Bird goes to court SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - For- ward Larry -ird of the Boston Celtics spent 45 minutes yesterday giving a sworn statement in a $175,000 damage suit filed by a San Antonio Spurs fan. Johnny A. Merla contends in the lawsuit he filed last year that Bird spat on him and knocked him to the ground with a tote bag after a game in January 1980. STATE DISTRICT judge Rose Spector issued a subpoena earlier this week requiring Bird to appear at the office of attorney Veasar Molina and give a deposition. Merla contends he suffered injuries and embarrassment in the alleged in- cident outside Hemis Fair Arena after the Spurs had beaten Boston. At the time, Boston players com- plained that they were harassed and spat upon by a group of angry San An- * tonio fans as they left the arena. NAMED DEFENDANTS IN Merla's suit were Bird, former ACeltics center Dave Cowens and the Boston team. Bird would not comment on the suit but his attorney, Robert Summers, termed the allegations "completely un- founded." Summers said it was "a very sad situation" that National Basketball Association players could not travel to and from games without being harassed. "I think Bird was fairly well abused that night," the lawyer said. The Michigan Daily-Saturday, May 30, 1981'* Page 15 SPORTS OF THE DAILY Chargers' boss stricken LOS ANGELES (AP) - The trial of the antitrust suit between the Oakland Raiders and the National Football League resumed business as usual yesterday with jurors being shielded from news that a key witness suffered a major heart attack after leaving the stand. Attorneys met in the judge's cham- bers before yesterday's session got un- der way and apparently decided thatx the jury would be told nothing about the illness of Eugene V. Klein, president and principal owner of the San Diego Chargers. Jurors have been told repeatedly by Judge Harry Pregerson not to read newspaper accounts of the trial. NATIONAL FOOTBALL League Commissioner Pete Rozelle, who was on the stand when court was abruptly recessed Thursday, returned to the witness box and was expected to con- clude his testimony later in the day. Klein was stricken afte he left the courtroom following four strenuous hours on the witness stand Thursday. A spokeswoman at Queen of the Angels Hospital said late yesterday morning that the 60-year-old former movie theater tycoon was in stable condition in the hospital's intensive care unit af- ter a restful night. Klein was rushed to the hospital after complaining of chest pains and nearly collapsing in the hallway of the federal courthouse here. When informed of Klein's seizure, Rozelle went to the hospital immediately along with Los Angeles owner Georgia Frontiere and her husband, Dominic, who also were in the courthouse when Klein was stricken. Allison improves CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - Injured race driver Donnie Allison continued to show improvement yesterday at Charlotte Memorial Hospital, accor- ding to a hospital spokesman. Allison, now in satisfactory condition, suffered a concussion, bruised lung, broken ribs and a broken knee in the World 600 at Charlotte Motor Speedway last Sunday. The spokesman said tentative plans are to fly Allison, 41, to a Birmingham hospital Monday. He will undergo surgery there sometime next week for his knee injuries. Allison was injured during the race when his car scraped the wall in turn four, rolled across the track and into the path of a car driven by Dick Brooks, Brooks suffered a dislocated shoulder in the accident and was treated at a Concord hospital and released. Vols stun UCLA AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Tennessee's 800-meter medley relay team stunned heavily favored UCLA in collegiate record time last night behind Delisa Walton's blistering anchor leg and Nebraska's Merlene Ottey shattered the collegiate 100-meter record to highlight the second day of the AIAW Track and Field Championships. It was a day of unsets in the rain- Ria Stalman upsetting collegiate champion Meg Ritchie of Arizona in the discus and North Texas State's Donna Thomas surprising Wisconsin's Pat Johnson and Florida State's Esmeralda Garcia in the long jump.' The Bruins also suffered another shocker when Tonya Alston, who was leading the seven-event Heptathlon pulled up lame and did not finish the 200-meter dash. The Lady Vols, who had been expec- ted to push the Bruins for the team title, unreeled a time of 1:36.70 in the 800- meter medley relay, which eclipsed the old mark of 1:37.29 by Cal State-Los Angeles in 1978. It also would have been an American record except that Jamaican Cathy Rattray, a freshman, ran thesecond leg. More Indy 500 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A fan who attended this year's Indianapolis 500 auto race filed a class-action' suit in federal court yesterday, asking that ticket holders be 'refunded because the race was not completed in their presen- ce. The suit, filed by Joan P. Grubbs of Indianapolis, says those who attended the race deserve a refund because Mario Andretti was named the winner several hours after fans "'had left defendants' premises and returned to Delay of strike irks players and owners Major .league players trod basepaths instead of picket lines yesterday, but the Philadelphia Phillies' Bob Boone had a warning for those who felt the season was safe from the threat of a strike. "The issue is not going to go away," said Boone, the National League player representative. YESTERDAY WAS to have been the first day of a strike by the Major League Players Association over the compensation issue, but a last-minute deal averted baseball's third walkout in nine years for at least a week. The delay produced some degree of annoyance among players and owners alike. "Let's get it solved," said Kansas City pitcher Larry Gura, the Royals' alternate player representative. "I'LL BE GLAD when the whole thing is over," said Tim Blackwell, the Chicago Cubs' player rep. "I guess it's better for us," added Pit- tsburgh third baseman Bill Madiock, "but in a month, we'll probably have to go through this again and then again in two years when the basic agreement comes up again. If that happens, it'll take two more years for the fans to recuperate. I don't know how much more they'll put up with." CALVIN GRIFFITY, president of the Minnesota Twins, said he was relieved that a strike had been averted but wished the issue had been settled. "This free-agent compensation issue should have been settled last year," Griffith said. "I wish the air could be cleared and we could concentrate on baseball." Like Madlock, the Twins' owner was m concerned about possible fan backlash. "FANS ARE still somewhat in doubt, as I am, about what's going to happen over this strike issue, and that doesn't lead to buying many tickets in advan- ce," he said. The harshest reaction, however, came from John McMullen, chairman of the Houston Astros. "I'm sure the Players Association believes it has scored a great victory," McMullen said, "but I believe they'll find out otherwise in the long run. They've opened a new wound, a wound that can only fester in the future." MCMULLEN SAID the free-agent issue "should have been settled last year and instead we had a year's delay ... It's just going to drag on and on and can only harm baseball." Action on the matter is scheduled on two fronts early next week. On Monday, negotiations are to resume in New York between the Major League Players Association and the Player Relations Committee, the bargaining arm of the club owners, federal mediator Kenneth Moffett an- nounced yesterday. AP Photo Wind blown John Cook falls over, aided by the breeze, after missing a putt on the fifth green during second-round play of the Kemper Open yesterday at the Congressional Country Club in Bethesda, Md. Danny Edwards leads the field with a score of 134. TONIGHT THRU SUNDAY .SCORES SECOND CHANCE American League PREsENTS Baltimore 6, Detroit 5 Toronto 6, Oaklanda3MARINER Milwaukee5, stntaE New Yorks5, Cleveland 251 . bry9455