Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 21, 1968 .,e. igt.HEMIHIANDAL y ., # Put Your Car On A Dirt-free Diet - You know it's clean because you do it yourself Hunsicker named associate BHopefu athletic director by Regents By MARK HALPERT . Irish v Wash, Rinse and Wax! wAs;1lfo ? 5 Minutes- 25c U LIBERTY CAR WASH A .--- 318' w Liberty St OPEN 24 HOURS Win or Lase: By JOEL BLOCK, Professor Paul A. Hunsicker, chairman of the department of physical education for men, yes- terday was named associate direc- tor of physical education. The action, made yesterday by the Regents at their regular monthly meeting, fills one of the two associate directorship posi- tions created last February dur- ing a reorganization of the ath- letic department. The other" posi- tion of associate director of in- tercollegiate athletics has not been filled yet. Iunsicker, who has been a lead- ing lisearcher in physical fitness at the University, will be Athletic Director Don Canham's assistant on matters concerning recreation, club sports, and intramurals. He has been a member of the Michigan faculty since 1949 and was director of the country's first survey of youth fitness during the 1957-1958 school year for the American Association of Health, Physical Education, and Recrea- tion. He also conducted a second na- tional survey for the United States Office of Education in 1964-1965. Hunsicker has paid strict atten- tion to the physical fitness of American youth and has said that Americans still break records at the Olympic games, but the young people in general are not as fit as they should be. He also is, an exponent of the theory that physical skills and fit- ness, unlike mental skills, can be and are retained only through continual daily exercise. Hunsicker holds degrees from Syracuse University, Springfield College (Mass.), and theUniver- sity! of Illinois. He taught at Our schedule -is simply tough," commented Lord Ara Parsegian onNotre Dame's first two encoun- ters. Next week they face number one ranked Purdue, but if they so much as glance into the future the Fighting Irish may beupset today by the Sooners of Oklahoma. For the third straight year the Terry Hanratty Jim Seymour com- bo will lead the Irish offense. Joining this comoo in the back-, field will be Jeff Zimmerman, at fullback, and Bob Gladieux and Coley O'Brien in the halfback slots. Zimmerman and Gladieux are returning starters, having aver- aged five yards per carry each lst NATIONAL fce Sooners Texas will be returning back to its old ball control game, but un- less ??super?? Bill Bradley can light the sky with some of his own fireworks the Cougars may just keep on rolling. Pick: Houston Gene Stallings will take hi* Texas Aggies into dangerous ter- ritory tonight as they invade Bat- on Rouge to take on the always dangerout Louisiana State Tigers. The Aggies, although they enjoy a higher ranking, are a three point underdog as they try to prove their seven ,consecutive victories at the end of the 1967 season was not a fluke. Texas Christian University has been marked the darkhorse in the Southwest Conference race, and it should get off to a fine start as they play a weak Georgia Tech unit which is going through a re- building period - Duke, Michigan's next oppo- sent, will be a big underdog at South Carolina: while Navy, Mich- igan's last non-league opponent, is a two touchdown underdog against Penn State, the power- house of the East. The name to watch is Bill Bol- den as UCLA plays host to Pitts- Terry Hanratty (5) hands off to burgh. Bolden will try to replace a crucial situation in one of the Heisman Trophy winner Gary Be- st season. Ara Parseghian's foot- ban, and if he can fit in as well as son in South Bend against tough Mike Phipps did at Purdue last year UCLA might very well rise to national conteption, who scored two long passes, will Excluding the Big Ten games lead the Houston attack. Texas is the fireworks will be centered a one touchdown favorite, but around South Bend, Baton Rouge, here too the betting is more on and Austin; and in these cities the conjecture than anything else. aying is 'anything 'goes.' - - ----- - -- ------ MONO TONY: Benyal T w -100th. f6- PAUL HUNSICKER r w s t , e S x 3. i f Springfield College before joining the Army Air Force during World War II, and currently holds the rank of lieutenant colonel. The new associate director taught at Illinois after the war before join- ing the Michigan faculty. He co-authored "Applied Tests and Measurements in Physical Ed- ucation," two research reports for Wright. Air Development Center, reports on the two national sur- veys of youth fitness, and many other, professional articles. Miami Swamps IWildcats, 28-7 MIAMI, (A') - Strongarmed David Olivo hurled three touch- down passes last night as the Miami Hurricanes launched their' football season with a 28-7 victory over Northwestern. Starting slowly, the Hurricanes were in a 7-7 deadlock with the Wildcats at halftime. Then Olivo, primarily a running quarterback in the past, unleashed an atrial. attack that produced three touch- downs in 9 minutes, 46 seconds. The victory brought s w e e t re- venge to Miami. Rated fifth in the nation in last year's preseason rankings, they were embarrassed by two-touchdown u n d e r d o g Northwestern in their opening game 12-7. I -_ season. many to terbacks ting his halfback 1)UTLOOK n;,; ,O'Brien, considered by be one of the finest quar- in the nation, will be get- first opportunity In the slot. En Go to Blaises' Hearty Post Gam e Bullet. Beverage is icuded. And as mueh cider, on tap as you can drink. -4.40 if we win- $4.60 if we losC : E1RATON ANN' AR BOR INN , FOURTH& HURON., DANCING THURS. THRU SAT. 9 to 2 A.M. CREDIT CARDS. " CALL, 769-2455, a guide to: Apartments Bars Restaurants with maps and hints on life in Ann Arbor $1.00 Available at the Book Stores ,'' E i ' G O' Brien- w a s predominantly known as a rollout quarterback, and the Sooner defense cannot af- ford to have their safetymen rush on the option since O'Brien is a brilliant executor of the roll-out play, The offensive line anchored by All - American tackle candidate George Konz, and tight end Jim Winegardner. The entire offensive unit is strong and 'experienced, and with the added threat of O'Brien at halfback it could compose one of the most explosive units in the country. Unlike two years ago when the Sooners were whitewashed 38-0, the Irish will not have an expe- rienced defensive unit., Headed by 6'5" 270 lb. tackle Mike Mckoy, the Irish defensive line will have five returning line- men, but will not be as rugged without the services of Kevin Hardy now in the pros, Safetyman Tom Quinn will be the only letterman starting in the Defensive backfield, which includes four line backing and three safe- ty slots. Oklahoma has its own All-Amer- "They will be snorting blue flames," commented Texas Coach Darrell Royal, acknowledging his team's misfortunes of their sched- uled game with the Houston Cou- gafs, who open ed their season by assaulting Tulane and coming away with a 54-7 verdict. Houston, unr'anked in the pre- season polls, "is the team to, watch," commented Royal even be- fore last week's victory catapault- ed the Cougars into 12th plaee in the AP standings. NOTRE ,DAME QUARTERBACK fyllback Ron Dushney' (38) ina Fightin' Irish's eight victories la ball machine opens the 1968 seas Oklahoma today. . ican passer in Bob Warmack. War- mack is a fine scrambler, and his deadly accuracy on the short pass- es could destroy the Irish. Joining Warmack in the backfield are fullback Mike Harper, .tailback Steve Owens, and wingback Ed- die Hinton. Owens was the lead- ing scorer in the Big Eight last season despite riding the bench for half the season. it was the 10th straight victory for the American League champ- ions, matching the longest win- ning streak in the majors t h i s year and Detroit's 100th of the season. Northrup's first shot followed a single by Kaline in the sixth and made the score 3-2'. In the eighth, Kaline, who had four hits, lined his 10th of the year, tying the score.. Then Norm Cash singled and Northrup sock- ,ed his 21st. Price followed with his third. Bob Olson, Notre Dame's only - -- returning linebacker, is a doubtfhl starter along with sophomore line- By The Associated press backer Jim Dright, both hampered WASHINGTON - Jim North- by leg injuries. rup"'hammered a pair of two-run. -te g w o homers and Al Kaline and Jim Both teams engage in wide OPel Price added'solo shots as the De-- football, and an upset by the troit Tigers whipped the Wash- Sooners would not be a surprise. ington Senators 6-3 last night. Pick: Oklahoma most appearances by a pitcher in one season as he helped the Chri- cago White Sox to a 2-1 victory over Baltimore. Carl Yastrzemski % rapped two singles and his 21st home run of the season, leading' the Boston Red Sox to a 4-3 ve- tory over the New York Yankees. In the National League, Steve Blass fired a two-hitter for his seventh shutout and eighth con- secutive victory 'as Pittsburgh wowned the Chicago Clubs 5-0. In other actionr usty Staub fol- lowed Bob Aspromonte's tying sacrifice fly with a game-winning single in 'the ninth inning as the Houston Astros scored a 'see-saw 7-6 victory over Cincinnati yes- terday night. The Astros had scored two un- earned runs in the eight for a 5-4 lead, but the Reds came back with two in the ninth on two hits by John ,Bench and Tony Perez. In Philadelphia Jery Grote's two out single drove in the' win- ning run In the ninth inning and gave the New York Mets a 3-2 victory over the Phillies in the first game of a Twi-night double, header Friday. Rich Allen broke his own Na- tional league strikeout record for a single season when he fanned for the 151st time in Philadel- phia against the New York Mets. THE CHILDREN'S COMMUNITY SCHOOL is looking for a parcel of land approximate-. ly 10,000 sq. ft. to lease by or be given the, use of for 1 yr. as a site for a mobile class- room structure. CALL 761-8167, 761-0663 ii h =Omni I Paul Gipson, wh yards last week, anc II, um1 f o ran for 115 The only dismal note ii an d Elmo Wright, otherwise ioyous day for Detroit came with the announcement that Tigei outfielder Willie H orton was admitted to Henry Ford Hos- i apital. for treatment sinusitus, an inflammation of a sinus.,j A spokesman for the club s ai d Horton might be confined to the hospital over the weekend, missing the three-game series with Wash- ington. In other American League ac- tion, reliever Wilbur Wood tied the American League record for Major Leag Come GO down TONIGH T 'til 6 P.M. NG OUT 0 Iw i . __ _. :____a .. -r 'a' I gs -S' ud . i AT .{Tf iAAT ALT TL {f TTL I I AME] Us' E55 t 1209 S. University ow ON xDetroit Baltimore Boston Cleveland New York ,Oakland' Minnesota California Chicago Washington x-Clinched RICAN LEAGUE W' L Pet. GB 100 54 .651 - 87 68 .561 13. 82 72 .533 18 81 73 .526 19 80 74 .519 20 78 X76 .507 22 t 73 81 .473 27. 66 88 .429 34 64 90 .416 36' 59 93 .388 40, pennant JodBSL MEN'S and BOYS CLOTHING STORES~ SALE NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet xst. Louis 94 60 .610 San Francisco 83 71 .539 Cincinnati 79 74 .516 Chicago ' 79 76 .509 Atlanta 78 76 .506 Pittsburgh 76 77 .497 Philadelphia 72 83 .463 Los Angeles 71 83 .461 New York 70 85 .452 -Houston 69 86 .446 x-Clinched pennant TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Pittsburgh New York at Philadelphia Cincinnati at Houston St Louis at Los Angeles Atlanta at San Francisco YESTERDAY'S GAMES PittsburghA5, Chicago 0 New York 5, Philadelphia 4 New York 3, Philadelphia 2 Houston F 7, Cincinnati 6 St. Louis at Los Angeles, inc. 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