Tuesday, March 30, 1971 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine a Cavs NEW YORK (A)-Austin Carr, Notre Dame's All-American guard, was the surprise first pick, by the Cleveland Cavaliers, in the Na- tional Basketball Association col- lege draft yesterday but it was Buffalo and Chicago which drop-1 ped the big bombshells by selecting Spencer Haywood and Howardf Porter.E Michigan's Dank Fife, former Wolverine captain and guard, was drafted by the Milwaukee Bucks in the tenth round yesterday. Fife, who had a season scoring average of 13.2 was the last player to be drafted. Buffalo waited until its third r daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: SANDI GENIS choice in the second round before gambling with the controversial Haywood, who only last Friday had been awarded to the Seattle SuperSonics by the NBA in an out-of-court settlement. Commissioner Walter Kennedy, conducting the draft via a tele- phone hookup with the 17 league cities, immediately warned the Braves that Haywood was not eligible to be picked. "As I understand the action, taken by the Board of Governors by which the dispute with Hay- wood and Seattle was settled,, Haywood is not eligible for the draft," Kennedy said. "If you insist on drafting him, I believe you will be wasting a draft pick. But if you insist, I will record that fact without con- ceding' that you will have any rights to deal with Haywood with- out Seattle's consent." Buffalo replied that it would stand by the choice, apparently gambling that the 6-foot-8 star forward who had jumped the rival American Basketball Association to Seattle, might in some way be- come available in the future. Only two picks later, on the 32nd selection, Chicago pulled an- other shocker by choosing Villa- nova's Porter, whose signing by Pittsburgh of the ABA had been announced only hours earlier. Cleveland turned away from the big man in selecting the 6-foot-3 Carr, who averaged more than 30 draft points during his fabulous career with the Fighting Irish. Sidney Wicks, the 6-8 All- American who led UCLA to its fifth consecutive NCAA title last weekend, had been expected to be the No. 1 selection, but when the Cavaliers passed him by, Portland immediately grabbed him as the No. 2 pick. Cleveland had won a coin toss with Portland last Monday for the right to pick first, -and might well have gone for 7-2 Artis Gilmore of Jacksonville had he not signed last Tuesday with Kentucky of the ABA. Buffalo, picking third, selected 7-0 Elmore Smith of NAIA cham- pion Kentucky State and Cincin- nati followed with a minor gai- ble by choosing 6-7 Ken Durrett of La Salle, rumored to already be promised to the ABA. Jim McDaniels, Western Ken- tucky's 7-foot All-American center who certainly would have been one of the top selections, was not chosen until the second round when Seattle made him the 23rd pick. McDaniels reportedly already has signed with Carolina of the ABA which held the first three rounds of its draft last January, getting a two-month head start on the NBA. Two other UCLA starters were selected in the first 18 picks, as Detroit, No. 11, took forward Cur- tis Rowe and Cleveland opened the second round by nabbing 6-9 center Steve Patterson, the hero of the Bruins' title victory over Villanova when he scored a col- lege career high 29 points. McDaniels also was joined by two other teammates from West- ern Kentucky's third-place NCAA finishers when Boston, picking 10th, grabbed Clarence Glover and then selected Jim Rose as its pick in the second round. Dean Meminger of Marquette was the other All-American se- Carr lected in the first round. New York I made him the 16th choice. NBA clubs picked 168 players in 10 rounds in yesterday's draft which lasted one hour and 50 minutes. The draft will be com- pleted today. First Round' Cleveland, Austin Carr, Notre Dame; Portland, Sidney Wicks, UCLA; Buffalo, Elmore Smith, Kentucky State; Cincinnati, Ken Durrett, La Salle; Atlanta, George Trapp, Long Beach State; Seattle, Fred Brown, Iowa; San Diego, Cliff Meely, Colorado; San Fran- cisco, Darrell Hillman, San Jose State; Baltimore, Stan Love, Ore- gon; Boston, Clarence Glover, Western Kentucky; Detroit, Cur- tis Rowe, UCLA; Philadelphia, Dana Lewis, Tulsa; Los Angeles, Jim Cleamons, Ohio State; Phoe- nix, John Roche, South Carolina; Chicago, Kennedy McIntosh, East- ern Michigan; New York, Dean Meminger, Marquette; Milwaukee, Collis Jones. Notre Dame. first > waukee, Willie Long, New Mexico. Third Round Cleveland, Gerald Lockett, Ar- kansas A&M; Buffalo, picked in second round; Portland, Larry Steele, Kentucky; Cincinnati, Rich Yunkus, Georgia Tech; Atlanta, Jeff Halliburton, Drake; Chicago, from Seattle, Cliff Ray, Okla- homa; Cleveland, from San Diego, Jackie Ridgle, California; Port- land, from San Francisco, Bill Smith, Syracuse; Baltimore, Rich Rinaldi, St. Peter's; Boston, Dave Robisch, Kansas; Detroit, Mary Roberts, Utah State; Philadelphia, Dave Wohl, Penn; Chicago, from Los Angeles, Mike Gale, Elizabeth City; Phoenix, Dennis Layton, Southern California; C h i c a g o, Dick Gibbs, Texas-El Paso; New York, Ken Mayfield, Tuskegee; Milwaukee, Gary Brell, Marquette. Fourth Round Cleveland, Cliff Harris, Hardin- Simons; Buffalo, Jim O'Brien, Boston College; Portland, Bobby Fields, LaSalle; Cincinnati, Sid Buck express drops Warriors, 104-90 By The Associated Press MADISON-The explosive Mil- waukee Bucks used a third-period offensive spurt to claim a 104-90 victory over the San Francisco Warriors last night in a National BasketballAssociation p 1 a y o f f game. The victory gives the Bucks a 2-0 lead in the best-of-7 Western Conference semifinal series. Down by 52-51 midway in the third quarter, the Bucks ripped off a 21-7 surge that sent Milwau- There are still some tickets available for the NCAA Gym- nastics Championship to be held at Crisler Arena on April 1, 2 and 3. All five sessions: Stu- dents, $3; Adults, $5. Individual tickets range from $1 to $2. kee into a 72-60 advantage going into the final period. Forward Greg Smith sparked the Bucks, scoring seven points and coming up with numerous re- bounds in t h e seven - minute stretch. Lew Alcindor scored 26 points and Bob Dandridge 21 to pace Milwaukee. As crucial as the Bucks' offen- sive spark was a strong second- half defensive effort that held the Warriors' Nate Thurmond to only four points in the final 24 min- utes Alcindor, the NBA's Most Val- uable Player, spent considerable time on the bench in foul trouble. The 7-foot-2 center picked up his third personal midway in the sec- ond period and his fifth with 5:19 to play in the game. With Oscar Robertson carrying the scoring load, the Bucks jump- ed off to a 23-16 advantage before the Warriors used deadly- free throw shooting to pull within five at the end of the first period. San Francisco, hitting a miser- able 25 per cent from the floor in the first quarter, sank 10 of 20 field goal attempts in the second to grab the halftime lead of 44-43. Colonels crunch MEMPHIS - The Kentucky Colonels withstood a Memphis scoring record of 51 points by Steve Jones to post a 109-107 American Basketball Association victory over the Pros last night. The lead changed hands 27 times-with Memphis leading 53- 52 at the half-before the Colonels took a late 10-point lead. The Pros shaved it to 109-106 and Jones added a foul shot in the closing seconds but Kentucky held the ball the rest of the way. Walt Simon led the Colonels with 30 points. New From Levi! For the Student Body: Boot Jeans $7.50 cond Round Catlett, Notre Dame; Atlanta, Poo S t e v e Patterson, W e 1 c h, Houston; Seattle, Pem- f a 1o, Fred Hilton, broke Burrows, Jacksonville; San Chicago, from Port- Diego, Tom Owens, South Caro- Sojourner, Weber lina; San Francisco, Greg Gary, nnati, from Chicago St. Bonaventure; Baltimore, Willie nati, John Mengelt, Allen, Miami of Ohio; Boston, lanta, Ted McClain, Randy Denton, Duke; Detroit, Jar- ;ate; Seattle, Jim Mc- rett Durham, Duquesne; Philadel-{ stern Kentucky; San phia, Erwin Johnson, Augusta; Newlin, Utah; Port- Los Angeles, Roger Brown, Kan- an Francisco, Charles sas; Phoenix, Walt Szerbiack, S o r d h a m; Buffalo, George Washington; Chicago, Jim SCRAMBLING AUSTIN CARR, as, Southwest Okla- Irving, St. Louis; New York, Steve was taken in the first round Portland, from Bal- Niles, Texas A&M; Milwaukee, Caveliers. Austin Carr (34) brea k Fisher, Colorado Henry Smith, Missouri. tournament game against Houston n, Jim Rose, Western_ - )etroit, Bunny Wilson, Baltimore; Buffalo, JOHNNY WHO? elphia, Spencer Hay- rsity of Detroit; Cin- a Los Angeles, Joel ,Creighton;Chicago, UCLA eontinues do: x, Howard Porter, Vil- ladelphia, from Chi- By CHUCK DRUKIS The Uclans greatest challenge aStewart, Nebraska; wa xetdt eteKna reg Northington, Ala- Another college basketball sea- waexpect o be the Kansas Cleelndfrm Ml-son is over, and again UCLA Jayhawks. Wooden concocted a Cleveland, from Mil- reigns supreme game long full court press that frustrated the Jayhawk offense. Despite a less than superlative The quicker Bruin team, however, showing, the Bruins managed to 'a bet aiybekteKn w ass un | r a b e t o e s i y b r a t e K n - ports gasp through their regional, and sas press en route to a 68-60 win. then barely win in both the semi- Thdakoretunm t c- finals and the finals. The dark horse tournamentcon- The Uclans started their cham- tender, Villanova, was the only r Arena, 12:30 p.m. pionship bid with a decisive, team standing between UCLA and though not spectacular win over their fifth straight championship. events), Crisler Brigham Young. This game was At first, the Villanova's t i g h t the only one where UCLA Coach defense baffled the Bruins. But John Wooden didn't formulate a then Wooden came up with a new game plan, packed with complex offense, which was basically no defenses and unusual offenses. offense at all. The Bruins kept 1:30 p.m. The game for the Western re- passing the ball until Villanova gional championship matched abandoned the zone. UCLA left the UCLA against Long Beach State. floor 68-62 winners. The Bruins emerged 57-55 win- While UCLA became the king of ners, their closest call in the college basketball by winning the .NCAA's since they lost in the re- NCAA tournament,rNorth Caro- gionals in 1966. lina became the prince by win- man allowed five hitsI -AssociatedPress (34), who played for Notre Dame, of the NBA by the Cleveland aks from a block in this NCAA n. rnation ri j t { I t i I This Week in St THURSDAY GYMNASTICS-Compulsory routines, Crisler FRIDAY GYMNASTICS-Optional routines (1st three Arena, 1:30 p.m. Optional routines (2nd three events), Crisle SATURDAY GYMNASTICS-Team finals, Crisler Arena, 1 Individual Finals, Crisler Arena,8 p.m. McNally, Orioles :smash By The Associated Press MIAMI - Dave McNally became the first Oriole yesterday to pitch nine-innings as Baltimore defeated Montreal 4-1, snapping a five- game exhibition losing streak. The 24-game winning Oriole left hander checked the Expos on 10 hits. Frank Robinson hit a home run for Baltimore. Adolpho Phillips spoiled Mc- Nally's shutout bid with a 425- foot homer over left field fence for Montreal in the eighth inn- ing. Carl Morton, an 18-game win., ner last year, was the loser. C* * T i Louis to a 3-2 exhibition baseballI victory over Minnesota yesterday. Javier scored on a passed ball ifter his first-inning triple. Har- mon Killebrew doubled in a run in the bottom of the first to tie it up. Javier doubledand Luis Melend- ez singled in the third, with Jay- ier scoring when loser Bert Bly- leven's attempt to pick off the runner at first went wild. Minnesota's second run came in the ninth when Cardinal reliev- er George Brunet walked three men,, one of whom scored on a wild pitch. - and one run in six innings for the victory. The Cubs meanwhile leaped on Frank Reberger, the Giants' start- er, for four runs in five innings and added an insurance run in the ninth off Steve Hamilton. *-* Sox sizzle SARASOTA-Mike Hershberger, battling to remain in the major leagues, delivered a game-winning single in the ninth inning off Jim Nelson as the Chicago White Sox rallied to hand the Pittsburgh Pirates an 8-6 loss yesterday. The Pirates pounded Chicago starter Tom Bradley for eight hits and a 5-0 lead through five in- nings. Rich Hebner had a pair of solo home runs. Steve Blass, pitching two-hit ball over five innings, was rocked for home runs by Mike Andrew and Walter Williams in the sixth, when the White Sox scored six runs, four of them unearned. N' . ::;"']Cmf{?;"o°:'^:nS-m v,:::"}::M.";ii :..". r } E .. ) {! ii y', I Y '',, 7 ', )1 ',,,......... 1 ',, i T t I I 3 s ! t t Endorsements for Athletic Boards BOARD IN CONTROL OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS EXCELLENT - Elliot Legow and Dave Mildner. Legow and Mildner both show an amazing depth of knowledge about inter- collegiate athletics and its importance in relation to the general student body. Mildner has served on the Advisory Committee on Recreation, Intramurals and Club Sports. Legow is very familiar with the workings of the Athletic Department. Each would like to de-emphasize the importance of athletics, while representing the general student view. ADVISORY COMMITTEE ON RECREATION, INTRAMURALS AND CLUB SPORTS- EXCELLENT - James Epstein. Although only a freshman, Epstein has shown an interest in and knowledge of c 1 u b sports. He is the only candidate who bothered to submit a platform, and we feel his presence would be a valuable addition to the Committee. I I aradres pounded ORLANDO - Julian Javier MEA r iz. Reg J tripled in the first inning and MESA, Ariz. - Reggie Jack- doubled in the third to lead St. son drove in four runs withahome doubed n te tirdto eadSt.runs his first two times at t h e plate yesterday as the Oakland Athletics defeated the San Diego hanie s f, Is Padres 9-6. t 1 A A MYP Nate C the Pad runs. The w INDIANAPOLIS (P)-Mel Dan- "Catfish iels of the Indiana Pacers was second named the American Basketball inningst Association's most valuable player Losing for the second straight year yes- gave up terday after being picked ABA rookie of the year three years ago. A U.S. Basketball Writers Asso- CubuS C ciation 22-man committee from PHOED 11 ABA franchise cities made the breezed t choice.-; San Fran Daniels, 26. led the ABA in re- .. bounding for the third time in four years with an 18.24 average. He also was Indiana's leadingj scorer with a 21.4 average as the Pacers, defending champions of the league, repeated Sunday as Western Division champions. Indiana bought the 6-9 New Mexico product from the Minne- TA sota Muskies in May 1968 for, $100,000, a No. 1 draft choice and players Ron Kozlicki and Jim Dawson. Zelma Beaty of the Utah Stars and rookie Charlie Scott of the' Virginia Squires received five first- place votes apiece but Beaty fin- ished second in points with 69 to Scott's 64. Dan Issel of Kentucky was fourth with 45 points, Rick Barry of New York fifth with39. Issel, Barry and Larry Jones of the Floridians received one first- In r place vote apiece. Lan( 1 offe olbert homered twice for res and drove in five 'inning pitcher was Jim " Hunter, who became the 's hurler to go nine full this spring. pitcher Dave Roberts both of Jackson's ho- i Scores club Giants NIX - The Chicago Cubs to a 5-1 victory over the acisco Giants yesterday. Baltimore 4, Montreal 1 Boston 11, Houston 4 Cincinnati 5, Philadelphia 2 Milwaukee 7, California 1 New York Yankees 3, Atlanta 1 Oakland 9, San Diego 6 Chicago Cubs 5, San Francisco 1 Chicago White Sox 8, Pittsburgh 6 Detroit 7, Kansas City 5 St. Louis 3, Minnesota 2 THE SIERRA CLUB presents Earth Ethics1 TUESDAY, MARCH 30 FREE FILMS ON WILDERNESS AND ENVIRONMENTAL SUBJECTS 7-10 P.M., Auditorium C, Angell Hall WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31 BACKPACKING DEMONSTRATION 1:30-3 P.M., Room 1040, School of Natural Resources, Jane Bishop "ECOTACTICS-PLANS FOR ACTION"-A discussion on political strategies to protect wilderness areas. : ". < 8 P.M., Room 2024, School of Natural Resources *Ron Eber-National Director of Sierra Club's Campus Programs Dr. Richard Cellarius-Chairman, Mackinaw Chapter *Walt Pomerory-Director, Michigan Student Environmental Con- federation, Lansing THURSDAY, APRIL 1 "LIFE STYLES AND THE EARTH ETHIC" 7:30 P.M., Red Carpet Lounge, Alice Lloyd Hall, Dale Manty, and Zero Population Growth. ... .-:it .' .. . . . . . ............ . . GRADUATE STUDENTS I in 7h AnnL. % n; rIafflAir-Mn C innnrf Cn h7 ri MICHIGAN UNION BI LLIARDS 4BLE TENNIS REDUCED RATES 9 a.m.-Noon MON.-SAT. BOWLING M-PIN BOWLING SUN., 1 P.M.-MID. lavic Department Otterings in lIB esponse to strong student interest, the Department of Slavic guages and Literatures will offer Intensive First-Year Russian 11B (June 30 to August 19). Other language courses to be red will be Intensive Second, Third and Fourth Year Russian. IS 3L MOTSoUths UI rewwHiiP )UiU. S upr n:Ug V.P. SMITH THINKS SO Elect the Grad Action Ticket To Defeat the Smith Proposal RACKHAM STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTION I Id