sports of the DAILY Who's on first? By The Associated Press A tentative agreement was reached yesterday to transfer ownership of the Boston Celtics to Buffalo Braves' owners John Y. Brown and Harry Mangurian and shift the Braves' franchise to San Diego under the new ownership of Celtics' owner Irving Levin, it was learned. Two well-placed NBA sources confirmed the report to The Associated Press and said attorneys for Brown and Levin will meet in Los Angeles today to draw up the final papers for the deal. Brown and Levin were traveling and could not be reached for comment. A third source, in the Braves front office, who asked not to be identified, said of the report: "We will make an announcement of our intention to move the franchise when the NBA Board of Governors meet in Chicago July 7. The club has no further comment." However, a Boston Celtics official says he has been told reports that team owner Irving Levin will dump the National Basketball Association team are unfounded. According to Celtics assistant general manger Jeffrey Cohen, Levin said this week, "I have no intention of giving up the Celtics." Cohen said yesterday, "Levin has met with Brown to help him expedite a move of the Braves to the Coast. Levin says people have put two and two together to make incorrect assumptions about him. "Things may change, but I talked to Levin and Red Auerbach," Cohen said, 'and I don't believe there's anything to it. That's also what Auerbach told me." Levin has been under pressure from Boston fans and media for his failure to return the once-dominant Celtics to prominence in the NBA. Ac- cording to the sources, Levin welcomes the chance to take over a new team near his Los Angeles home. Brown, who has been searching for a new home for the Braves for more than three months, is said to be "looking forward to the challenge of rebuilding the Celtics." * * * * A new record LOS ANGELES (AP)-Jim Brown, former pro football great turned actor, was sentenced to a day in jail and fined $500 Wednesday for beating and choking a golfing partner on a South Los Angeles course last October. Inglewood Municipal Judge Wardell Moss placed Brown on two years' probation and a suspending 90-day jail term. The 230-pound, 6-foot-3 Brown got into an argument with golf pro Frank Snow, 33, over the placement of Snow's ball on the ninth hole at the Western Avenue Golf Course, Jordan said. Brown slapped the 185-pound, 5-foot-11 Snow and punched him in the ribs, then grabbed him by the throat, Jordan said during the trial. Brown denied it on the witness stand, and defense witnesses claimed Snow had threatened Brown first with a raised golf club and that Brown had only pushed Snow away from him. The two men had been golfing partners for years. Deputy District Attorney Mal Jordan, who had sought a 120-day jail term and a $1,000 fine because of Brown's "many brushes with the law," told reporters he felt the sentence was "completely inappropriate." On May 10 in a non-jury tril, Moss handed downa misdemeanor battery conviction against the 42-year-old movie actor, formerly a Syracuse Univer- sity All-American and star fullback for the Cleveland Browns pro football team. At Cleveland, Brown set National Football League career records for the met touchdowns rushing with 106, met total touchdowns with 126 and most yards rushing. Munson fined New York Yankee catcher Thurman Munson has been suspended for three games by the American League office for bumping an umpire last week in Detroit. The suspension calls for Munson to miss both games of tonight's doubleheader at Milwaukee and a game against the Detroit Tigers at Yankee Stadium Friday night. Munson bumped umpire Jim McKean last Thursday after being called out on strikes. rS LET THEM KNOW s C SWE'RE OUT THEREI - C Et 3RANNX American League HIGHLY VISIBLE VINYL BUMPER STICKER Detroit 4-1, Cleveland 3-2 . Milwaukee , New York 0(Istgamel $.49 (includes Postage and Handling) . Toronto3, Baltimore2 Check or Money Order payable to: National League0 Los Angeles 3, Atlana 2 g DOWNTOWN RUNNER Houston 3,.Cincinnati ; « o ,,P.O. Box 1266 Philadelphia 7, Montreals -Detroit, Mi. 48231 Chicago s. New York e (10 Innings )7j // I7I/IA AP' Photo Second-seeded Jimmy Connors slams a two-handed backhand for a winner in yesterday's second round action in Wimbledon against unheralded Kim Warwick. Connors faced a much tougher match than he anticipated, with the Australian forcing Connors the entire contest. Favorites squeak in Wimbledon second WIMBLEDON, England (AP) - Jimmy Connors struggled for 2 2hours yesterday before finally getting past Australian Kim Warwick, while Guillermo Vilas, Chris Evert, Evonne Goolagong and John Newcombe won their second-round Wimbledon tennis matches in less dramatic fashion. The best match of the tournament so far came on the center court where Connors beat the big Australian 6-3, 7-5, 2-6, 6-4 in a battle of long rallies,, desperate retrieving, big serving and some superb groundstrokes and volleys. Warwick, who had come from a two- set deficit to win the third set, matched Connors game-for-game in the fourth set. Then, for no apparent reason, War- wich gave away the crucial tenth game on his own service, giving Connors both the set and match. Newcombe, the 34-year-old Australian three-time Wimbledon champion who is seeded 16th, mastered fellow Australian Ross Case 6-4, 6-2, 9-8 and also moved into the third round. Newcombe had beaten his first-round opponent, Australian Dale Collings, 4-6, 7-5, 7-5, 6-2 on Tuesday. Vilas, the fourth seed from Argen- tina, survived a second-set scare to beat hard-hitting Englishman John Feaver 6-3, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3. 1 I .* ,a INTRAMURAL OFFICIALS NEEDED Learn a Lifetime Sports Activity Come to the following clinics at the Intramural Sports Bldg. 606 E. Hoover July 6 & 7 Softball 7 pm-8 pm Basketball S pm-10 pm Contact Sandy Sanders 763-1313 Dept. of Recreational Sports r r rrr" t_ M " f Arr-IL f " i " f "' .- .... . . " spy Y'T y +f f . " 9 v w e k" r M f" U" w wnos r e a O bi, W i f f / Lf ! i s w a^ 19, ,,Y ^s. s.X e- w a4 W a- w . s L. . f" s . a . o ." . ". u .. w a