A.Y, IVEB]WARY 10, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'O CAPTAIN, MY CAPTAIN! Roberts Halted by Knee Injury Advance Sales Jvee,Frosh Quitets Sparkle Mig*Lht Supportw,------- * c/n-amhwppthe jaorv e Strac1 has selected a tentative Stediupefulsgane whenc the two fist team from the many aspir. teamatca t r at Columbus the dug- ev !4 7L Y e '- I - 4 - 17nn f-- pmt.-,that reported Buring the in]- By PRES HOLMES The first of the original five members of the Michigan cage quintet which has started together for the past three seasons has been forced to give up basketball for the rest of the year. Big Bill Roberts, Michigan's six-foot seven-inch center, has had his hardwood carreer cut short right at the height of con- ference competition. THE LEG INJURY which was probably incurred when h e jumped from a moving train last spring and aggravated this fall has failed to respond to treat- ment, and an operation has been deemed necessary by University physicians. Dr. Carl E. Badgley of the University Hospital, who per- formed the successful opera- tion on shot-putter Charlie Fonville's back, will operate on Roberts to remove a cartilage from his left knee the latter part of the month. Roberts was able to play for only about a minute in the Ohio State game here on January 29, and that turned out to be the last appearance of his collegiate ca- reer. BILL CAME to Michigan in the fall of 1942 and played a year of freshman basketball before enter- ing the service. On his return to the Wolver- ine cage scene for the 1946-47 season, he worked as a sopho- more at center with the Maize and Blue quintet of Mack Su- prunowicz, Boyd McCaslin, Bob Harrison, and Pete Elliott, an aggregation which was still go- ing strong this season for the third straight year until the mishap. It's not too unusual that Bill's greatest thrill from his suddenly ended basketball career at Michi- gan should have happened in that, the bleachers seeing him for the first time in a Michigan uniform. NATURALLY THE Michigan center, and this year's captain, is disappointed at not being able to play the rest of the season, "espe- cially the Minnesota game and against McIntyre," he says. "But I've bought a new pipe and have 'kinda' reconciled myself to the situation." At first glance it might look as if he was going to be able to sit back and relax for a while, but after watching the MSC game from the bench last week he quipped, "I lose more weight sit- ting it out on the bench than I used to when I played the whole game."' When questioned about the chances of Michigan repeating as Conference champs he firmly re- plied, "It'll be an uphill battle all the way, but those are the boys who can do it." rid Practice Set for March Michigan will open six weeks of spring football practice March 28, Coach Bennie G. Oosterbaan an- nounced recently. The Wolverine grid session ac- tually will be split in two parts due to spring vacation. Oosterbaan will call his gridders together, Monday, March 28, and practice through Friday,. April 1. Practice will be resumed April 11, on a five- day week basis and continue un- interruptedly through May 14. Oosterbaan will follow the gen- eral practice that characterized the Crisler regime. Emphasis will be placed on individual instruc- tion and work with sophomores. Candidates who are engaged in spring sports are not expected to take part in any of the drills. A five-year advance ticket sale is being considered by Michigan athletic officials as a means ofI financing a proposed upper deck addition to the Michigan footballl stadium, the plan to open ad- vance sales for alumni of all good seats in the proposed addition. Three plans are under consider- ation; a complete deck, which would boost the seating capacity to 125.000; a horse-shoe deck,' open at the south end, which wculd increase the seating to 115,-, 000; or two "straightaways" which would bring the total to about 105,000. The stadium now seats 85,938. Cost would range from $55 a seat for the complete upper deck, to $85 a seat for the straightaway plan. The latter would entail an expense of about $1,000,000. "BUT THIS is the most favor- able time we'll ever be in," com- mented one member of the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics. "And under the financing plan now being considered, sale of the good seats in advance would preclude any difficulties with pos- sible recession." Explaining that the board felt that action should be taken now or never, he said that contracts should be let within the next 30 days, and that it will be "next fall or nothing". A report is expected within the next few days from Athletic Dir- ector Fritz Crisler. Lelnc'C7:1 Cpl in-2 varsity conLe;SL #ial xxt"k of t rartirn Tnt mnn of fit Corn petition While the basketball spotlight has been focused on Michigan's varsity squad, the Jayvee team, under the wing of Coach J. T. White, has been chalking up a few laurels for itself. The junior cagers have played five games to date and have lost only one, a 39-38 decision to the, Ypsilanti Normal varsity squad. The most recent accomplish- ment for the Maize and Blue was a 54-34 win over the Hillsdale College quinte, here last Monday afternoon. This is the second de- feat the Wolverines have handed Coach Gib Holgate's crew this season. Last December Michigan won, 42-23. The other two victories were chalked up last week against the junior outfits from Ohio State and Michigan State. The Wolver- ines cagers dumped the Buckeyes, _'_47 "-, th-r ninmn- the Spar- tans, 49-43, two days later. These two have been the only games the jayvees have played against foes common to the Mich- igan varsity as well, and White's :rew set the scaring pace for their 'etter half each time. Although ,he opponents' total differ, both Michigan teams scored the same number of points. If this holds true for the rest of the season all eyes will be focuseC era 26'. tiwee. ztaoyeUL. 'p opma A A home-and-hoe series with the frosh quintet is six-foot-three the LIT "I3" team in the next t wo Jim Skala from Chicago, Illinois. weeks precedes the OSU contest. Skala alternates at guard and These are the only other games forward. He was top scorer in the scheduled for the jayvees for the frosh-jayvee game in December remainder of the season. when the freshman upset rank by defeating the junior varsity, 26-33. FresIhm en, . . Second and third men of the I-M NEWS TUESDAY NIGHT'S RESULTS Fraternity Basketball SAE 39, Sigma Nu 23 Kappa Sigma 65, Tau Delta Phi 14 ATO 46, Theta Delta Chi 17 Psi Upsilon 47, Phi Sigma Kappa 13 SAM 55, TKE 28' Sigma Phi 27, Phi Gamma Delta 25 Alpha Phi Alpha defeated Phi Kappa Sigma (forfeit) Sigma Chi 26, Phi Kappa Tau 24 Delta Tau Delta defeated Phi Psi (forfeited) DKE defeated Kappa Nu (forfeit) Beta Theta Pi defeated KAP (for- feit) Chi Psi 40, Alpha Delta Phi 17 Phi Kappa Psi 51, Delta Chi 11 Lambda Chi Alpha defeated DSP forfeit) * * * Faculty Volleyball Army 3, Public Health 0 Engineering Physicists 3, Navy 0 Engineering Aero. 2, Engin. Math 1 The Freshman edition of the Michigan cagers, under the direc- tion of Coach Dave Strack, has re- sumed intra-squad scrimmages following vacation. Cridser Blasts SC Ohfficials A .W vr Remarks Athletic Director Fritz Crisler denied vehemently the charges made by MSC's Dean Lloyd C. Emmons about the proposed foot- ball schedule arrangements. Crisler cited a resolution by the Michigan Board in Control of In- ercoliegiate Athletics and sub- mitted to Michigan State in Janu- ary. Rather than a "take it or leave it" plan, it would simply let the two schools drop the matter for the years 1950-53. Michigan State officials want- ed a "home and home" arrange- ment, and thus termed Crisler's proposal as an "ultimatum." starting five are Tom Tiernan, of Kankakee, Illinois, and Dick Gerstner of Kalamazoo. Both reach six-foot-three and play for- ward. From this trio, Strack picks his pivot man, but no definite as- signment has been made as yet. Securing one of the guard spots is Dick Frame, a five-foot-eleven cager from Jackson, Mich. The other guard slot is shared by Don Peterson, Racine, Wisconsin prod- uct and brother of Michigan's varsity fullback, and Fred Thomp- son of Bloomfield, N.J. BILL ROBERTS . . . losing weight his first season as a starter for the Wolverine squad. MINNESOTA HAD a new cen- ter too, a kid by the name of Jim McIntyre. Standing six-foot-ten in his sweat socks, this Gopher had been causing trouble for all of Minnesota's opponents, and promised to do the some for Michigan. Although a zone defense was used and Bill wasn't ;totally re- sponsible for putting the clamps on "Big Jim," he still feels mighty proud of the box score the next day which read: Mc- Intyre, 1 point. What made this win over the Gophers even better was the fact that Bill's parents were out in LOOK, MISTER Give yourself a break. Make sure of a good job after college. Invest your time wisely, today-cash in tomorrow. 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But even so, our system works a lot better than the second-rate substitutes being peddled by some countries we could mention. Tt. 'tA~d" -,'tC ' f'*t rr i i( P 1iCf PwA ,11rit' know how to use machine power to pro- duce more goods at lower cost. We have more skilled workers than any other country. We believe in collective bargain- ing and enjoy its benefits. And we Ameri- cans save-and our savings go into new tools, new plants, new and better machines. Because of this, we produce more every working hour...and can buy more goods with an hour's work than any other people in the world. We can make the system work even better, too: by all of us working together more power, greater skils, and by sharing the benefits through higher wages, lower prices, shorter hours. It's a good system. It can be made bet- ter. And even now it beats anything that any other country in the world has to offer. So-let's tune it up, not chop it down. 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