PAGE SIB THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24,1965 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1963 r o Impressive In Defeat ALL BIG TEN TEAM: Wolverines Grab Four Spots By CHUCK VETZNER ed the epitome of glitter. Ken Maxey, who looks like a! Sullivan, a 6'4" prep All-Ameri- smudge on the floor at 5'9", also? If there are .three things every can from Wisconsin who has miss- did his best to upset Russell. At freshman boy should learn, they ed most of practice with a broken one point he drew a charging foul are- 1) Don't fall asleep in an foot, passed behind his back with on Russell when Cazzie was streak- astro lecture. 2) Tell freshman ease and at one point fired a pass ing down on a fast break. In a girls you are a sophomore. 3) toward the basket while dreamily similar situation, Maxey became Don't mess with the Caz. gazing at the middle of the court. daring and swiped the ball. Somewhere a 1 o n g the line, White Hazzard Maxey was equally talented on freshman basketball coach Tom If Bill Bradley is called "The offense serving as playmaker and Jorgenson failed to point out the White 'O'," with experience, Sul- troubleshooter. In the second half, last rule to his fledglings. The re- livan, who was a forward in high he gobbled up an errant varsity sult was a 108-80 loss to the var- school, could become the white pass and began to march the sity last night but the defeat Walt Hazzard. length of the floor. Well before he might have been much worse if reached midcourt he .found him- the frosh had minded their elders. ! D'D y self staring at Russell and Oliver "The freshman came at us fly- Darden who were inten't on sepa- ing," chuckled head coach Dave ' A T rating Maxey and the ball. T ui Tickets Tickets for the opening game of the basketball season against Tennessee here on December 1 go on sale today at the ticket office, State and Hoover, be- tween 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. ! Strack. "They had a lot of poise abd enthusiasm." Guts and Ability They also had oodles of ability and the guts to go out and try to stop the defending Big Ten champs. And when that's the goal, the player you try to outmaneuver is Cazzie Lee Russell, the Zeus of Michigan basketball. Russell flipped in 19 points and made some dandy passes, but he got a good going over from his greenhorn opponents. At one point guard Bob Sullivan gave Cazzie a close-up view of his elbow and at times even out-flash- Russell Darden Dill Clawson Thompson Myers Bankey Pitts Tillotson Brown Delzer Slobodnik Peaks F Stewart McClellan Adams Maxey Sullivan Maundrell Edwards Montross Wilber 8 3-3 19 13 0-0 26 2 3-4 7 6 3-3 15 5 0-0 10 6 1-2 13 1 0-0 2 1 3-6 5 1 0-0 2 1 1-2 3 1 0-0 2 0 0-0 0 0 4-4 4 45 18-24 108 RE SHMEN 10 1-4 21 6 0-0 12 4 3-4 11 5 3-3 13 1 4-5 6 3 0-1 6 0 3-5 3 2 0-0 4 2 0-1 4 33 14-23 80 Ballerina's Grace But en showed the grace of a ballerina and the speed of a thoroughbred as he side-stepped the two swatting foes. He looked like he was in the midst of a drib- bling drill where you slalom through a batch of folding chairs. Another meddlesome youngster was Dennis Stewart, a 6'7" high forward from Steelton, Pa. Ap- propriately, his alma mater is Steelton Highspire. Stewart's another former All- American, but this is a freshman squad where anyone who isn't at least all-City must feel like a fighter showing up without his trunks. Master Shooter More important than his trophy- case is Stewart's shooting, which is masterful. He has a lovely jumper which has a marked pro- pensity to fall in the basket. Rus- sell's job was to guard him. Ste- wart scored 21 points. But the crowd came mainly to get a preview of the big boys, and they were not disappointed. The varsity was tough when they had to be, despite the best efforts of the frosh. CHICAGO RP-Illinois' record- smashing fullback Jim Grabowski1 and Michigan State's halfback{ Clint Jones and safety George Webster were unanimous choices on the All-Big Ten team an-{ nounced yesterday.t The team, consisting of 11 of- fensive and 11 defensive players, was chosen by a panel of 11 writers.t Michigan placed halfback Carl Ward and tackle Tom Mack on7 the offensive squad, while half- back Rick. Volk and All-America Bill Yearby at tackle made the de- fensive team. On the second team, Wolverine captain Tom Cecchini represented Michigan, being selected as a line- backer. Wolverine quarterback W a 11 y Gabler, end Jack Clancy, and half- back Rick Sygar received honor- able mention. Michigan State claimed six of the 22 first team spots, while Pur- due and Michigan had four each. Northwestern, -Indiana ,and Wis- consin were the only teams not to have a player named to the first team. The 1965 AP.All-Big Ten team: Offense- Ends, Bob Hadrick, Purdue; Gene Washington, Mich- igan State; tackles, Tom Mack, Michigan; Karl Singer, Purdue; guards, John Niland, Iowa; Doug Van Horn. Ohio State; center, Larry Kaminski, Purdue; quarter- back. St e ve Juday, Michigan' State; halfbacks, Clint Jones, Michigan State; Carl Ward, Mich- igan; fullback, Jim Grabowski, Illinois. Defense - Ends, Aaron Brown, Minnesota; Bubba Smith, Mich- igan State; tackles, Jerry Shay, Purdue; Bill Yearby, Michigan; linebackers, Dwight Kelly, Ohio0L State; Don Hansen, Illinois; Ron Goovert, Michigan State; backs, ar tans Lead ArkansasI souri, meets Florida in the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans. Florida, up- set 16-13 by Miami, vacated its Top Ten lease. Tennessee, No. 9, plays in the Bluebonnet Bowl and Texas Tech, No. 10, in the Gator Bowl against Georgia Tech. The Top Ten with first place votes in parentheses, season records -and total points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: George Webster, Michigan State: McKelvey, Northwestern: B o b Rick Volk, Michigan; John Fill. Apisa, Michigan State. Ohio State: Ron Acks, Illinois. Defense: Second team offense: Ends - Bo Batchelder, Illinois: Ends-Bill Malinchak. Indiana: Jim Long, Purdue: tackles, Bill Cas B a n a s z e k, Northwestern; Ridder. Ohio State; Gary Eickman, tackles, Gale Gillingham, Minne- Illinois; linebackers, Harold Lucas, sota; Jim Burns, Northwestern; Michigan State; Jack Calcaterra, guards, Paul Faust, Minnesota: Purdue: Tom Cecchini. Michigan; John Karpinski, Michigan State; backs. Don Japinga, Michigan center, Boris Dimitroff, Michigan State: John Charles, Purdue; Tom State; backs, Bob Griese, Purdue; Sakal, Minnesota; Tom Brigham, Tom Barrington, Ohio State; Bob Wisconsin. :,, 4," x a :'s STEAK AND SHAKE 13 13 South University RIB-EYE STEAK Two Eggs, Potatoes, and Toast ..........$1.35 LIVER AND ONIONS Potatoes, Bread and Butter .............$1.00 -Daily-Jim Lines Icers Open Season w nit west By JIM TINDALL After five .weeks of daily prac- tice (skating, skating, and more skating)Michigan's hockey team will be the first winter sport to open its regular season as the icers meet Western Ontario in a Friday-Saturday home series this weekend. Faceoff time for both games will be 8 p.m. at the Coliseum. Although the student portion of the crowd might be smaller than usual because of the Great Turkey migrations; Coach Al Renfrew is looking for an excellent series and added, "Western Ontario will probably be our toughest non- conference opponent before we head into WCHnA play. (For those following WCHA ac- tion which began last weekend: Colorado College beat Michigan State twice, the second game in overtime, and Michigan Tech also bopped Minnesota-Duluth twice.) Rugged Conference Western Ontario plays in a rugged conference along with schools like McMaster, Queens and Montreal. Last year they finished with an 11-4-1 mark, and the Mustangs lost to Montreal in the Eastern finals of the Canadian collegiate tourney only to see Montreal go on to win the nation- al crown. The Canadian schools in this league play under two unusual rules: first, that a student can transfer schools (even within the conference) and be immediately eligible to play, and second that graduate students are eligible to play on the team. There are some interesting consequences to both of these rules. With regard to the first, Dave Leeson, the center on. Western Ontario's first line played at Mc- Master last year and played the season two years ago at still an- other conference school. Former 'M' Captain As for the second, Larry Bab- cock, Michigan, hockey captain three years ago, is the team cap- tain and is playing left wing on the Mustangs' first line. Last year Babcock, who is working on his law degree, was voted the Most Valuable Player on the Western Ontario team. Renfrew described Babcock yesterday, "as a very fine player with an awful lot of hockey experience." Experience seems to be the forte of the Mustangs as they will put a team composed almost entirely of graduate students on the ice this weekend. This is contrasted with Michigan's youthful squad which will have to rely on the development of the sophomores and juniors who have had rela- tively limited hockey background until now. Already Played Four Western Ontario has still an- other advantage in that they have SCORESp NBA Detroit 118, Cincinnati 115 San Francisco, 134, New York 125 NHL1 Chicago 3, Detroit 2 .Both Teams Pleasing r YI~~fiII "I was pleased with the per- formance of both teams," said! Strack still wearing a post-game played four games already this grin. "You like to see the fresh- season, including one last night. men do well, but of course, the They played two exhibition games primary concern is this year's against a rugged McMaster team team. and Waterloo (another of Michi- "We plan to use our fast break gan's nonconference opponents). more this year, and it turned out This past weekend Coach Renfrew fairly effective although we didn't travelled to Canada to scout them control it as well as we could. We in their 8-0 victory over McGill. gave up the ball 11 times in the After seeing them in action Ren- first half which is far too many." frew would only say that, "They Despite the giveaways, the var-, have a fine hockey team and their sity carried a 48-29 halftime lead goaltending is particularly good when Newt Loken's gymnasts (Garry Bonney, their goalie, was jumpedwout for the intermission on the league All-Star team last year)." An'd game experience could alsoG work against the Wolverines as Garrett Capt they have been skating against each other for fiveweeks andars know each other's moves prettyas that this team was anxious to get into a game to see how good they NEW YORK (P)-Mike Garrett,' really are. He emphasized that Southern California's s t o c k y, "Five weeks is an awful long time swivel-hipped halfback who has to go without playing any games. thundered his way to the fore- We tried to make the practices front of college football's great interesting and varied, but there runners, won the 1965 Heisman is nothing like a game to point Memorial Trophy as player of the out what you don't know. But the year. team is enthusiastic and physical- The 21-year-old, 5-foot-9, 185- ly healthy too." pound senior easily outdistanced Leeson, the three college wonder his opposition in a poll of sports- mentioned earlier, will center writers and sportscasters for the Western's first line with Bab- 31st annual award presented by cock and Jerry Knightley, an All- the Downtown Athletic Club of America from Renssalear two New York. years ago, on the other wing. Garrett got 179 first place votes' The defense will be headed by and a total of 926 points. Howard Pete Kelley, an All-Star last sea- Twilley, Tulsa's 5-foot-10 pass son, and Bill L'Heureux who is, catching wizard, edged bulldozing ironically, an undergraduate. fullback Jim Grabowski of Illinois Herman Starts for second-528 points to 481. As for Michigan's starting team, Donny Anderson, Texas Tech's Renfrew has decided to open the do-everything halfback, finished series with sophomore goalie fourth and Floyd Little, Syracuse's Harold Herman instead of junior mercurial runner, was fifth. letterman Greg Page. He added Overpowere d' that this was only for the first "I am overpowered," the soft- game and after that he would spoken Garrett said in a telephone "play it by ear" as the season pro- interview to newsmen at the club gressed. where the award was announced. On defense the three pairs work- Told that he was only the sec- ing together are Teddy Henderson ond Negro to win the honor-the (two year letterman) -Bill Lord, first was the late Ernie Davis of Hank Brand (letterman) -Rick Day, Syracuse-Garrett replied, "Well' and Tom Shiller and Mark that's a marvelous thing. He was Thompson (both lettermen). These a great man." three pairs are not ranked in any Garrett, leading major college order and performance in a game rushers this season with 1,328 situation will determine their po- yards on 243 carries in nine games, sitions. needs only 58 yards in his season The Blue offense will be headed finale against Wyoming Saturday by center-captain Mel Wakabaya- to become the most productive ball shi, the WCHA scoring champ last carrier in history. year, with converted defenseman Second to Matson Barry MacDonald and Bob Baird He has gained 3,109 yards in on the wings. The second and three varsity years compared to third line are Mike Matilla-Bruce San Francisco's Ollie Matson's Koviak-Dean Lucier and Bob Fer- record 3,166 from 1949 through guson-Bab Boysen-Lee Martilla. 1951. Art Luppino of Arizona and Looking forward to the week- Alan Ameche of Wisconsin gained end, the Wolverines will be facing more but each played four varsity a rough, experienced opponent (both in games this year and seasons. Others named in this year's seasoned players) and if the young balloting, in the order of pointsF Wolverines can stick with the__ Western Ontario club, or even beat them, it could be a bright SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: season for the Blue. DALE SIELAFF Ii- ___________ FRESHMEN CLARENCE ADAMS (33) AND DAVE McCLELLAN (23) show the determination displayed by the frosh team in last night's scrimmage as they battle the varsity's Craig Dill (40) and Oliver Darden (55) for a rebound under the basket. Despite the fight put up by the freshmen, the defending Big Ten champs came up with a 108-80 victoryrat Yost Field House. show. Sullivan scored the first quickly fell behind. basket of the game, but the frosh qikyfl eid i U nbeaten Sp Then with six minutes gone, Stewart hit a jumper to tie t eeadt aoll O 17-16 when Sullivan grabbed a re- bound, tore down toward the basket and fed Stewart perfectly. By The Associated Press. Cazzie Stuff Barring defeat by UCLA in the The varsity took the lead for New Year's Day Rose Bowl, un- keeps when Russell plastered in beaten and untied Michigan State the first stuff shot of the year. virtually was certain Tuesday of In the second half, the closest capturing the national college the freshman came was 86-71 football championship for 1965. when the reserves for both sides Another poll will be staged were in.Ante polwlbesad after this week's remaining games and the final poll, determining " the national championship, will [res Heisman be held after the bowl games on New Year's Day. fj UCLA, the host team in the Grid Player Rose Bowl, leaped from eighth to P fourth after upsetting Southern California 20-16 Saturday. received, were: Arkansas, No. 2, opposes Louisi- Steve Juda'y, Michigan State; ana State, a non-ranker, in the Tom Nobis, Texas; Bob Griese, Cotton Bowl at Dallas on Jan. 1. Purdue; Steve Spurrier, Florida; Nebraska, No. 3, takes on Alabama Steve Sloan, Alabama; Bill Wolski, in the Orange Bowl at Miami. Notre D a m e; Ron Landeck, Alabama remained in fifth place, Princeton; Clinton Jones, Mich- just ahead of Notre Dame, falling igan State; and Bill Anderson, from fourth. Tulsa' .The seventh-ranked team, Mis- OPEN: Mon., Wed. ond Thurs. 4 P.M. to 2 A M. OPEN: Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tuesday) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 DETROIT ST., ANN ARBOR, MICH. CARRY-OUT ORDERS ONLY--PHONE 665-2266 FREE DELIVERYFRI.-SUN. BARBECUE CHICKEN AND RIBS FRIED CHICKEN SHRIMP AND FISH d.M Ileidelber an St. 668 -9753 1. Michigan State (34) 10-0 2. Arkansas (9) 10-0 3. Nebraska 9-0 4. UCLA 7-1-1 5. Alabama 7-1-1 6. Notre Dame 7-2 7. Missouri 7-2-1 8. Southern California 6-2-1 9. Tennessee 5-1-2 10.,Texas Tech 8-2 The others receiving vote alaphabetical order: Dartmi Duke, Florida, Georgia Z Louisiana State, Ohio S Princeton, P u r d u e, Syra 420 391 338 202 260 202 157 81 53 51 s, in outh, Tech,. tate, cuse, Specializitg in GElMAN FOOD FINE BEER, WINE, LIQ1VOR PARKING ON ASHLEY ST. Hours: Daily 1 1 A.M.-2 A.M. Closed Mondays 00 III FRONTIER BEEF BUFFET To give our employees a day off, we are CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAY. Thanks for past patronage 2333 E. STADIUM "Roast Beef at its Finest" 663-9165 ANN ARBOR CANTATA SINGERS RICHARD A. CRAWFORD, Conductor WORKS: 1. "Three Madrigals" by Monteverdi 2. "In the Beginning" by Copland 3. "Rejoice in the Lamb" by Benjamin Britten 4. "Spanish Carols," anonymous Rackham Lecture Hall-Friday, Dec. 3, 8:30 P.M. Sponsored by the Office of Religious Affairs OPEN TO THE PUBLIC WITHOUT CHARGE This announcement through the generosity of LIBERTY MUSIC SHOP STUDENT SPECIAL Traditional Thanksgiving Dinner$12txe. $1.20 tax ex. MICHIGAN UNION CAFETERIA Served 11 :30 A.M. -2 P.M. No evening service Thanksgiving Day * NORTH CAMPUS COMMONS For Your Dining Pleasure wvill serve THANKSGIVING DAY DINNER 11:30 A.M.-3:00 P.M. Roast Tom Turkey with dressing, giblet gravy and cranberry sauce Roast Long Island Durck with dressing and aple sauce Roast Prime Rib of Beef, an Jis Beef Strogonoff overju"lienne potatoes * '4 0 'p I I -1 WASHBOARD WILLIE IS BACK. 9 f. ,.l _ III i N L.i _ ".+ y