
Webster H/HS-25014

by the LOVE

ROCK BLUES At Its Best!
featuring
"MY LITTLE RED BOOK"
and 13 other great songS!

NOW
ONLY

98 375

4

mono

stereo

Available in both Mono & Stero

SPECIAL

0 "

LOVE WILL SWEEP YOU
OFF YOUR FEET

mo n

. ,..,
f ... f ;,

E

I -M WI& - Itj 1

I

I

- - - 1

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan