FRIDAY, AUGUST 27,196$ THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE FIVE PRWAY, AUGUST 27, 1965 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE Spring Sports Open Fall IM Competition Start the Year Off fight Welcome Students THE BROWN JUG RESTAURANT Dine Out This Weekend 4 By JIM TINDALL Is there a place on the sprawling Michigan campus for junior. high and high school athletes that don't have the ability, time, or interest to compete in sports on the Big Ten level? "There certainly is a place in Four program for anyone who en-' joys athletics," would be the em- phatic answer of Intramural Sports Directors Rod' Grambeau and Earl Riskey. These two men, aided by their staff of eight teach- ing fellows, administer play in thirty-six different sports in thirty-six different sports in twelve different divisions such as social fraternity, residence halls, professional fraternities, and so on throughout the, academic year. For Everybody This, the fifty-fourth year in which the program has existed promises to be a full one for non- scholarship jocks of all sizes and shapes. An organizational meeting will re held on Wednesday, September 1 at 7:30 p.m. for all managers of group teams. The managers will be divided up into division and instructed in the organization and rules of the program. The actual competition will be- gin will "A" and "B" softball on r1M Hours The hours that the Intra- mural Building will be open durlng the coming year are as follows: Monday through Fri- day, 8 a.m.-7 p.m. and Satur- day morning 8 a.m.-noon. The pool will be open for free swimming from 4 p.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Friday. September 6. Because of the new trimester the sprng sports will all be played during the fall be- cause of spring Ann Arbor weather. The next sport will be tennis which will begin on September eleventh, followed by the golf tournament on September eigh- teenth. Track Meet The outdoor track meet will be divided into residence halls Sep- tember twenty-first,, and fraterni- ties, September twenty-third. The annual cross-country run will take place on September 30. The intramural football season on both the "A" and "W' levels will begin on October twelfth, climaxed by a 'single-elimination playoff. In addition to the team com- petition, Mssrs. Riskey and Gram- beau have arranged for three in- dividual all campus tournaments this fall in tennis singles, golf, and twenty-one. The dates for these will be announced at a fu- ture date. As usual there is a need for officials, especially In softball, and anyone interested in making a little extra money by withstanding verbal abuse should contact Mr. Russ Women Boast Giant Cage Center BUDAPEST, Hungary (MP-They call her "Big Red." Rival players shiver at the sight of her. She is the latest of the Soviet Union's succession of athletic amazons. Her name is Ravilya Kalimova Prokopenko. She is six feet, seven incles' talt. She wears a size 16 shoe. She has hands like hams and the shoulders of a bull. She plays center for the Rus- sian women's basketball team. The Russian women are by far the best in these fourth World Student Games. They are big, tall and tough-but none as awesome as Ravilya. When she walks down the street, When she walks down the street,. her elbows usually swing- ing over the heads of her. com- panions, people stop and gape. She clogs Budapest traffic. Small boys and girls flock around her for autographs. She can't en- ter another avenue - such as swimming or gymnastics-without taking attention away from the sport at hand. "There's the big Russian girl," people whisper in many languages. "That's Big Red." Ravilya appears non-plussed by all this attention. Ravilya said she never played basketball before this year. She was working peacefully on her father's cooperative farm in Tashkent, the capital of Uzbeg, when. she was discovered by a Russian sports official. Noting her tremendous size, the official persuaded her to come to Moscow. She entered the univer- sity-the route to stardom for all ' - - nJ.'Ldf a....n.. , rnm.a Earl Riskey at the Intramural Building. ' Last year's champions in the five major divisions were as fol- lows: Faculty-Math. Social Fra- ternity-Delta Tau Delta, Resi- dence Hall-Wenley, Professional- Law Club, and Independents- Frederick House. Seat Covers Installed tin 'M'Stadium The University of Michigan football stadium, largest college- owned structure of its kind, will have a "new look" for fans at- tending the Wolverines' six home games this fall. More than 30 running miles of blue fiber glass seat covers with maize numbers,, have been placed on its 101,001 seats this summer. Across from the pressbox side of the stadium or the east side, a huge block "M" of Maize and' Blue that extends between the= 20-yard lines, and reaches from the fifth row to row 72 in height, also has been installed in the new arrangement. . The project was begun last March for the comfort of the fans as well as to beautify the stadium. A whole carload of lumber was used to replace weathered or broken seats before the fiber glass rows were installed. Some idea of the tremendous task involved may be had from the fact that each row of seat covers had to be es- pecially tailored to fit into its section and row, and hand- carried into the stadium to be fitted into place. In. addition to the lumber, more than 45,000 carriage bolts and 325,000 pop rivets were used in the job, be- sides stainless steel bands and clips to fasten the covers into place. The corner and ends of the stadium provided special problems where sections had to be cut and fitted on the site. While the seats will be ready for the opening crowd at the Cali- fornia game-high school band day-September 25, it may take until the end of October before the project is completed. Congratulations! Michigan State played its first football game in 1896, defeating Lansing High School, 12-0. 1204 S. University 761 -1111 I- - FRONTIER BEEF BUFFET Cafeteria Open. 7Days Sun.-Thurs. 1 1130 A.M.-8:00 P.M. Friday and Saturday until 8:30 P.M. 2333 E. STADIUM 663-9165 "Roast Beef at its Finest" li I Collaqe l3 512 E. William Stop in and enjoy a delicious pizza or wonderfully prepared Italian dish, or call in and order. NO 3-5902 or NO 3-3379 FREE DELIVERY 5 p.M.-2 a.m. '7 days a week WALK DON'T 'Run' PANCAKE HOUSE and COFFEE SHOP with prices you can afford W. Stadium Blvd. at W. 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