Wednesday, January 29, 1969 THE :MICHIGAN DAILY Pnns W Aa Wednesday, January 29, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rage iNine e Buffalo grabs 0. . as first pick in football draft KunzKeyes picked next; Hanrauy a second choice NEW YORK (R) - Southern California's 0. J. Simpson, the Heisman Trophy winner who reportedly wants $600,000 to sign, was the No. 1 pick by the Buffalo Bills yesterday in the combined pro football draft. Before the .draft is completed today, 442 college players will have been selected by the 26 teams of the National Foot- ball League and American Football League in 17 rounds. Buffalo, the AFL cellar team whose 1-12-1 record was the worst in the combined standings, nudged out Atlanta and Philadelphia for the first draft which is based on the in- verse order of the clubs' 1968 won-lost percentages. Atlanta of the NFL took George Kunz, the 6-foot-5, 240-pound of- pdfensive tackle from Notre Dame, as No. 2 in the first round and Pittsburgh of the NFL selected Joe Greene, a 6-foot-4, 274-pound defensive tackle from North Texas State, as No. 4 in the, first round. Leroy Keyes, Purdue's running back - flanker - defensive back, who was runnerup to Simpson in the Heisman voting, was the No. 3 selection in the opening round. He went to the Philadelphia Eag- les of the NFL. The selection of Marty Domres, Columbia's 6-foot-4 quarterback, by San Diego of the AFL, using Denver's first-round pick from a trade, and the drafting of Calvin Hill, Yale fullback, by the Dallas Cowboys of the NFL were major surprises in the first round. Ivy League players seldom find fav- or with pro scouts. The last first- round pick from the league was believed to have been Chuck Bed- narik of Penn by Philadelphia in 1949. 0. J. SIMPSON Terry Hanratty, Notre Dame's FIGH T TIME: Brawling basketball daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: BILL CUSUMANO 'Ron Johnson 'thrilled' to Ie playing for Cleveland First Round Buffalo, running back v. J. I -Daily-Thomas R. Copi RON JOHNSON, Michigan's all-time leading ground gainer, slashes 'through the Northwestern line on the way to a record-breaking season rushing total of 1391 yards. Johnson, a halfback and captain of the team his senior year, was picked in the first round of the pro football draft by the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League. All-American quarterback w h o er selected Gene Washington,1 was sidelined by a knee injury in Stanford flanker, as its own first- the final games, was passed over round pick. in the first round. Hanratty, third The Los Angeles Rams of the in the Heisman balloting, finally NFL, who held three first-round went as No. 30, the second-round choices because of deals w i t h pick of the Pittsburgh Steelers. Detroit for Bill Munson and It was a surprise to many that Washington for Gary Beban, used Greg Cook, University of Cincin- them to pick Larry Smith, Flor- nati quarterback, and Domres ida running back, Jim Seymour, went before Hanratty. Cook, the Notre Dame split end, and Bob NCAA major college leader in Klein, Southern California tight total offense and second leading end. Seymour thus will be on theI passer, was nabbed by his home same team as Jack Snow, his pre- team, the Cincinnati Bengals of decessor at Notre Dame. the AFL= San Diego got Domres Bill Stanfill of Georgia, regard- on the first-round rights it ac- ed with Greene as the outstand- quired from Denver in a trade ing defensive lineman available, for quarterback Steve Tensi. iwent toMia i of the A as No. 20 in the first round andI Bill "Earthquake" Enyart, O r e- gon State's 6-3, 233-pound full- back, was selected in the second round by Buffalo. The Baltimore Colts of the NFL and the world champion N e w York Jets of the AFL drafted 25th and 26th because they were in the Super Bowl- The Colts picked Eddie Hinton, a flanker from the University of Oklahoma, and the Jets, picking last took Dave Foley, Ohio State offensive tackle. Among the big names who last- ed until the second round, in ad- dition to Enyart and Hanratty, were Paul Gipson, Houston run- ning back, picked by Atlanta; Ted Hendricks, Miami Fla. defensive end, taken by Baltimore: Bob Douglass, Kansas' left-handed quarterback, drafted by Chicago: Jerry Levias. Southern Methodist flanker, taken by Houston. The drafts cary with them the exclusive negotiation rights with the players among the 26 clubs of the two leagues. It will be up to the owners to get together with the athletes and their agents on terms. Simpson, Southern California; Atlanta, tackle George Kunz, Notre Dame; Philadelphia, run- ning back Leroy Keyes, Purdue; Pittsburgh, defensive tackle Joe Greene, North Texas State; Cin- cinnati, quarterback Greg Cook, Cincinnati; Boston, split end Ron Sellers, Florida State; San Fran- cisco, choice from New Orleans, tight end Ted Kwalick, Penn State. Los Angeles, from Detroit, run- ning back Larry Smith, Florida; San Diego, from Denver, quarter- back Marty Domres, Columbia; Los Angeles, from Washington, split end Jim Seymour, Notre Dame; Miami, defensive tackle Bill Stanfill, Georgia; Green Bay, defensive tackle Richie Moore, Villanova; Chicago, bypassed af- ter using full time allotment; New York Giants, defensive end Fred Dryer, San Diego State; Chicago, tackle Rufus Mayes, Ohio State; Houston. linebacker Ron Pritch- ard, Arizona State. San Francisco, flanker Gene Washington, Stanford; New Or- leans, from Minnesota, guard John Chinners, Xavier; San Diego, line- backer Bob Babich, Miami of Ohio; St. Louis, defensive back Roger Wehrli, Missouri; Cleve- land, running back Ron Johnson, Michigan; Los Angeles, tight end Bob Klein, Southern California; Oakland, defensive tackle Art Toms, Syracuse; Kansas City, de- fensive back Jim Marsalis, Ten- nessee State; Dallas, running back Calvin Hill, Yale; Baltimore, flanker Eddie Hinton, Oklahoma; New York Jets, tackle Dave Foley, Ohio State. SCORES NBA New York 122, Philadelphia 88 San Francisco 107, Cincinnati 100 Boston 108, Atlanta 96j ABA ALL-STAR GAME West 133, East 127 COLLEGE Ohio State 76, Illinois 67 Georgia Tech 72, Furman 63 Miami, Fla., 87, Florida Southern 83 Wisconsin 56, Marquette 50 North Carolin St., 8i, The Citadel 65 Gannon 104, Steubenville 74 Temple 73, Duke 69 Lafayette 75, American U, 72 Cincinnati 82, Bradley 62 Long Island 64, St. Louis 63 By JIM FORRESTER Ron Johnson, Michigan's record breaking halfback, was picked by the Cleveland Browns of the Na- tional Football League in the first round of the pro football draft in New York yesterday. Johnson, greatest Wolverine back since Tom Harmon, was en- thusiastic about being chosen by the Browns, "I'm very thrilled. I'll be in the same area and the Browns have a fine organization." Johnson broke virtually every rushing and scoring record at Michigan. The hard driving half- back rushed for 1391 yards and scored 116 points, both Wolverine season records. His 2,440 yards career rushing also set a team record.! But his greatest day, the great- est performance by any back in modern collegiate history, came against Wisconsin* on November 16, 1968. In the rain Johnson ran for 347 yards, an NCAA all-time single game rushing record and scored five touchdowns, a modern Big Ten mark. Virtually all of Johnson's yard- age, though, was gained in his junior and senior years. A product of Detroit's Northwestern High School and an all-city selection as a prep, Johnson saw little action in his sophomore year at Michi- gan as he played behind Jim Det- wiler and Carl Ward. Johnson fully intends to play pro football, though his duties will be different on the Cleveland ball club. "I'll be a fullback," said John- son. "I'll be carrying theball less and blocking more." With the expected retirement of present Cleveland fullback Ernie Green, Johnson feels, "I'll have a good chance to play in my first year." Tom Stincic, Wolverine line- backer and the team's second leading tackler, was chosen by the Dallas Cowboys in the draft's third round early last night. PEORIA, Ill. RP-Led by Rich Roberson and Jim Ard, Cincinnati smashed Bradley 82-62 last night in a Missouri Valley Conference basketball game which finished up with a fist fight. Cincinnati, advancing its con- ference record to 4-3 and overall' mark to 12-4, held a 39-27 half- time lead after moving in front twice by .26 points. L. C. Bowen and Steve Kuber- ski helped Bradley stage a come- , 'back in the second half and after the Braves had pulled within six points at 56-60, Ard hit three quick rebound baskets to give Cin- cinnati a 62-50 edge.j Roberson led all scorers with 27 points. and Ard hit for 21 while *Bradley, suffering its fifth con- ference loss in seven games, was topped by Bowen with 17 and Kuberski with 16. Kuberski, how- ever, fouled out with 4:10 to play. With a little more than a min- ute to play, Cincinnati's Rollie Wynn and Bradley's Dave Lund- 1strom got into a fight with both benches coming onto the floor. Wynn decked Lundstrom and af-I ter both players were handed tech- nical fouls, their coaches yanked them from the game. * * * . , TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (P) - South Carolina Coach Frank Mc- Guire, protesting two technical fouls in the closing minutes, re- fused to leave the court last night and officials ordered the Game- cocks' basketball game with the Florida State Seminoles forfeited. The Seminoles were leading 87- 76 with one minute, 57 seconds left in the contest when referees Reggie Copeland and Bobby Brock ended the. game. Copeland and Brock had warned the Gamecock coach to get off the floor. He refused, and they backed up the threat, putting South Car- olina's third loss in 13 starts on the books. South Carolina is ranked 19 in the nation in the AP poll. Join The Daily Sports Staff Boston of the AFL in the pro- cess of hiring a coach to succeed+ Mike Holovak, took Florida State's able receiver, Ron Sellers, in the, first round. The All-American end led the nation's major colleges with 86 receptions and set a career record with 4,598 yards. San Francisco of the NFL pick- ing seventh with the rights pick- ed up from New Orleans w it h Kevin Hardy in the Dave Parks deal, took Ted Kwalick, P e n n State's fine 6-4, 230-pound tight end. With John David Crow an- Bay of the NFL quickly followed by taking Richie "Mountain" Moore, 6-7, 290, of Villanova, and the New York Giants of the NFL picked Fred Dryer, 6-5, 235, de- fensive end from San Diego State. The Chicago Bears of the NFL, who would have picked ahead of the Giants, were unable to make up their minds within the 5-min- ute limit, in effect for the first two rounds, and followed t h e Giants by drafting Rufus May- es, Ohio State offensive tackle. Ron Johnson, the Michigan -Daily-Thomas I.Copt TOM STINCIC, Michigan linebacker, shows the form that made him the second leading tackler on the Wolverine squad this season as he brings down Northwestern quarterback Dave Shel- bourne. Stincic was the third round choice of the Dallas Cow- boys in last night's football draft. nouncing his retirement, Kwalick running back who broke T o m should fit into the picture quickly Harmon's records, was taken by with the 49ers. San Francisco lat- the Cleveland Browns of the NFL, IT HEALTH SERVICE INFORMATION Mm I FLIGHTS TO EUROPE Fly Boeing 707 Jets MICHIGAN GRADUATE ASSEMBLY FRATERNITY MEN Petitions for positions on the Interfraternity Council, 1969-70, are now available at the I.F.C. offices, 1510 Student Activities Building, 662-3162. The following schedule has been established: SENIOR OFFICES Petitions due Jan. 30 Election by F.P.A. on Feb. 4, 6 Positions Open: president internal vice president administrative vice president external vice president executive secretary JUNIOR OFFICES Petitions due Feb. 4 Interviewing on Feb. 8 Positions Open: academics Big Ten Information Bureau Fraternity Relations Personnel Publications Formal Rush Special Projects Additional Information and Appropriate Forms Can Be Obtained at the I.F.C. Offices, 1510 S.A.B. University, Health Service is now seeing stu- dents on an appointment basis in an effort to decrease waiting time and more effi- ciently schedule doctors' time. A certain number of appointments will be reserved each hour for emergency walk-in patients. 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