TUESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Tl-EE ichigan Basketball Future Shrouded by Troubles Quintet Lacks Offensive Punch, Rebound Control Redskins Prove Too Much for Wolverines; McCoy Shackled by Scarcity of Reserves it By TED PAPES Ernie McCoy's basketball night- mares have virtually become reali-! ties. The gray-haired Michigan cage mentor was a helpless figure on the bench at Saturday's season inaugural as he watched his charges absorb the first opening night Wolverine defeat in 17 years. MIAMI'S REDSKINS were not brilliant but held complete com- mand throughout the contest. Against the backdrop of the visitors' spirited play, Michigan appeared confused and impo- tent. Most evident shortcoming among the Wolverines was their lack of any organized scoring punch. There were periods of considerable length during which they failed to register a single point. * * * THE THREE FORWARDS who cracked the lineup, Jim Skala, Bob Olson and sophomore Paul Charles Rules Big Favorite -CINCINNATI-(A')-The odds fellows had Heavyweight Cham- pion Ezzard Charles a 541 choice yesterday to retain his laurels in tonight's 15-round title scrap with rugged Nick Barone of Syracuse. Overlooking the fact Barone has never been off his feet in 52 pro- fessionals fights, the betting boys opine "The only thing Charles figures to lose is his moustache." The Queen City. boxing com- mission ordered the champ to shave the hirsute adornment from his upper lip. About 10,000 of Charles' home town fans are expected to put some $50,000 on the line to watch the Cincinnati slugger's fifth de- fense of the title in Ohio's firstj heavyweight championship scrap in almost 20 years. The payoff will be on the number of dollars they draw at the gate, with Charles getting 42%/ per cent, and Barone 171/2. Geyer, were held to a collective ration of only four points. With the exception of Cap- tain Charlie Murray the guards were even less effective. Five of them contributed six markers to the futile Michigan cause. That left the scoring burden on center Leo VanderKuy and Mur- ray who were credited with 15 and 11 respectively. IN ADDITION to a field goal scarcity the losers were shackled by inaccuracy at the free throw line. They muffed 16 of their 30 chances. Offensive and defensive re- bounding by the Wolverines left much to be desired. The game's pattern became mo- notonous as Michigan repeatedly got off one shot at the basket and then lost the ball. Miami, on1 the other hand, sometimes fired five or six consecutive attempts before scoring or losing posses- sion. THE POOR Wolverine board work could not be attributed en- tirely to lack of height since the Redskins did not have much of, an edge there. It was more a case of the team lacking polish and incen- tive against a fired-up quintet. McCoy has no place to turn for relief. He must develop the ma- terial he used Saturday if he ex- pects to break into the victory column at all this season. * * * ROOKIES GEYER and Lysle Smith displayed some signs of future possibilities but had their ragged moments also. Other re- serves slipped. into the act butI failed to impress anyone. If it's any consolation Michigan was not the only major school to suffer an upset defeat in its first outing. Rice, Texas, Pittsburgh, Dart- mouth, and Loyola of Chicago were also toppled with. the season only a week old. Their outlooks are not so dismal as the Wolver- ines', however. 21 YOUROWN p ~ 2'LG , rC~sTi W/nsrz ,, a.4.. CANeea Navy's Upset Win Over Cadets Attributed to Spirit, Alert Play 'Look' Gives Wolverines Grid Mention Two Michigan football players were given honorable mention honors in the Look Magazine 1950 All-American team that appeared on the news-stand yesterday. Chuck Ortmann was selected as an offensive' specialist, and Don Dufek as a two-way player in the backfield. Here is the team that was picked by Grantland Rice and the 489 rpembers of the Football Writer's Association: OFFENSE End-J. Dan Foldberg-Army Tackle-Robert Gain-Kentcuky Guard-Lewis McFadin-Texas Center - Redmond Finney - Princeton Guard-Robert Ward-Maryland Tackle-James Weatheral-Okia- homa End-Ernest Curtis-Vanderbilt Quarterback-Robert Williams- Notre Dame Halfback-Victor Janowicz-Ohio State Halfback - Robert Reynolds - Nebraska Fullback-Kyle Rote-Southern Methodist DEFENSE End - Dorne Dibble - Michigan Sate Tackle-Albert Tate-Illinois Guard-Theodore Daffer-Ten- nessee Guard-Robert Momsen-Ohio State Tackle-Holland Donan-Prince- ton ' End-William McColl-Stanford Backer-Up--Elmer Stout-Army Backer-Up-Les Richter-Califor-. nia Halfback - Richard Sprague - Washington Halfback-Edward Withers-Wis- consin safety-Buddy Jones-Oklahoma. By JERRY FANGER f Graduation cut a deep hole in- to the roster of last year's Mich- igan swimmers, but- prospects for this season by no means look dim. According to Assistant Coach Johnny McCarthy the Wolverines have adequate replacements, and what's more the finest freshman team that has swam in Ann Arbor in a long time. ,e * * A COMBINATION of fine vet- erans and sophomores coupled with tremendous spirit should take the Maize and Blue squad a long way. Captain Dave Neisch spoke for the team as a whole when he said that the Michigan natators knew they were un- derdogs because of large gradu- ation losses, but that this fact has only made the men work harder. Unbelievable accom- plishments have been produced by the psychological spark of being an underdog. Supposedly in the middle dis- tance races there could be no re- placements for the "twins", for- mer captain Matt Mann III and Gus Steager. Coach Matt Mann has their replacements now in Louis Childs of Bogata, Columbia, and Wally Jeffries of St. Louis, Missouri, who have shown much improvement over the bannel Rookie Raglin To JoinWings DETROIT- (P) -The Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League yesterday called up de- fenseman Clare Raglin from their Indianapolis farm club in ex- change for defenseman Marce Pronovost. It marks the first time in the NHL for the 23-year-old Rag- lin who will join the Red Wings in New York Wednesday to play against the Rangers. Pronovost, who will report t Indianapolis the same night, wa one of the Red Wings' brightes rookies last season but has not been able to match that form thi year. Red Wing officials said he would get more work with In- dianapolis and expressed belief that this would be for his own . good. freshman season they had last year. TWO FINE breast strokers, Charlie Moss and Bill Upthegrove, were thought of as inexpendable graduates. However, Rusty Car- lisle of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. has developed considerably. There was never any doubt that John Davies of Sidney, Australia would be able to step into one of the breast stroke vacancies. In 1948 Davies took a fourth place in the Olympic games, and he too has improved stead- ily with age. Tom Coates and Dave Tittle have graduated leaving a hole in the free style dash events. Jim White and Dick Martin are back though, and there are many ap- plicants for the other dash slots. * * * IN DIVING competition the Wolverines have been weak for the last few years. George Eyster and 'Jim Hartman were the top 'M' Natators Aim High as Sophs Fill Openings Left by Graduation board men last year. Eyster uated. Hartmann has been ticing continuously to gain sion form. The backstroke place on the team is still held down by Ber- nie Kahn. This Saturday afternoon a group of both varsity and fresh- man swimmers will journey into Detroit' for a Michigan A.A.T. meet. Most of the natators going are freshmen, some of whom can do 100 yards in 52:2. * SCHEDULE Dec. 13 Michigan A.A.U. Jan. 13 Michigan State (*) Jan. 20 Purdue (*) Feb. 2 exhibition at Erie, Pa. Feb. 3 exhibition fat York, Pa. Feb. 5 LaSalle (*) Feb. 8 New York A.C. (*) Feb. 12 Minnesota Feb. 17 Bowling Green (*) Feb. 24 Ohio State March 3 Iowa (*) March 8, 9, 10, Western Confer- ence at Minneapolis March 29, 30, 31 N.C.A.A. (*) away meets grad- prac- preci- Makes a Man Love a Pipe and a oman Love a Man NEW YORK-(P-The general and lasting impression, of course, is that Navy just kicked the spin- ach out of Army all the bleak af- ternoon at Philadelphia last Sat- urday, but other memories which probably will die with the years still are vivid in the mind. The picture, for instance, of Navy back Dave Bannerman, in- censed when an Army defender plowed into him out-of-bound, uncorking a punch that sent the surprised Cadet staggering back about six steps. It was a beautiful blow, flush on the button. If Joe Louis had a right like that he'd still be champion. The officials missed it. * * * player standing idly by as a live ball bobbled invitingly at his feet. Army had punted. The Navy safe- ty man elected to let the ball die untouched, but a teammate dove for it, just touched it with his knee enough to make it a free ball. Before the Army man real- ized what had happened the Mid- die safety man cuddled the ball to his own bosom. The picture of Zug Zastrow on those quarterback sneaks. Imagine a stocky, 209-pound guy trying to sneak through anything. It was like a tank try- ing to sneak through a picket line undetected. It looks like happy days are here again at Annapolis. Tough Luck, Spartans Michigan's football team placed sixth in the final United Press football poll yesterday. Michigan State found itself looking up at the Wolverines from three rungs below in ninth place. /9 ~1~L 4 4A 4 THE PICTURE of an ArmyI DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Thoroughbred of Ape Tobaccos Choice white Burley . Smooth and meild r EXECUTIVE CAREERS IN R ETAILI1N One-year Course leads to Master's Degree. * Prepare to step into a responsible executive position in the retailing field: buying, advertising, fashion, t personnel. Specialized training, ex- elusively for college graduates, covers merchandising, personnel manage. ment textiles, store organization, sales promotion, and all phases of store activity. Realistic approach under store-trained faculty. Classes are com- bined with paid store work. Students are usually placed before graduation. Co-educational. Master's degree. Limited enrollment. Write Admissions Office for Bulletin C. RESEARCH BUREAU FOR RETAIL TRAINING LIVEPSITY OF PITTSBURGH . Pittsburgh 13, Pa. (Continued from Page 2) gineers or chemists for control or development work, management engineering, industrial engineer- ing, product engineering, plant en- gineering, mechanical engineer or design major for style and design, marketing or business administra- tion majors for supervision of cleri- cal personnel, and accounting, There are also a limited number of openings for women. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Com- pany representative will be coming Thurs., Dec. 7, to interview chemi- cal and mechanical engineers with strong preference for industrial en- gineering or business management background or interests. For further information on above notices and appointments for interviews please call at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Bldg. Ph.D. Candidates: The Bureau of Appointments will hold a gen- eral meeting for all Ph.D. candi- dates interested in obtaining teaching positions in Feb., June or Sept. of the coming year. Calls are being received for college and uni- versity teaching positions in all fields and from all parts of the country. The purpose of the meet- ing is to discuss the opportunities in the teaching field and some of the procedures necessary in secur- ing teaching positions. The meet- ing is to be held Tues., Dec. 5, at 4 p.m., in Room 3B, Michigan Un- ion. All Ph.D. candidates are urged to be there. To All Students, College of Lit- erature, Science, and the Arts: Elections for the Spring Se- mester are now being approved Freshmen and sopho ores who will have less than 5 hours by the end of this semester should make appointments for approval of elections in the Academic Counselor's Office, 1210 Angell Hall. Juniors and seniors, and those sophomores who will have 55 hours or more by the end of this semester should make appoint- ments for approval of elections in the Board of Concentration Ad- visers' Office, 1006 Angell Hall. All Counselors and Advisers have advance information on when and where Spring Semester class- es will meet. Students are urged to have their next semester's elections approved early. If elections. are not ap- proved before the final examina- tion period begins, students must report during the half day preced- ing the time they are scheduled to register. There will be no ap- pointments during the examina- tion period. Interviews: A representative for the Austin Company will be at the Bureau of Appointments interviewing civil, architectural, electrical and me- chanical engineers on Thursday, Dec. 7. The Company is a large construction company with offices in New York, Cleveland, St. Louis, (Continued on Page 4) Nw ow.. SAVINGS INSURED TO by Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corpora- . tion. Open an account with any amount. Earn 2% current rate. 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