Tuesday, Junle, rW Britt awaits selection as NBA draft starts From Wire Service Reports Michigan's small senior for- ward, Wayman Britt, will find out how the pros assess his chances of adjusting to the backcourt as the NBA holds its annual draft today. Britt, the Wolverines' 6-2 captain and four-year starter, is the only Michigan player up for the draft. According to most observers, he will go in the middle to late rounds. Britt was already selected in the 13th round of the Na- tional Football League's draft by the Washington Redskins, though he has never played organized football. In draft developments yes- terday, the Houston Rockets obtained the first choice of the draft in a startling five-player trade with the Atlanta Hawks and announced they would use it to pick guard John Lucas of the University of Maryland. The Hawks had won the No. 1 selection of the draft in a coin- flip with Chicago and had been expected to select seven-footer dissolve Ito merge they are going to have to buy the Kentucky fran- chise," Vance said. "I don't think we've gotten to the point to say what procedural steps would be taken to distribute the players." The Louisville Times reported on the meeting in a front-page analysis story in its late edi- tions. It said the Colonels and the ABA are dead, for all prac- tical purposes. Robert Parish of tiny Centena- ry College in Shreveport, La. Parish averaged 18 rebounds a game. Instead, Atlanta had a draft-eve change of heart and swapped the opening pick to Houston, along with center Joe Meriweather, guard Gus Bailey and the Rockets' No, 1 draft pick - ninth in the first - round selection rota- tion. Lucas, regarded as a perfect pro-size guard at 6-4, was the all-time leading scorer at Maryland, averaging 20 points a game since he was a soph- omore. Other plums available in Tuesday's draft include a pair of All-Americans, Scott May of Indiana, the college Player of the Year, and Adrian Dantley of Notre Dame. Both were picked last week for the United S t a t e s Olympic basketball team. Lucas, Parish and Leon Douglas of Alabamna, another likely first-round pick, all de- cided to pass up the Olympic trials rather than jeopardize their draft standing or risk any chance of injury. Other top prospects for the draft include UCLA teammates Richard Washington and Mar- ques Johnson, who both de- dlared themselves available through the NBA's hardship draft, Wally Walker of Virginia, Ron Lee of Oregon and Quinn Buckner of Indiana, another Olympic team selection. After Houston picks Lucas, Chicago owns the No. 2 choice. Kansas City picks third follow- ed by Detroit. Then the first- round draft rotation continues with Portland, Buffalo, Mil- waukee, Golden State, Atlanta, Phoenix, Seattle, Philadelphia, Washington with two straight choices, Cleveland, Boston and Golden State, again, in that or- der. Bernard King of Tennessee and Maurice "Bo" Ellis of Marquette were among 11 players to withdraw their names yesterday from the so-called hardship list. The nine others withdrawing their names - and leaving 18 players on the list - were Wayne "Tree" Rollins of Clem- son, Arnold Dugger and Antho- ny Roberts of Oral Roberts, Ray Williams of Minnesota, Rickey Green of Michigan, Alonza Bradley of Texas South- ern, Wilson Washington of Old )ominion, Hollis Vickery of Il- linois Valley Community Col- lege and Johnny Jones, former- ly of Purr High School in Hous- ton. A m o n g draft - eligible un- dergrads are Adrian Dentley, Notre Dame; Marques Johnson and Richard Washington, UC- LA; Johnny Davis, Dayton; and Lonnie Shelton, formerly of Oregon State. TWINS ARE HAPPY BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (A) - The Minnesota Twins are pleased with their 1976 Ameri- can League baseball schedule. They are to play 53 of their 78 home games between Memorial Day and Labor Day, the peak drawing period. The Twins have only two games listed before April 24. SHORT or LONG HAIRSTYLES TO PLEAS DASCOLA STYLISTS ARBORLAND-971-9975 MAPLE VILLAGE-761-2733 E. UNIVERSITY-662-0354 E- ~E-~-9329 MICHIGAN SENIOR CAPTAIN Wayman Britt in action this past season. The 6-2 guard is eligible for today's NBA draft. Four teams vote to ABA merger With ri LOUISVILLE (o'-Four of the six American Basketball Asso- ciation teams have decided in a secret meeting in Chicago to pay $4.5 million each to enter the rival National Basketball As- sociation, G e n e r a I Manager Dave Vance of the Kentucky Colonels said yesterday. Vance said the Colonels and the Spirits of St. Louis voted against the move to disband the ABA and merge with the NBA and that the other four teams agreed to buy out the Colonels and the Spirits, who were sup- yosed to resume operations in Jtah next season. "I have talked with (ABA president John) Brown, and he told me that the position actually is we have declined to go along with the other teams in the ABA under the current terms and conditions which have been outlined to us with respect to a possible merger," Vance said. Those terms, he said, include provisions for four ABA teams to pay $4.5 million each to the NBA to join it. "If at the meeting of the NBA next week, if they say they want four ABA teams at the price that has been quoted, then Kentucky will not be included among the four," Vance said. "At that point in time the other four ABA teams would have to buy out the Kentucky franchise and the Utah franchise." The four teams which want to join the NBA, Vance said, are the Denver Nuggets, New York Nets, Indiana Pacers and San Antonio Spurs. He said Kentucky decided not to go along with the merger idea because "it's just not a very realistic approach to our way of thinking. "We don't know yet that the NBA is going to go along with this," Vance said. "If they don't go along there will still be an ABA. "If the other four teams want OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK BOOKS & MAGAZINES 1301S Uver 301 South University VUM CLERICALS Tired of the Union as it is? VOTE UNITYJune8,9, 1. President ... DEBBIE MOOREHEAD Chair, Bargain Comittee- 1st Vice Pres..... JUDY DUMOFF JEAN JONES 2nd Vice Pres......BOB DALE Financial Sec. SUSAN SUSSELMAN Bargaining Committee (3)- Recording Sec... SHARON WENZEL OT1S CALVERY Sgt. at Arms.... EMMA WILLIAMS SUE McGEE Guide......MICKIE FOREMAN DAYLE SHARBACH Together we can SAVE LOCAL 2001 --PAID ADVERTISEMENT