Tuesday, October 15, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Poge Seven Tu s aO t b r11 1 6 HE M C G N D I YPge e Hines, Matson, start U. s. ball ,By The Associated Press MEXICO CITY - Randy Mat- son, the mammoth shot put king from Pampa, Tex., and sprinter Jim Hines of Texas Southern won1 America's first g o 1d medals as United States track and field strength asserted itself at the Olympic Games yesterday. Americans captured two other medals with George Woods of Los Angeles taking the silver in the shot put behind Matson and Charlie Greene of Seattle finishing third for the bronze behind Hines in the 100-meter dash. Hines put on a spectacular fin- Michigan's Ron Iptschinski, after surviving Sunday's, quali- fying' runs, faded yesterday in his preliminary heat from sec- and to fifth in the stretch and failed to make today's medal field of eight. Only top four in- ishers in each preliminary qual- ified for the finals. ish and:was timed in 9.9 seconds for tie 100, shattering the Olym- pic record and tying the pending world mark. Matson heaved the 16-pound; ball 67 feet, 4% inches and won the shot put by better than a foot over/ teammate Woods. The 6-foot-61/, 265-pound giant, dai Y s IPo rtS NIGHT EDITOR: BILL DINNER who finished .second to America's Dallas Long at Tokyo four years ago, had shattered the Olympic record with a qualifying heave of 67-101/ Sunday. He holds t h e world record at 71-51/2. Woods, a 300-pounder, was sec- ond with a toss of 66 feet, 1/4 inch. Russia's Eduard Ouschin took the bronze medal with 65-11, accounting for his country's first medal of the, Games. Dave Maggard" of Mountain View, Calif., America's other shot put qualifier, finished fifth with 63-9. Hines thrilled a crowd of 65,000 packed into the Olympic Stadium .with his spectacular performance. He beat Lennox Miller, a Southern; California student from Jamaica, who was second, and Greene. Hines, Greene and Ronnie Ray Smith of San Jose, Calif., all have marks of 9.9 up for recognition in the event. The Olympic 100 car- ries with it, even if unofficially, ti- tle of the world's fastest human.' Shortly after Matson had given the United States its first gold medal, Hines and Greene, w h o both had won thei' semifinal heats, went alfter the 100 crown. After one false start, the field got off with Greene apparently hold- ing a slight lead at 40 meters. Then Hines put on a tremen- dous burst of speed and( won by at least one meter over Miller. After 'Hines passed the finish line, he jogged back and hugged Greene in joy. The two are long-, time friends and rivals. Then he wandered jubilantly in front of the stands, waving to the.crowd as the spectators roared their ap- proval. oiling Bob Seagren and John Pennel, America's premier pole vaulters, soared over the qualifying height of 16 feet, 1 inch to gain the final Wednesday. But K C. Carrigan, a 17-year-old schoolboy from Or- ting, Wash., who has cleared 17 feet, failed three times and was eliminated. He was one of two nonqualifiers in a group of" 13. Jarvis Scott of Los Angeles and 15-year-old Esther Stroy of Wash- ington, D.C., moved into the semi- finals of the women's 400-meter run with second place finishes in their preliminary heats. The United States, defending basketball champions in the Olym- pic basketball tournament, steam- rollered Senegal 93-36 for an im- pressive second straight triumph. The American five led by 6- foot-8 Spencer Haywood, stormed to a 44-15 halftime advantage over the outmanned Africans and con- tinued 'to pull away in the final minutes. Senegal managed to tie the score 6-6 at 3;06 but then was held scoreless for more than nine min- utes while the U.S. ran off 19 straight points. Haywood, a 19-year-old colle- gian from Detroit, paced the U.S. attack with 16 points. Bill Hosket 6-foot-7 Ohio State grad, tossed in 14 points and Charley Scott of the University of North Carolina added 12. It was the 68th straight victory without a defeat for the U.S. in Olympic competition since the game was introduced into the in- terntaional competition in 1932. The Americans will play the Phil- ippines today. They downed Spain 81-46 in their opener Sun- day. Vvhel C pizza .(1is falwys(j> in go ast"' ILLAGE - - T -- ® 1f VPIZZA IPARLOR Sing along entertainment with Charlie and Kate, Wed.-Sun., 81 Come in and sample the widest selec tion of imported beer in Ann Arbor-18 kinds. Crisp, cold salads served with your fov- i ; JIMMY IJINES of the U.S. break Bob Hayes won the 100 in 1964 to win the vold medal in Olymp at Tokyo with a 10.0. He t h e n shattered the Olympic recordm signed a professional football ,,n- American, Charlie, Greene (r), tract and has starred as a flank-: er with the Dallas Cowboys. rica Viscopoleanu took the golda Angela Nemeth of Hungary won medal with a world's record !eap the gold medal in the women's javelin with a toss of 198 feet, % of 22 feet, 4% inches.2 inch. Rumania's Mihaela Penes The old mark was 22-2% held took the silver medal a n d Eva by Englands Mary Rand. That Janke of' Austria was the bronze was also the Olympic record. See- winneru ond was Sheila Sherwood of Great In the m - Britain and Tatjana Talysheva:of MEN ON THE MOVE:, Expansion draft shuffles NL teams] By The Associated Press MONTREAL - The San Diego Padres tapped outfielder Ollie Brown as the No 1 selection and the Montreal Expos raided the Pittsburgh Pirates for three aging stars-Maury Wills, Donna Clen- denon and Manny Mota-in yes- terdays National League expan-- sion draft. Two other major names were selected on the second round with Montreal taking outfielder Jesus Alou of' San Francisco and San Diego picking- shortstop Zoilo Versalles of Lod Angeles. Having lost the coin flip for the' first round, the Expos selected Mota, not necessarily their No. 1 choice from the Pirate roster butl the player they felt Pittsburgh was most likely to add to their protected list once the first roundu was over. The Expos - apparently were right,, for Clendenon was still available at the start of the sec- ond round and Wills was available at the! start of the third. rThre was one first-round de- velopment greeted with consider- able eyebrow raising-the selec- tion of Dave Giusti by the Padres as their second pick. Giusti had been acquired by St. LQuis just. after the World Series Gridde Pickings' In- the unpredictable world of football, the Gridde Pickings alone, remains ;s the bastion of stability predictability. As in the weeks before, there' again was a winner, the talented Roy Gordet. "Immortal Roy." will long be remembered by football progonosti- cators, for possessing the temerity to predict a Michigan victory over State. But,' one can not help thinking of .all these latent predicting- power GiIdde Pickings. If the material gain of one beautiful Cottage Inn pizza is not sufficiently stimulating, then just ask Roy of all the personal satis- faction and confidence -he has gained. So, get those entries in by Friday midnight and follow in Roy's footpaths. last week in a trade that sent catcher Johnny Edwards to Hous- ton. It had been generally expected that the Cardinals would include diusti among their 15 protected' players. The ,Padres other first round picks in order were: pitcher Dick Selma from the New York Mets, infielder Jose Arcia from the Chi- cago Cubs and, pitcher Al Santo- rini from Atlanta. After Mota, the Expos selected outfielder Mack Jones from Cin- cinnati, Catcher John Bateman from Houston, infielder-outfielder Gary Sutherland from Phildadel- phia and pitcher John Billingham from Los Angeles. On the second round, Montreal picked besides Clendenon and Alou pitchers Mike Wegener from Philadelphia. Skip Guinn from Atlanta and Bill Stoneman from Chicago. San Diego's second round picks in order were: Pitcher Clay Kirby of St. Louis catcher Fred Kendall of Cincinnati, outfielder Jerry Mo- rales of -New York, outfielder Nate Colbert of Houston and Versailles. Former American Leaguer Jim Mud Cat Grant was selected by Montreal in the fourth round of the draft. -N Russia was third. Jay, Silvester, a 245-pound in- surance salesman from Smithfield, Utah, broke the Olympic discus record with an opening throw of 207 feet, 9% inches to lead three U'S. qualifiers into today's finals. Silvester, 31, is the world record holder in the event and has a mark of 224-5 pending. Al Oerter, the 32-year-old de- fender who is, going after an un- ,precedented fourth gold medal in the event, set the old Olympic record of 202-1% four years ago at Tokyo. Monday the 260-pound- er from West Islip, N.Y., did 194-9, fifth best among the 12 qualifiers. Gary Carlsen of Los Angeles was -Associated Press ks the tape in the 100-meter dash pie competition yesterday. Hines with a 9.9 dash; while another finished third. I one notch ahead of Oerter with a toss of 198-0%. Wyomia Tyus, the defending Olympic champ from Griffin, Ga., and Barbara Ferrell of Los An- geles each won' a .pair of prelimi- nary heats in the women's 100- meter dash zipping into today's semi-finals along with Margaret Bailes of Eugene, Ore Miss Tyus ran her second heat in 11.0 seconds, one-tenth faster than the world record she shares with Miss Ferrell and Polish sprinters Irena Kirszenstein and EwaiKlobukowska. But her time was disallowed because of an aid- ng wind of 2.7 meters peg second. The wind also erased Miss Fer- rell's 11.1 clocking in the next heat then dipped below the 2.0 meters- per-second limit as M i s a Kirs- zenstein again matched the mark in her heat. Wilma Rudloph of the U.S. zip- ped to an 11.0 Olympic clocking in winning at Rome in 1960, has been officially recognized. r [ ; orite pizza setting. in our comfortable rustic 3411 Washtenaw - Just West of Arborland- 971-5900 ...there is no career that cai match business in diversity of intellectual interest . . . A vigorous, free society calls for the highest type of business leadership , ~ THE STANFORD UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL OF BUSINESS invites you to megt its Admissions Representative' MR. TERRY MAHURON, Assistant to the Dean of Admissions, on October 21, to discuss the Stanford M.B.A. and Ph-D. Programs in' Administration. Appointments to meet with Mr. Mahuron may be made through DR. EVART W. ARmis, Director of Placement. The M.B.A. Program is a two-year general management course particularly designed for students 'who have majored in liberal arts, humanities, science, and engineering. The purpose, of the Doctoral Program is to train scholars for the stimu- lating challenge open to busin'ess educators, researchers, and innovators. CIVIL ENINEERS WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF H IGHWAYS Highway engineering is a re- warding career and the State of Washington is an exciting place to work and live. Every phase of highway civil engineering is employed in the Washington Highway Department. Representatives from the Wash- ington Department of Highways will be on the University of Mi- chigan campus, Thursday, Octo- ber 24, 1968 interviewing civil engineers. , Iterested students please signup for an interview at your campus engineering placement office. i 1. MICHIGAN at Indiana 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. (pick score) Wisconsin at Iowa Minnesota at Michigan State Illinois at Notre Dame Northwestern at Ohio State Wake Forest at Purdue Iowa State at Oklahoma Pittsburgh atNavy Syracuse at Penn State Virginia Military at The Citadel 11. Alabama at Tennesseei 12. UCLA at California 13. Cornell at Harvard 14. Missouri at Nebraska 15. Arizona State vs. Oregon State 16. Texas Tech vs. Mississippi State 17. Florida at North Carolina 18. Stanford vs. Washington State 19. Southern Mississippi at Mississippi 20. Ursinus at Muhlenburg LET US STYLE YOUR HAIR TO FIT YOUR PERSONALITY I * 8 BARBERS * No Waiting The Dascola Near Michigan' Barbers Theatre I a VOICE-SDS GIVE... A PINT OF BLOOD To supplement a fund for needy students who will then be able to receive ALL the blood they need FREE when they are injured. So that' hardship cases in Ann Arbor might be able to have the blood they couldn't ordinarily afford. The Red Cross Blood Clinic will be in the Michigan Union Ballroom Thursday and Friday, 10:00 to 4:00. The students and citizens of the Ann Arbor area are counting on you. Give . . so that others might live. Sponsored' by Michigan Interfraternity council Right now we're in communications, military command and control, air traffic control, transportation, medical information, education, urban planning. We have openings for systems engineers, electronic engineers, systems analysts, mathematicians. ON CAMPUS, OCT. 21-22 SIGN UP NOW AT THE PLACEMENT OFFICE...h'" An Equa Opporunity mploye Or rie fr ore information: Mr LJ Glinos. College Relations Coordi nator The MITRE corporation, 4000 Middlesex Turnpike, Bedford, Mass. Tues., 7:30,2nd floor, S.A.B. * Academic Reform " Election Issues I ! i Education Committee No. 2 Meeteing Thursday, 4:00 2nd floor S.A.B. r A TUESDAY, Oct. 15, 8 P.M., Multipurpose Room, Undergrad Library "'THE UNIVERSITY IN AMERICAN SO (ETY- AN END OF: IDEOLOOY" r UNIVERSITY CHARTER & CALEDONIAN AIRWAYS EUROPE FLIGHTS 1969 SIGN-UP ON BOEING 707 JET AIRCRAFT FLIGHT 1--May 7-June 24 7 wks. $199 FLIGHT 6*-Dec. 21-Jan. 8 Christmas Holidays $175 FRIDAY, OCT. 18 3 P.M. Rm. 100 FLIGHT 2-May 15-Aug. 20 14 wks. $204 TUESDAY, OCT. 22 6 P.M. Rm. 150 FLIGHT 3-June 27-Aug. 25 81/2 wks. $229 FLIGHT 4-June 2-June 29 4 wks. $199 WEDNESDAY OCT 23 6 P.M Rm 150 FLIGHT,5-July 8-Aug. 17 6 wks. $214 -. - MICHAEL NOVAK suggests that the university is to our society what the church once was. "Radical stu- dents turn upon their professors as protestant re- formers upon complacent and powerful medieval churchmen. . . The students protestonts are saying that the old doctrines are wrong, the theories are inadequate, the 'professors are blind to too many realities of life. The reformation is theoretical as well as practical. We have torevise our conception of knowledgeand of the role of science, our view of All flights are DETROIT-LONDON-DETROIT HUTCHENS HALL LAW SCHOOL) WAIT LISTS WILL BE TAKEN for each flight. FX: x 'n<4?ry ourselves and of the world. The issues involved, in I 11 I II I - '-- ~ . - . __