Page 6 Portland Obaerver Oregon Players to watch Thursday. August 26th, 1976 Sfori XJJk by Roa Syfcaa N B A N U M B E R O N E D R A F T C H O IC ES Much has been w ritten about the great job done by some General managers, and the bad job, also, done by some. Our own •Stu Inm an has drawn a good deal oi criticism -- so let's take a look at some of the choices made around the N B A . In 1965, Boston drafted as their #1 choice a fellow by the name of Ollie Johnson, not to be confused w ith the one drafted third in 7 2 by Portland and currently doing a bang-up job in K.C . In 1966. Boston draft ed Jim Barnett, and in 1967 M ai Graham, none of these players are around today. In fact, the only ones still around are JoJo W h ite '69, D ave Cowens 7 0 , and Glenn McDonald 7 4 . O ver a ten year span the Celtics have only kept three first round choices. Looking at Phoenix w e see such 91 choices as: G ary Gregor, Neal W alk, G reg Howard, John Roche, Corky Cal­ houn, M ike Bantom, John Shumate and A lv in Adams. O f this bunch only Alvin Adams #1 choice of 7 6 remains. Phoenix apparently saw fit to explore the trade route and, as evidenced from last season s play, w ere quite successful No names THE FAMILY^ LAWYER 32 Johnson. Jim: RB, 5-10, 190, Jr., M PJAVE. CAL. (R O S A M O N D A N T E L O P E V A '-L E Y ) Jim w u Califor nia JC Division I I Player of the Year - intelligent, rarely makes mistake« - ex cellent credentials can play both full­ back and tailback currently listed as number three fullback good power for aixe - good balance and running speed - V E R S A T IL E A T H L E T E W H O W IL L PLAY SOM EW HERE born 1/20/53. that are still active the Capitol Bullets seem to head the liav In examining play­ ers drafted by Capitol we aee: Jerry Sloan, now with the Bulls: Jack M arin, also w ith Chicago; E a rl Monroe. N .Y . Knicks; Wee Unseld. Bullets; M ike Daves, waived; George Johnson. Golden State; Stan Love. ex-U.O . great, waived; Phil Chenier. Bullets; Nick W eather spoon. Bullets; Len Elmore, ABA; and K evin Grevey, also Bullets. So it seems Capitol has not wasted many number one d ra ft choices. Looking at the expansion teams that entered the N B A in 1970 we see: P O R T L A N D : 1970. Geoff Petrie; 1971, Sidney Wicks; 1972, LaRue M artin; 1973, Barry Parkhill; 1974, Bill Walton; 1975, Lionel Hollins. B U F FA L O : 1970, John Humm er, 1971. Elmore Smith; 1972, Bob McAdoo; 1973 Ernie Di; 1974, Tom McMillen; 1975, to Phoenix. C L E V E L A N D : 1970, John Johnson; 1971, Austin Carr, 1972 D w ight Davis; 1973, Jim B re w e r 1974. Campy Russell 1975. John Lam bert. The worst year in my estimation must have been 1972. Going down the list we find C yril Baptiste drafted number one by Golden State and later convicted and sentenced to a ja il term on dope charges. Looking further we see Tom Payne. 77T center from Kentucky drafted number one by Atlanta and currently serving a prison term for rape. The remainder of the 7 2 d ra ft is as follows: Boston - Paul Westphal. D etro it - »Bob Nash. KC- Omaha - N ate W illiams, Atlanta - »Tom Payne, New York - Tom Riker, 76ers - •F re d Boyd. Los Angeles - »Travis G rant. Golden State - »Cyril Baptiste. Capitol - Phil Cheniep'. Chicago - Ralph Simpson. Houston - none, Seattle - »Bud Stallworth, M ilw aukie - »Russell Lee. Julius Erving, Phoenix - »Corky Cal­ houn. Buffalo - Bob McAdoo, Cleveland - D w ig h t Davis, and Portland - LaRue M artin . * Indicates those no longer in the A Mistaken Identification W i" B ernard “H e put me through a terrible ordeal," Roger told the court. "H e ought to reimburse me fo r m ak­ ing that false accusation." But the court could find nothing worse than an innocent mistake on the part of the manager. D is­ missing Roger's claim, the court said there could be no "malicious” prosecution when there was no malice. The law generally takes this forgiving attitude toward people who instigate criminal charges that fail to stand up in court. Reason; the law does not want to 9 /24/53, JOmOHam discourage most honest citizens from reporting crimes. “N o one would willingly (re­ p o rt) a breach o f law,” observed one judge, “w ith tbs prospect o f a suit fo r malicious prosecution staring him in the face." Nevertheless, the law does in­ deed frown on accusations made recklessly or wickedly. A bank executive described a wanted man as being grey-haired and about S t " tall. Y e t later, at police head- qnariers, he picked out a suspect who was 6' tall and had blown hair. This was enough basis, a court said afterward, for a jury to infer malice and to bold the banker legtflly liable. In another case a fanner, an­ gered by thefts from Ms apple orchard, had a neighbor's sou ar­ rested for stealing. Unable to come up with any evidence at all, he finally admitted that he was just trying to “throw a scare" in­ to the neighborhood. Here too the court ordered the farm er to pay damages. He had no right, said the court, to subvert the machinery o f justice for his own ends. B a r A s s o e ia tio n aad the O regon State B ar. O 1976 American Bar Association A Meet Tri-MefS Driver“Of-the-Month. A1 Scruggs’ 10 years of driving with Tri Met means high seniority and first pick at the routes. Al’s favorite choice? *3 — Fessen­ den, which he's been on for about three years. “I like the people and watch for them --------- at their stops. And I enjoy helping out my passengers. For instance, a teacher with 30 6 year olds really appreciates it when I count heads and then deposit their fares all at once? Those extra services have earned A1 the August Driver of the Month award. Better service for more people. & NCE REFERRED TO AS THE O ''TROUBADOUR OF TOLERANCE, BECAUSE OF HIS BITING GU'TAR AND MIS F IG H T IN 6 BLUES.FOLK AND SPIRITUALS AGAINST J IM , C R O W PRACTICES IN TH E 1440*. JOSH WAS CONSIDERED ONE OF THE GREATEST FOLK SINGERS OF HIS E R A . ONE OF THE FIRST TO S IN G HIS BLUES AND SPIRITUALS IN HEW V0RK'< CAFE SOCIETY. APPEARED ON TH E CONCERT STAGE... Ducks excite Eugene fan* University of Oregon invited members of the news media down for a preview of the new Ducka. W e spent hours talking to the coaches and players and was quite impressed w ith what we saw. They're talking about a football season of excite­ ment and entertainm ent in Eugene this fall. Now here is it more evident than on the practice field where coach Don Read and his staff are preparing the 1976 Ducks for a geared-up offensive tempo. The pa. 9 always has been a staple in coach Read's offensive thinking, and it’s likely to be more so this autumn. Basic to this planning is the intent to pass the ball from a position of strength, rather than necessity -- putting the ball aloft when the Ducka w ant to, not when “I f we do stay healthy, we w ill be one of the good teams in the conference." When asked to expound furth er on th is coacu Read said. “W e can honestly challenge the power schools in thia conference (U C L A and So. CaL) on any given day. Oregon w ill move to more of a pro-style offense this fall. And the Ducks recruited accordingly. Read believes that this year he has the speed to get outside whereas tost year thia kind of speed waa lacking. N o one appreciates the value of that approach b etter than Read, a nationally recognized authority on the a rt of pass­ ing. H e has w ritten tw o books on the subject. Read points out that for the Ducks passing game to be effective, it has to be complemented by a solid running game, and vice versa. He to convinced that the skilled returnees he has back among hto 34 letterm en - plus hto potent group of junior college transfers - should provide the Ducka w ith that critical offensive blend: Balance. Here to hto evaluation in “W e're going to be a much unproved football team. You can aee It on paper. But, more important, you could sense it in spring practice. W e believe we'll be much better offensively. T h a t w ill improve our overall chances of winning, because we’ve played good enough defense in recent years to win. “W e'll be bigger and faster than we've been in the past tw o or three years. W e have a chance to be a very explosive football team. W e w ill throw the ball better, and we will run better. “Depth, aa always, w ill be a factor. If we don't stay healthy, we w ill have pro­ blems. this year. C o a o n H y Methodist Chorch A M I ZhM Meeting a t Harney Center Helen F. McCall, Paster 3605 E 13th Street 9:45 . Sunday School Vancouver. Washington , 0;45 . M oratag Service First Aanivarsary Services féevo@ufá>HQ/Uf J[/eM R U N N IN G BACKS LO O K GOOD leration. “U p front, we'll miss tackle Ron Hunt. But there's some quality back. Lea Duman to one of the fine guards In the PAC-8. Coach Read expresses concern for hto linebacking corp. W e have to develop another linebacker or two. D a rre ll Mehl to a tough, sm art two-year starter. K im N utting should be improved. Bruce Beek- ley to one tough player who should help the position. Read sees the defenae aa being sound. Reggie G rant to the best defensive back in camp and ahould step in and fill the shoes left void by the All- Am erican M ario Clark. G rant w ill be call ed upon to defenae the opponents quick eat, and bet receiver. The kicking game appears strong and there should be another hard-noaed defenae. A ll in all, big explosives should come from Duckland hto own worda: BONUS VAIUff “W e're solidly improved a t running back. George Bennett, who had a strong finish last year, ahould be one of the better backs in the conference. Other veterans are Eugene Brown, who to ex­ trem ely capable, but has been hampered by injuries; Rich Clough, w ith hto quick­ ness and flat-out speed; John York, a strong runner w ith super balance, and M ike Fouta, who'a a fine all-around back, when he's healthy. Then there are the JC bscks. V.’ho odd S daStaUiiuS tO OUT uur e- field. Dennis Bullock to a super spring and should really help us. Greg Gilchrist was one of the fasteat JC backs in the country last year, and Jim Johnson to a good blocker with great balance and acce­ A p u hlie service fe atu re a t the A m e r ie a a 76 Rosette. John: O T, 6 6 . 260. Sr.. H A Y W A R D , C A L , (M O R E A U C H A B O T JC( - John enjoyed an excellent first season - missed last three games with dislocated kneecap - strong and aggres­ sive -• has improved his foot speed • earned JC A L L A M E R IC A N honors aa an offensive tackle at Chabot JC waa all-conference at that school for tw o years - earned starting sport first week of spring drills - born 9 /25/56. ED RADCLIFF AND EVERETT MARSHALL they have to. J “Fingered" by the manager of a supermarket, Roger was arrested and brought to trial on a charge o f armed robbery. But the jury found him not guilty. Roger promptly filed a suit against the market manager fo r malicious prosecution. 2 W hite. Jo Joe SR. 6 0 . 185, Sr., S A V A N N A H . GA. (Richard Arnold! - Jo Jo is not a new player but is playing a new position this season. Waa tw o year letterm an cornerback when switched to wide receiver last fail started slowly, but came on strong toward season's close - exhibited his game-breaking talent against Stanford, catching consecutive 40-yard passes during one series - prob* bly fastest Oregon player - earned 14 high school ieltera - named Georgia's most veraative high school athlete •• born -ni J NBA. 20 Gilchrist, Greg: KB 6-1, 190, jr., W A S H IN G T O N , D.C. Outstanding new addition - fast, quick, elusive back who gives Oregon a game breaking tailback - impressive in spring drills - emerged aa 91 tailbadt; 4.6 (40 yards) speed strong inside runner - poeaible kirk returner good receiver -• JC A L L -A M E R IC A N -- attended same high school as Notre Dame basketball A L L -A M E R IC A N Adrian Dantley - named one of top 30 newcomers in the nation - born 11/19/55, Cooks by Temperature.. .Not Just by Time / Eliminates Overcooking or Undercooking G E '» Autom atic Che« make« microwave cooking truly automaticl T h u revolutionary idea in m icro w ave cook mg let» you cook by temperature or by time. The auto matic cooking control ta n ta i the internal temperature of food at it cook» and turn» the oven ori automatically w hen the food n done' N o gueuw ork' N o pot watching' With « choice of high. madium/da«rott and low cooking level», the Jet 90 » automat«: cooking control leu you prepare roe»:«. catiarolet toupt, end even large, lew tender cut» of meat w ith carefree i aee. You don't have to rotate or turn food nor guew at cooking tim e There'! no overcooking with GE'» Autom atic Chet COME TODAY.. . Watch a Demonstration Can ba u«ad on your liitehän countertop. o» m a built in w ith on optional hàtl 7:00 - Vesper Service 7:00 - W ed, P rayer M tg August 25th Rev, T . Strayhand Auguat 26th - Rev. C. Senn August 27th - Concert Sunday. 3 p m . - D r. E . W . M alie ONUS: IO-PI«« AtKlwr-NwhlaR COOKW EAR SET MW B R O W N *N SEAR D IS H Included w ith Yaur le t 9 6 Furche». EASY TERMS CAL TORAN Home 289-0939 BOB N E L S O N ”n0s ,iaPPe„...at Home 287-4050 Still serving the community AS THE HO M E FOLKS FOR {. 6. Stassens, Inc. Hollywood Offico 2 8 8 -8 8 7 1 To soli your homo or buy o homo Coll Bob or Col SHO P 9 T O 9 M O N . THRU FRI. SAT. TIL 6 (O n ta d Sun.) 30th an d S. E. D IV IS IO N 234-9351