Friday, October 1$, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Frdy coer1,16 H MCIAaAL Pace Eleven :,. Us. t~ Tanker set, relay marks By fhe Associated Press MEXICO CITY-U.S. swimming forces splashed to a perfect, rec- ord-smashing start in the Olym- pics with two gold :medals yester- day. The golds gave the United States nine for the five-day. old Games. The U.S. also :has three silvers and five bronzes for a total of 17. A quartet of teen-age girls ignited what is expected to be a lush harvest of gold medals with a narrow but double record victory in the 400-meter medley relay. Kaye Hall of Tacoma, Wash., Catie Ball of Jacksonville, ,Fla., Ellie Daniels of Elkins Park, Pa., and Sue Pederson of Sacramento, Calif.,. completed the race in 4:28.3,_ eclipsing the Olympic record and the listed world mark. The race was a two-team strug- gle from the start between the American and Australian quartets. Kaye Hall 17-year-old, and Aus-< tralia's Lynne Watson hooked up in a duel in the opening back- stroke leg with the American hold- ing' a :slight lead. Catie Ball, another 17-year-old from Jacksonville, Fla., swim- ming the breaststroke, had an edge over Judy Playfair In their duel. But Ellie Daniels of Elkins Park, Pa{, at 18 the best of the four- some, pulled away from Lyn Mac- Clements for a one-meter advant- age. Sue Pederson of Sacramento, Calif., who celebrated her 15th birthday Wednesday, swam the anchor freestyle and she really turned it on in the final 50 meters as she sped away from Australia's Penny Steinback. Then, like any happy girl, Sue broke down and cried. When the waters of the Olympic pool had subsided, the men's 400- meter freestyle relay flashed to a kes ninth Olympic gold medal -At. e ro RALPH BOSTON soars to a new Olympic record in the long jump of 27'134" to lead all qualifiers. Boston, a veteran Olympian, was upset in 1964 and looks to this year's Games as his vindication. Blacek protest disturbs IOC By The Associated Press MEXICO CITY - Swift Willie Davenport of Southern Univer- sity, claimed America's seventh gold medal with a record-tying victory in the 100-meter hurdles yesterday while Olympic officials struggled in closed meeting rooms over the racial turn the Games have taken. Davenport's time of 13.3 sec- onds tied the Olympic mark set by teammate Erv Hall of Villan- ova in the semifinals. Hall was second in 13.4, the same time as, bronze medalist ELddy Ottez of Italy. Another American, Leon Coleman of Winston-Salem, N.C., was fourth in 13:6. Davenport jumped off to a great start and went over the first- hurdle with a clear lead. By the seventh hurdle, he was two meters in front and raised his hands at the tape just as Smith had done in the 100-meter race Wednesday. Both the International Olympic Committee and the U.S. Olympic Committee met in extraordinary sessions to 6onsider the actions of Negro sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos, whose behavior following their 1-3 finish in Wed- nesday's 200-meter dash touched' off the racial controversy. The U.S. committee officially apologized to the I0C and the Mexican Planning Committee for the actions of the two athletes in a carefully worded statement that emerged from some five hours of o meetings. Meanwhile, back at Olympic E Stadium, all three medalists a smashed the world record in the t triple jump with Russia's Victor v When o stagA knocking on. dom our t1jyst. You'll find the type of company and job you've been preparing for. A company in the forefront of advancing, technology . *.with diversified capabilities . . and a healthy mix of commercial and government business. You'll be able to choose a creative career in fields such as underwater acoustics; radar; communications; space systems or computer technology. , Come and talk to us on: r,,, NOVEMBPER 4-~5 Openings for: BS, MS, and PhD Candidates in ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS PHYSICS For work in: RESEARCH and DEVELOPMENT DESIGN MANUFACTURING VALUE ENGINEERING FIELD ENGINEERING RELIABILITY ENGINEERING ENGINEERING WRITING Sign up for interviews through your Placement Office, or write Manager of College Relations; Raytheon Company, 141 Spring Street, Lexington, Massachusetts 02173. I second double record, winning in 3:31.7. The fqursome of Zac Zern of Buena Park, Calif., Steve Rerych of Paterson, N.J., Mark Spitz of Santa Clara, Calif., and Keny Walsh of Ponte Vedra, Calif., sur- daily sports. NIGHT EDITOR: PHIL BROWN MORE SPORTS, PAGE 9 Gridde, Pickings The world will not salute you. A DeGualian like character will not kiss you on both cheeks. He will not pin a medal on your chest. Your name will be all but forgotten. Who remembers such immortals as the Great Soaby? Who re- members what he is not remembered for? The Great Soaby won the Gridde Pickings (then Grid Selections)' contest of September 28, 1958 with an 18-2 score. We of the Daily Sports Staff cannot promise you fame and fortune if you enter and win Gridde Pickings. But we can promise this great, soon-to-be-forgotten hero a super fabulous, ultra-great (and just a bit greasy) pizza from the Cottage Inn if, and only if, he gets his entry to the Daily by the witching hour Friday night. Warning:- The Great Soaby will personally curse anyone whose entries total more than one. DAVID WEIR, Sports Editor (53-27 .663) - MICHIGAN, Iowa, Michigan State, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Purdue, Oklahoma, Navy, The Citadel, Tennessee, UCLA, Cornell, Missouri, Arizona. State, Texas Tech, Florida, Stanford, Mississippi, Muh- leuburg. BILL LEVIS,zAssociate Sports Editor (53-27 .663) - MICHIGAN, Iowa, Mich- igan State, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Purdue, Oklahoma, Navy, The Citadel, Ten- nessee, California, Harvard, Nebraska, Arizona State, Texas Tech, Florida, Stan-; ford, Mississippi, Muhlenburg. DOUG HELLER. Associate Sports Editor (49-31, .613) - MICHIGAN, Iowa, Michigan State, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Purdue, Oklahoma, Navy, The Citadel, Tennessee, California, Harvard, Nebraska, Arizona State, Texas Tech, Florida, Stanford, Mississippi, Muhlenburg . BOB LEES, Associate Sports Editor (48-32, .600) -- MICHIGAN, Iowa, Minne- sota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Purdue, Oklahoma, Pittsburgh, The Citadel, Tennessee, California, Harvard, Nebraska, Oregon State, Mississippi State, Florida, Washington State, Mississippi, Ursinus. MARTY BASCH AND RON HARVEY Guest Selectors (Indiana Law Students) 4 - Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Purdue, Oklahoma, Pitts- burgh, The Citadel, Alabama, UCLA, Cornell, Nebraska,. Oregon State, Texas Tech,. Florida, Stanford, Mississippi, Muhlenburg. passed the world mark of 3:32.5 and the Olympic standard of 3:33.2 Zern, Reruch and Walsh were members of the team that held the world recird before Thursday's performance. Don Scholander, who won four gold medals in the 1964 Olympics was the other member of that team. In swimming to new marks, Zorn matched Schollander's Olym- pic standard for 100 meters as he swam the opening leg in 53.4. Russia, four meters back at thet finish was clocked in 3.34.2 with Australia traveling in 3:34.7 for the bronze medal. In basketball action, Jo Jo White led a vicious U.S. attack that kept the lead except for the opening moments of the game Wednesday night as the Americans sailed by their first big test in the Olympic tournament, beating Yugoslavia, 73-58. The U.S. led at the half 36-28 and easily increased its margin in the early stages of the second half, rolling to its fourth straight vic- tory as White, wizard of the mid- court shot, looped in 24 points. z The victory was ~ the 70th straight in Olympic play for the U.S., which has never lost in the Games in basketball. The los was the first for Yugo- slavia after three triumphs. White pumped in 12 of his points in the first 20 minutes with some deadly outside shooting that shocked the tall Yugoslavians. .Davis Cup pers to 1lay tennis exhibition here' Tw~o members of the undefeated United States Davis Cup tennis team will perform in an exhibition at the University Events Building tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. Arthur Ashe, 1968 U.S. Amateur and US. Open champion, will play Clark Graebner in the feature match of the extravaganza Also performing in the exhibi- tion will be Donald Dell, captain of the Davis Cup squad, Dick Dell, Donald's brother and a member of the Michigan varsity net team, and Wolverines Brian Marcus and John Hainline. Tickets are available to the gen- eral public at two dollars, and to students, staff, and faculty at one dollar. All proceeds go to the Davis scp fund. Bilboard The Michigan Women's Field Hockey team will play Michigan State today at 4:15 on Palmer Field. UTTLE VICTIES 2 2 h a C e Saneyev taking the gold on a leap of 57 feet,% 4inches. Hungary's Guylia Zeivotzkyand Romauld Klim of Russia staged stirring battle in the hammer hrow before the Hungarian won with an Olympic record heave of 40 feet, 8 inches. Klim took the silver medal at 40-5. The throw did notmatch Zei- votsky's best effort, though. The Hungarian has a world record heave of 242 feet pending. Two Americans, Ralph Boston and Barbara Ferrell, smashed Olympic records in qualifying vents. Boston broke his own mark in the long jump with a leap of 27 feet, 1%/ inches, before Miss Ferell, from Los Angeles, shattered- the women's 200-meter record twice. Miss Ferrell, a silver medalist in the 100-meter behind Wyomia Tyus, smashed the 200-mark min- utes after Australia's Raslene Boyle matched the American girl's 22.9. Ron Freeman, an Arizona State University speedster from Eliza- beth, N.J., led the American trio into the semifinals of the 400- meter dash. winning his heat in 45.3 seconds. PAUL CAMELET MASTER TAILOR for Men and Women alterations and remodeler specializes in shortening ladies coats, slacks, and skirts. No longer with Comelet Bros. in business for himself.' 1103 S. University above the drug store 663-4881 -Associated Press TOMMIE SMITH AND JOHN CARLOS take the black protest to the Olympics. Smith (center) won the 200-meter dash with teammate Carlos finishing second. The protest is symbolized by the black glove and the two. men's staring down during the play- ing of the Star Spangled Banner. by Black Label. V I - y MY GRANOMOrHER'S COMING TO SEE THE CAMPUS THIS VI/EEKEAD F J7 I 'M WAG TO 774E %D4,zOE, ANYHOW i i 0 i 1 V RAYHOEo An Equal Opportunity Employer 4. - (Consensus in capitals) 'I. MICHIGAN at Indiana (pick score) 2. Wisconsin at IOWA 3. Minnesota at MICHIGAN STATE 4. Illinois at NOTRE DAME- 5. Northwestern at OHIO STATE 6. Wake Forest at PURDUE 7. Iowa State at OKLAHOMA 8. Pittsburgh at NAVY 9. Syracuse at PENN STATE, postponed until Dec. 7 10. Virginia Militaky at THE CITADEL I, 11. Alabama at TENNESSEE 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. 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