Saturday, October 19, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Se S O c t o b e r 1 9,.. given Black expelled; MEXICO CITY (il,-Spindly Bob Beamon soared an unbe- lievable 29 feet, 21/2 inches in the long jump and Lee Evans led an American sweep in the 400-meter dash yesterday at the troubled Olympic Games. Before the two blacks smashed world records, the Olym- pic Village was shaken by the news that sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos had been thrown off the team for their racially symbolic actions at a; medal-ceremony Wednesday. The U.S. Olympic Committee said it had taken the drastic action against" the two athletes after a threat by he Inter- national Olympic Committee, to expel the entire U.S. team unless some steps were taken. A threatened walkout by American athletes because of the suspension of the Negro sprinters failed to materialize as Evans, a, close friend of the ousted payir, ran and won the dash. Evanspaced a 1-2-3 finish of U.S. Negro sprint stars in the '400 meters. ,At the following medal ceremony Evans, Larry James and Ron. Freeman wore black berets7 as they mounted the winners' stand and gave clenched fist sa- NIGHT EDITOR: lutes .similar to those made by JOEL BLOCK Smith and Carlos at the earlier victory ceremony. - However, the three athletes took off the berets, held 8their hands at Olympic victory ceremony. Wed- their sides and faced the American nesday. flag when the Star Spangled Ban- Smith, winner of the gold medal ner was played during the medals in the 200-nieter race, and Carlos, presentation. who finished third in the same Asked at a;press interview why event, raised clenched fists in the trio had porn black beretsblack gldves and bowed their ' r 'heads while the Star Spangled Evans replied: It. was raining. Banner was playedeachwore Asked if. he planned some, form of anewsplydEch or acti In sypathy with Smith one black glove, black scarves and and Carlos, his former teammates blacksocks. at San Jose State College, Evans Although the first reaction of answered: "No comment." many Negiro athletes was to go. BCKS RESENTFUL home, a U.S. Olympic official said The U.S. Olympic Committee he was sure everything would be The .S.Olymic ommiteesmoothed out. announced A the, suspension ofsmohdut Smitand Carlos aftermidnight "There was a lot of emotion at Thursday for what it termed "un- first arid' some resentment," said typical exhibitionism" during an Ilirlmer Lodge, chairman of both the 1' AI OlvJiI. s. df thi A ua t- Peamon flies '1-Hoosier clash: Good cage classic JOHN CARLOS -Associated Press ROBERT BEAMON of El Paso, Texas, burrows his feet into the sand pit after 'a record-shattering long jump 'of 8.9 meters (29'2 "). It was his first attempt in the Olympic long jump event yesterday. i t TOM-PnE SMITH The suspensions removed both from the squad and banned them from the Olympic Village and use of the American team's facilities. Both men stayed in the city Thursday night but Carlos re- turned to the Village briefly yes- terday morning to pick up tickets. Afterabsorbing the first shock of the news which spread around the Village in early morning, Evans and Ralph Boston, world record holder ,in the long jump, said they would compete in their events. Boston took the bronze medal in the long jump. The performance of Beamon, the Texas-El Paso stringbean, and Evans made up for disappointing showings by three U.S. girls in the women's 200, won in a world rec- ord time of 22.5 seconds by Po- land's Irina Kirszenstein. RvYUN WINS Earlier, Jim Ryun, the Kansas comet, successfully kicked off a bid to become the first American in 60 years to win the Olympic metric mile, and the American basketball team captured its 71st consecutive Olympic victory by beating Panama 95-60. Californian Bill Toomey also jumped into the lead in the pun- apoplex -- doug helter Gn .o. uymnpic ana Te ima eur Athletic Union's track and field committee, "but it is cooling down." Jesse Owens, winner of four gold" medals In Berlin in 1936 and a member of the Olympic consul- tants' committee, met with Car- los, Smith and several other ath- letes late Thursday night. Owens was closeted with U.S. Olympic officials yesterday afternoon. RUNNERS BANNED Smith, and Carlos were alter- nates pn the 400-meter relay team that is due to compete today and tomorrow. r, ishing decathlon competition after two events. .r., Beamon's amazing jump exceed-, ed by almost two feet the world record of 27-4% shared by Ameri- can Ralph Boston and Igor Tor- Ovanesyan of Russia. -The leap nearly carried him out of the pit and the crowd of 50,000 in the Olympic Stadium went hysterical in near disbelief. So did Beamon, the 6-foot-3, 160-pound New York native. He ran around excitedly, waving' his hands, and then fell to his knees, overcome by emotion. The other athletes mobbed the 22- year-old Beamon and he wept in joy. Boston, the 1960 gold medal- ist; put his arms around the youngster to steady him. EVANS REBOUNDS Evans, rocked earlier in the day by the news of the suspensions of his teammates, Smith and Carlos rebounded with a sensational 43.8, Jleading the -first American medal sweep of the Games. James of Vil- lanova was second and Freeman of ArizonaState finished third. Evans' time smashed the listed world record of 44.5 held by Smith and also wiped out a 44.0 pending mark set by Evans in the U.S. team trials. James almost caught Evans at the tape and Freeman was about two strides back. The race was so close, at the finish that it took more than one half hour for the official result to be released,' Wyomia Tyus of Griffin, Ga.,, the winn'er of the 100-meter dash, led going into the home stretch but faded badly when the- Polish champion put on a tremendous burst of speed. By BOB LEES Associate Sports Editor.. Every sports fan worthy of his statistics knows one thing about the state of Indiana - they sure can play basketball down there. And every statistical-minded' football fan has confidence in this prediction on today's Michigan- Indianargame:the score will pro- bably resemble one of. those Hoosier court battles. Both the Wolverines and t h e Hoosiers have sustained only one non-conference loss to go with' three high-scoring wins. Michigan has averaged 24.5 points per game (30 after the California. loss), while Indiana has rolled for 31.5 per game (35 in the three wins). The Wolverines' totals may seem a little lower than the Hoos- iers', but one more little' statistic can be thrown in here: Indiana's defense has allowed 30.5 points per game. The name of this game, then, will be offense, sort of like when the Tigers play the Twins with the wind blowing out to center- field. And bdth teams have a one- two punch that has been the main reason their opponents' defenses have gone batty: Michigan, of course, has Ron Johnson and Den- nis Brown, while Indiana lists flarry Gonso and John Isenbarger. If Isenbarger were playing base- ball, he'd be called "flakey". There's no way to really describe that term except to recall some of the tailback's past actions, 1 i k e passing from punt formation, which end up driving coach John Pont to distraction - apd oppon- ents to defeat . What makes him so hard to de- fend against is his wide range of abilities. Last year's, 27-20 victory, over the Wolverines was engineer- ed mainly because he ran the half- back-option pass so well. This year he's already gained 397 yards on the ground, completed four of, five passes, caught two for 59 yards, averaged 42.4 yards in punt- ing, run back a -kickoff for 31 yards - and probably swept out the gym for exercise.,,'-, But Gonso doesn't' have to be content just handing off to Isen- barger and watching him do' his stuff. The junior quarterback him- self ranks tenth in the nation in total offense, rushing as often (64 attempts) as Isenbarger, while completing 37 of 73 passes and scoring four touchdowns. So far, then, the Hoosier offense years a somewhat startling re- semblance to the Wolverines' (though Johnson's one pass at- tempt last week fell far short of Isenbarger's style: it was inter- cepted). The other members of this cast add even more of a simi- larity. To parallel Garvie Craw, t he Hoosiers present Bob Pernell, who Off ense MICHIGAN Mandich (215) Penksa (225) Caldarazzo (210) Denzin (220), Broadnax (226)' Dierdorf (225) Imsland (210) Brown (175) Betts (180) Craw (211) Johnson (196) MICHIGAN Seymour (193) Goss (225) Hill (210. Parks (235) Pryor (218) Stincic (217) Moore (200) Healy (170) Curtis (184) Hoey (169)' Hartman (170) TE LT LG C RG RT RE QB FL FB TB Defense INDIANA GageI Andrews WoodI Applegate DeSalle Spickard Stolbergi Gonsoi Butcheri Fleming Isenbargeri INDIANA Bilunasi Whitei AdamsI Wolfe price Sniadecki Silas Moynihan Norman Cunningham Baughman (19 (20 (21 (19 (22 (22 (17 (19 (19 (21 (19 (21 (22 (19 (21 (22 (21 (21 (19 (18 (17 (18 .s averaging 6.7 yards per carry, more than Isenbarger in 10 fewer attempts. The Wolverine flanker combination of Paul Staroba - John Gabler is1represented by Jade Butcher (19 receptions for 399 yards and 6 TD's), while Eric Stolberg, with 11 catches for 177 yards,matches up at split end with Michigan's Jerry Imsland- The Jim Mandich tight-end slot is filled by -Al Gage (nine for 108 yards), a senior who 'has never lived up to the potential he show- d as a sophomore. When it comes to defense, how- ever, the parallel breaks down.' Michigan's totals of 13.5 points-. allowed per game (11 after Cali- fornia) is much better, than In- dianp's, even though total yardage figures are not nearly as dispar- ate. Yet Michigan's "20-20" de- fense has been stopping opponents when' it counts, while Indiana's main bulwarkr linebacker Jim Sniadecki, is out of today's posted lineup. What these starters will face to- day should be little different than last year, as far as the Hoosier of- fense g'oes. Options, from t h e quarterback or the wingback posi- tion, on pitches or passes, into the line or on sweeps, should provide the bulk of the play. Michigan, on the other hand, found an effective method of vary- ing running and passing last week, and showed a strong ability to score from far out. Put the two on the same field, then, and the result should be what the basketball people would call a "barn-burner". The Lineups LE 4, LT MG , RT E Lit LB S .S Cl8 CB )6) '3) 2) 98) Z2 ) 24) 77) 90) 3) 12) 97) 18) 10) 5) 18) 28) 14) 15) 98) 85) 78) s1) Gee whiz, Arthur's coming Throughout. the Midwest, there seems to be almost a patho-' logical lack of interest in tennis as a sport. People think it's played exclusively by rich snobs named "Chauncey" on the East Coast, for by sun tanned tennis bums who surf in their spare time in Ythe West., \ Only in Hamtramck do they know the truth, where nestled among the Pollock jokes, scmebogly has'invented a "Peaches BArtkowicz." Well, .all this has got to change. Tennis, after all, has been scientifically proven to be the sport that best combines each aspect of pt every other sport in one competitive endeavor. Got that? Anyway, the guy 'who made the decision that a major tennis exhibition should be held on the Univ'ersity of Michigan campus we all know and love at Ann Arbor must have rocks in his head. In addition to all the other problems tennis has in this part of the country, students already interested in tennis wlen they first come to Michigan have certainly lost it all after they have had a taste of exorbitant court fees or weeds on the baseline. But with the odds running 20-1 against anything coming of it, somebody has had the nerve to bring Arthur Ashe to the University Events Building to raise money for the Davis Cup fund. It is true that Ashe is at least the third best tennis player in the world and /the top amateur. The young serviceman thrilled millions on television, as he won the 1968 U.S. Open Championships in early September. But you can bet most of the people watching their tubes were not in the Midwest. Ashe and teammate Clark Graebner are the'big favorites to end the Australian domination of the Davis Cup, symbQl of world tennis supremacy, late this year. Graebner is coming to the Events Building to'o. He will face Ashe in a two-of-three sets match. Incidentally, Ashe and Graebner do more to cldbber the stereotypes of what tennis players' are than anyone else you can f think of. Ashe is black. As a youngster in Richmond, Virginia, he was thrown off the local tennis courts. Graebner is a former star at Northwestern University in Illinois. He actually played on a team that won the Big Ten- championship in one of his three varsity years. Ths is a rarity, of course, since every- one knows Michigan takes that 'crown 90 per cent of the time. The captain of the Davis Cup team is Donald DeI. His brother Dick is currently captain of the Michigan tennis team, which plays almost its entire season in the spring term after most of the students go home for the year. The two Dells will square off in a doubles match against Ashe and Graebner. nGAlso on the program is a match between Wolverine varsity players Brian Marcus and Jon Hainline. Hainline has more or less a classical style but Marcus is a masher with short legs and a big trunk. When is this match, anyway? Despite rumors to the contrary, it's Sunday, Sunday, Sunday, Sunday at 1:30 p.m. Tickets are a buck for students. This could be the last chance people in this area will ever get to see tennis of this caliber. COME IN FOR DINNER ON SUNDAY ENTERTAINMENT Monday-Saturday FINE FOOD ENTERTAIN- MENT 314 S. Fourth Ave. 3 P..-1 A 761-3548 V. -Associated Press LEE EVANS, winner of the 400-meter run in yesterday's Olympic games, and his teammates Larry James and Ron Freeman (right), quietly accept their medals without semblance of the black power protest which occurred Wednesday. ItM a-r a not often engineer gets to design cornpany. / PACKARD Ca r Wash 3070 Packrd-I block E. of Plat Announces Its GRAND W OPNN FRI., $AT., SUN.-OCT. 18, 19, 20 c Yes, we widl actually GIVE AWAY 25c coin to EVERY car duing the hours of 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. during our grand FRE opening just to get acquainted. FEATURING 2 CONVENIENT METHODS ,; : , "MIND EXPANDING DRUGS AND RELIGION" Prof. Edmund Anderson, Ph.D. Research Pharmacologist University of Illinois 7 p.m. Sunday, October 20 UNIVERSITY REFORMED CHURCH. (E. Huron Of Fletcher) 10:30a.m. The Pleasure Principle" DO-IT-YO;URSELF -Let High Pressure Spray Dolthe Work -Wash, Rinse & Wax --4 Large Boys -No Waiting in Long Lines l'-"Iv AUTOMATIC -Only One in Ann Arbor -Never Get Out of Your Car -East, Only 2 M.in -Nothing Touches Car Except Spray When he does, he tends to take care of his own kind. He designs a company that is one heck of a good place for an engineer to work. You can tell LTV Aerospace Corporation is an engineering oriented company. The ratio of engineers to everybody else is exceptionally high, The engineer who wants to be a technical specialist here can do as well as the engineer who gets into administration. The engineer who wants to keep working on an advanced degree can do it right here. And the projects: they range from deep space to the ocean floor - military and commercial aircraft, V/STOL; Ianch vehicles: extra vehicular No question about it: the engineers at LTV Aerospace are taking care of themselves. An LTV Aerospace representative will tell you how to get inon it. CAMPUS INTERVIEWS WEDNESDAY, OCT. 23 Schedule an apoointment or write: iI .I