SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY U PAGE 1 RETURN ENGAGEMENT TONIGHT: ELIIK Keyes, Chin Star in M'Wmin SPEAKING - of BY GEORGE FLINT JT WAS A distinctly different set of circumstances but somehow a more sincere and moving atmosphere, that greeted the Michigan football team at the annual Grid Bust given by the University of Michigan Club Thursday night. An odd and somewhat cynical high school football coach used to say that during winning seasons you build public relations; during mediocre seasons you build for next year; during losing seasons you build character. THE WOLVERINES, after three straight conference champion- ships under Bennie Oosterbaan, sat down at the banquet table in Detroit with a losing season at their backs. Strangely enough, they were happy about it. It was a quiet and sincere kind of happiness, wrought by a feeling that each athlete had done his utmost and had at the same time earned the respect of those who knew him best. Coach Bennie Ooster- baan, in his direct and forceful way, sounded the keynote at the evening's end. "These men gave the best that they had, and a little more. I have always tried above all other things to build up a relationship of friendship among the coaches, the players and myself, and that re- lationship is more important to them and to me than winning football games." * * * * Look to the Future { OOSTERBAAN also stated something which might astound the current critics of Michigan football. Addressing a number of high school athletes present in the ball room of the Statler Hotel, where the bust was held this year, Oosterbaan quietly and unequivocally told them not to come to Michigan if they did not feel that it offered the things which would be valuable to them ten or fifteen or twenty years from now. "We are interested in any of you who desire to come to Michi- gan. We welcome you with open arms. But we are not engaging in a bidding contest with anyone. The important thing for you to think about when you choose your institution is the type of education it can give you. That is the fact which will guide your future." University President Harlan H. Hatcher paid tribute to the Michigan coach as a teacher of young men, stressing the fact that football, as all extra-curricular activities at Michigan, is part of the learning process. The bust produced a number of moving moments, but there were light ones too. Don Peterson, the team's most valuable player and possessor of the second highest scholastic average, found platform oratory a bit too much for him. His comment when he received the traditional 'M' ring awarded to senior letterwinners: "I'm lumped." S* * * *0 The Michigan Mixture 'A ND TOM KELSEY, who won the George C. Patterson award for a scholastic average exceeding B plus, recalled why he switched to Michigan from Ohio State. "The Touchdown Club down there tries to run the team. The alumni at Michigan don't do that." This speech produced sighs of satisfaction from the several hundred alumni pres- ent. Captain Bill Putich, called by Oosterbaan the man who in all the years (27) the former All-American has been at Michigan "gave the most of what he had in every game," read a letter from the entire Michigan team which stressed the love of the game and the lack of any pressure in the direction of an undue "will to win" in the Wolverine lair. 0 0 0 * IT REMAINED for tackle Tom Johnson, a three-year regular and one of the most soft-spoken members of the team, to sum up the true worth of football to the players themselves. "After that last game, when you realize that you won't be playing ball for Michigan again, it sort of leaves a space in your daily routine. You go to classes, and in the afternoon you sit around, and three o'clock comes, and you feel like you ought to be down at the field. You go down to the training room, and they tell you it's closed to football players-the basketball players have taken over. I'll always remember Michigan and Michigan foot- ball. If I get married and have some kids, they're only going to come to one college-Michigan." Listening to the men of Michigan who spoke at the head table, the feeling that character in the highest degree was the main object of football at Michigan pervaded the sometimes raucous, sometimes quiet atmosphere of the banquet hall. Perhaps some of the charges brought against intercollegiate football are true. But the loyalty to coaches and team displayed by alumni at Detroit Thursday proved that it isn't necessary to win every year, at least at Michigan. They're still champs in my book. Frosh Rule Voted Bach By Big Ten CHICAGO-(IP)-The Big Ten today decided to ban freshman athletes from varsity competition at the end of the school year and heard its football coaches approve spring grid practice. The policy-making faculty re- presentatives, at the second-day session of the league's annual win- ter meeting, revoked a waiver of a one-year residence rule for fresh- man athletes. * * * THAT MEANS, beginning next fall, freshmen will have to wait until their sophomore year for var- sity eligibility. This year, because of fears that military inroads would de- plete campuses of athletic talent, freshmen were allowed to join varsity squads. Minnesota,for instance, had a half-dozen frosh considered first-line varsity footballers, while Wisconsin's fullback Alan Ameche was the leading confer- ence rusher as a freshman. The football coaches, meeting with the athletic directors, ex- pressed the opinion that, as the conference conducts it, there is nothing wrong with spring prac- tice. The National Collegiate Ath- letic Association's council has re- commended elimination of spring practice or a limit of 20 sessions. The Big Ten has no limit. * * * THE ATHLETIC directors, con- sidering the possibility of curtail- ing length of sports seasons, de- cided to hear recommendations from coaches of all sports on what they consider proper limits. In abandoning the one-year res- idence rule, the faculty representa- tives agreed that "there is nothing in the present situation which makes further waiver of the fresh- man rule advisable." AP Briefs NEW YORK - (1P) - Coach Charles (Chuck) Taylor, who put his Stanford Indians into the Rose Bowl in his first season as a head coach, was named Football Coach of the Year today. Taylor, who succeeds Charles Caldwell of Princeton as Coach of the Year, was an All-America guard at Stanford in 1942. * . *0 NEW YORK-P)-Judge Saul S. Streit, big-time basketball's stern critic, suspended sentence on three former Bradley University stars today, blaming their college president for their "moral debase- ment." THE THREE, All-America Eu- gene (Squeaky) Melchiorre,. 24, William Mann, 24, and George (Mike) Chidnakis, 26, tried to fix a 1949 game at Madison Square Garden with Bowling Green. Y * * * Cooney Also Leads Attack Ikola Shines In Nets; Registers 27 Saves (Continued from Page 1) EARL KEYES . . four point man IM All-Star Grid Squads MadePublic By DICK LEWIS Twenty-three football players, were chosen on the annual intra- mural all-star team yesterday, with seven of the lot coming from championship organizations. Fraternity all-stars were divid- ed among seven different teams. Howie Maturen, ATO passing ace, Moe Katz, Tau Delta Phi's one man gang, Milt Heath, Delta Sig- ma Phi standout, and Jerry Rov- ner, Pi Lambda Phi's repeat selec- tion, made up the backfield. * * * ' LINEMEN on the fraternity unit include Don Johnson of Sigma Phi, Earl Keim of the Phi Ilelts, and Sigma Chi's Paul Fancher. Three residence halls placed two men each on the honor squad. Champion Wenley was represented by it diminutive quarterback, Warren Wertheim- er, and Jim McCormick, a glue- fingered end. Lineman Erwin Kleizaert and back Dick Dennis of finalist Hay- den House, and Fletcher's Leach brother combination, Dick the lineman and Bob the back, gained recognition for their outstanding play.' LEO EFIMCHIK, a brilliant lineman from Kelsey, Gomberg's Dick Donahue, another forward wall stalwart, and back Bob Szczarba of Huber were also named on the combine. Wesleyan, the independent football champions, placed end Ed Wolven and back Cliff Heller on the dream team. All-stars named from the Rumpots were backs Frank Putich and Joe Cassis. Linemen Bob Spencer and Dave West of the M.C.F. and Foresters respectively, and back John Fush- man of the Newman Club rounded out the star-studded seven. Heathcott was serving a trip- ing penalty at 18:10 of the sec- ond stanza, but the Wolverines had already added three goals to Chin's first perio dscore and they led, 4-1, after Quesnel's tally. Jean Bruneau picked up the other Carabin marker in the midst of Michigan's third period five- goa l barrage. *; * * AFTER CHIN'S initial marker, play opened up and the Wolver- ines scored what proved to be the winning goals in lightning fashion halfway ,through the second per- iod. Maize and Blue defenseman Graham Cragg had just made two fine poke checks to halt dangerous Montreal thrusts when sophomore Doug Muller from close in killed a passout from Heathcott for his first of two goals. Time: 9:55. A change of lines and ten sec- onds later, Chin rifled a shot from the right boards that bounced off Auger into the net. Time: 10:05. The start of last night's contest was delayed 15 minutes because the Carabins' train did not arrive until just before game time, and the visitors showed the effects of travel, tiring noticeably in the final stanza. Heyliger looks for a much tough- er contest tonight. SUMMARY FIRST PERIOD: 1-Michigan, Chin (Cooney, Keyes), 17:35. Penalties: Michigan-Cooney (cross- checking), Heathcott (tripping), Mc- Clellan (holding); Montreal-Bisson (hooking), Charest (tripping); all two minutes. SECOND PERIOD: 2-Michigan, Mullen (Heathcott, Martinson), 9:55; 3-Michigan, Chin (Keyes, Cooney), 10:05; 4-Michigan, Philpott, (McKen- nell), 16:28; 5--Montreal, Quesnel (Bruneau, C. Hotte), 18:10. Penalties: Michigan - Heathcott (tripping); two minutes. THIRD PERIOD: 6 - Michigan, Cooney (Chin), 0:59; 7-Michigan, Mullen (Heathcott, Martinson), 4:46; 8-Michigan, McClellan (Chin), 7:48; 9-Montreal, Bruneau (Charest), 8:33; 10-Michigan, Keyes (Cooney, Cragg), 12:05; 11-Michigan, Keyes (Cooney, Chin), 15:42. 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