TUESDAY, NOVEMBER24, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE !! !ff 0 1 _ .._-.._._..........------------------------------------------------.-____.__ Varsity-Freshmen Fives Meet Tonight Public To Get First Look at '53-'54 Edition of Michigan Basketball Team ! rPV s me a av cn an ax". Terps Tops Frosh Gridders Touted In AP Rating As Future Varsity Stars ti By WARREN WERTHEIMER The public will get its first look at the 1953-54 edition of the Mich- igan basketball team tonight at Yost Field House. The Wolverine varsity will take on the freshman team in a reg- ular 40-minute game starting at nine o'clock. Admission will be free to everyone. COACH Bill Perigo has not yet decided upon his starting lineup. However he has named eight play- ers who will see a great deal of action. Captain Ray Pavechevich, Jim Barron, and Don Eaddy will al- ternate at the guard positions. 3 1Wolverines Given Major Grid Letters Football coach Bennie Ooster- baan announced the 1953 Michi- gan gridiron letter winners yester- day. The 31 recipients of "M" awards are: . Frederick N. Baer, LaGrange, Il- linois; Louis G. Baldacci, Akron, Ohio; James T. Balog, Wheaton, Illinois; Richard E. Balzhiser, All letter winners please re- port to Rentschlers at12:00 noon today for team picture. -Bennie G. Oosterbaan Wheaton, Illinois; Richard A. Bel- son, East Chicago, Indiana; Don- ald C. Bennett, Chicago, Illinois; Tony D. Branoff, Flint, Michigan. THEODORE J. CACHEY, Chica- go, Illinois; Daniel J. Cline, Brock- port, New York; Donald R. Dug- ger, Columbus, Ohio; George S. Dutter, Fort Wayne, Indiana; James W. Fox, Saginaw, Michigan; H. Ronald Geyer, Toledo, Ohio; Edward L. Hickey, Anaconda, Montana; Robert S. Hurley, Ala- mosa, Colorado. Raymond K. Kenaga, Sterling, Illinois; Eugene P. Knutson, Beloit, Wisconsin; William P. Koesar, Mentor, Ohio; Edward S. Kress, Kansas City, Missouri; Duncan B. McDonald, Flint, Michigan; G. Edgar Meads, Ox- ford, Michigan; John M. Mor- row, Jr., Ann Arbor, Michigan; Richard E. O'Shaughnessy, Sea- ford, New York. H. John Peckham, Jr., Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Thad C. Stanford, Midland, Michigan; ' Richard J. Strozewski, South Bend, Indiana; E. Robert Topp, Kala- mazoo, Michigan; John J. Vesele- nak, Flint, Michigan; Arthur D. Walker, Jr., South Haven, Michi- gan; Gerald H. Williams, Flint, Michigan; Ronald M. Williams, Massillon, Ohio. IM Scores Volleyball: Phi Delta Phi 6, Phi Delta Epsilon 0 Delta Upsilon 6, Phi Psi 0 Alpha Epsilon Phi 5, Triangle 1 Alpha Tau Omega defeated Kappa Alpha Psi(forfeit) Nu Sigma Nu 5, Delta Theta Phi 1 Phi Delta Theta 4, Sigma Phi 2 Delta Chi defeated Phi Kappa Psi (forfeit) Sigma Nu defeated Phi Sigma Kappa (forfeit) Delta Sigma Delts 4, Phi Al- t pho Kappa Sigma Alpha Mu 6, Acacia 0 Delta Tau Delta 6, Theta Xi 0 Swimming: Cooley 35, Winchell 22 Hayden 38, Lloyd 19 Wiliams defeated Van Tyne (forfeit) Taylor 39, Allen-Rumsey 18 Harvey Williams, 6-8 junior, will probably get the call as start- ing center with Paul Groffsky taking over the pivot slot when Williams is on the bench. Groffsky, Tom Jorgenson, John Codwell, and Milt Mead will share duty at the forward spots. IT WILL BE these eight who will probably decide Michigan's fate throughout the season, while Jerry Stern, Jay Vawter, Bruce Allen and Tom Singer will most likely see spot action. The Wolverine cagers have impressed most of those who have seen their pre-season workouts. According to Perigo himself, this year's squad shapes up as a good deal better than last seasons. For one thing, the team will have the advantage' of one year's play under Perigo and by now is much more familiar with his race-horse style of offense. * * * THE PLAYERS are more famil- iar with the fast break and are working a lot more smoothly. Along - this line, the coach has been running the team an awful lot and as one player has put it, "Either we'll be in shape comes the opening of the season, or we'll be dead." For another thing, the '53-'54 team will have more depth. Doug Lawrence was the only major loss from last season's five while Jim Barron, Tom Jorgenson and Harvey Williams are new men who will play a big role on the cagers this year Williams is expected to give Michigan some of the height it so badly needed last year. Especially in a fast break system, it is es- sential to have a man who can clear the boards quickly. As Irish Tiel NEW YORK- P) -Maryland, only undefeated and untied major college team in the country, was' voted the No. 1 football team of the land Monday in the weekly' Associated Press poll by a land- slide margin. Coach Tatum's terrific Terra- pins moved into the top spot af- ter Notre Dame pulled into a 14-14: tie against a tough and stubborn Iowa team in the final seconds Saturday. The result was that the Fighting Irish dropped from the No. 1 place to No. 2 for the first time this season. The top 10 first place votes: 1. Maryland 2. Notre Dame 3. Michigan State 4. Oklahoma By DICK BUCK With another football season brought to a close and many vet- erans having ended their playing careers it may be well to have a look at what the future holds. The freshman squad players, coached by Wally Weber with the assistance of Cliff Keen and Don Robinson, will be eligible for var- sity competition in 1954 and will undoubtedly be called upon to fill numerous vacancies. COACH WEBER announced 58 letterwinners last week on a team which was termed average but with a number of individual stand- outs who should develop into first- line gridders. With a good part of the 1953 line graduating, next year's squad will find men such as Jer- ry Goebel invaluable. Goebel, a Illinois high school circuit as a quarterback and continued to prove his ability this fall. The 6-! foot, 190 pound gridder attended Fenwick High in Chicago the same school from which Wolverine full- back Fred Baer comes. For Your Car. ...MICHIGAN NAME PLATE Brilliant a - In University r Y rColors A SturdyTAx 9NCL Steel Plate+ Size of Plate 61" x 1314" ORDER NOW AUTO INITIAL COMPANY FROM 90 State St. Rochester 14, N.Y. I if DON DUGGER ... in Shrine game ! ugger Gets' Shrine .Bid By DAVE LIVINGSTON Michigan's Don Dugger has ac- cepted an invitation to play in the annual East-West Shrine foot- ball game to be held January 2, in San Francisco's Kezar Stadium The Wolverine star, a Maize and Blue standout at guard for the past three years, will be the only Michigan gridder to take part in the biggest of all post-season all- star games, played for charity with all proceeds going for the benefit of crippled children. . ** * HEADING the East coaching staff will be Ray Eliot of Illinois, with Michigan's Bennie Ooster- baan and Eddie Anderso of Holy Cross as assistants. Stanford's Chuck Taylor will head the brain- trust for the West. Dugger, who will head West for the Shrine Game shortly aft- er Christmas vacation begins, plans to keep in shape for the final football game of his illus- trious career with daily work- outs at Ferry Field. Roger Zatkoff, great linebacker! on last year's Wolverine squad, was the last man to represent Michigan in the East-West battle. 5. UCLA 6-4, 208-pound center, was an 6. Illinois all-stater at Grosse Pointe and '7. Texas has looked exceptionally good in 8. Rice freshman ball. His uncle Paul 9. Iowa Goebel, now mayor of Grand 10. Georgia Tech Rapids, captained the 1922 The second 10: West Virginia, Michigan varsity. The younger Wisconsin, Kentucky, Texas Goebel lettered in three sports Tech, South Carolina, Auburn, in high school. Baylor, Army, Stanford, South- ern California. Dick Hill, a 5-10, 185-pound I guard from Gary, made the sec- NEW ORLEANS -(P)- Georgia ond All-State team in the Indiana Tech, No. 10 team in the AP rat- high school rankings and should ings, has accepted an invitation to strengthen the Wolverines at this be host team in the Sugar Bowl posiiton. Along with Hill are 5-10, football game at New Orleans, 190-pound Clem Corona from Ber- Jan. 1. wick, Pa., and Bill Steinmeyer, a --_i Toledo product who prepped at Staunton Military Academy. AP Big Ten T eam The Associated Press yesterday announced the 1953 All Big Ten football team. LE-Don Dohoney, Mich. State LT-George Jacoby, Ohio State LG-Jan Smid, Illinois C-Jerry Hilgenberg, Iowa RG---Tom Bettis, Purdue RT--Cal Jones, Iowa RE-Bob Topp, Michigan QB--Paul Giel, Minnesota LH-LeRoy Bolden, Mich. State RH-J. C. Caroline, Illinois FB-Alan Ameche, Wisconsin I i RAMS, 49ER'S ALSO WIN: Lions Beat Bears To Keep Division Lead STANDOUTS at tackle are Jim Davies and Jim Orwig. Davies cap tured All-State honors while play ing 'for Muskegon Heights. The 5-11, 210-pounder also tossed the shot put while in high school. Or wig's 6-1 frame tips the scales a 190; he comes from Toledo and i a nephew of Michigan's Bill Orwig A 6-4, 210-pound end Ron Kramer from East Detroit ap- pears to be top flight material. Kramer was all-state in both basketball and football. Chuck Brooks of Marshall, Michigan, has proven a good all-around competitor as an end. Two all- staters Dave Ward of Midland and Mike Higgins of U of D high along with Dick Heynen of Grand Rapids Catholic Central will add strength and depth to this slot. Ever searching for clever, speedy backfield men, Weber has come up with two fine prospects in Ter- ry Barr and Jim Maddock. Barr 6-1, 175-pounder who played his high school ball in Grand Rapids shapes up as an above average tail- back. Barr is fast, having taken the state quarter-mile crown his final ,two years of high school. Maddock made all-state in the The Detroit Lions came from behind to beat the Chicago Bears, Sunday, 20-16, and thus held on to first place in the Western Divi- sion of the National Football League. The Lions capitalized on an in- terception of a George Blanda pass to punch over the winning score in the fourth quarter., Bob Smith caught the errant toss on the Bear six and four plays later Doak Walker carried it across. THE LOSERS led three times in the contest, first when Blanda kicked a field goal, again after Eddie Macon went 14 yards around end, and for the last time on a 55-yard touchdown pass from Blanda to Bill McColl. The Los Angeles Rams stayed right on the heels of Detroit, a half game behind, as they over- came the Baltimore Colts, 21-13. Two last period six-pointers ac- counted for the winning margin. Norm Van Brocklin, who hit on 11 of 17 pass attempts, found Vita- min Smith for 26 yards and a touchdown early in the quarter. Three plays later, Herb Rich in- tercepted a pass and carried it 53 yards for the score that wrapped it up. GEORGE Taliaferro, playing his first game at quarterback in his SPORTS DAVE BAAD Night Editor professional career, ran 44 yards for one Colt touchdown and rip- ped off gains of 49 and 27 yards. The San Francisco Forty-Nm- ers remained a game behind the Lions by romping past the Green Bay Packers by a 37-7 margin. Y. A. Tittle tallied twice for the winners and threw to Billy Wil- son for a third score. Hugh McElhenny and Joe Perry accounted for the other Forty- Niner six pointers. * * THE CLEVELAND Browns par- layed two Lou Groza field goals and two Otto Graham scoring aer- ials into a 20-16 triumph over Pittsburgh's S t e e I e r s. Groza's three-pointers came from 41 and 50 yards out. Graham's payoff tosses covered 54 and 31 yards with Ray Renfro and Darrell Brewster in the receiving ends. Jim Finks sneaked over for the first Pittsburgh score and hit on five of five passes during the losers second scoring drive. Ray Mathews took it across from the. one. Ladies' and Children's HAIR STYLING by EXPERTS 715 N. University The Washington Redskins came up with 17 points in the final quarter to edge the New York Giants, 24-21. Eddie LeBaron com- bined with Charley Justice on a 54 pass play that set up one score, LeBaron himself eventually carry- ing it across. A few minutes later, Justice ran 15 yards up the middle for the winning score. 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