PAGE TWO *. THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. JAN ,. E T OT E M I H G N D I YT T T ~ n V J 7 JL AA I JLIW JLP', 1..1 }. J 1&11 V IA" Bonnies Star Back on Court. RANKED THIRD: Michigan Progresses In AP Basketball Poll 'M' Statistics Rate Among Best BUFFALO, N.Y. (P)-St. Bona- venture's Fred Crawford, whose basketball- career appeared to be ended by tuberculosis about three years ago, is achieving rare feats these days. He is. averaging .30.5 points a game, grabbed 143 rebounds in 11 games, played the. full 40 minutes in each of the Donnies last six I.-M Refs There will be a meeting for those interested. in officiating intra-mural basketball games Monday, Jan. 20 at 7:30 p.m. at the Intra-Mural Building. games, and is the key to his club's fast-break offense. As a result, St. Bonaventure has a 10-1 record and is gunning for a berth in a post-season tour- nament. Feels Good "I feel pretty good now," Craw ford said this week in a telephone interview from the St. Bonaven- ture campus in Olean, N.Y. The last time the future was rosy for Crawford and the Bon- nies was his sophomore year, 1960-61. Led by All-America Tom Stith and Crawford, the team rolled to a 24-4 record and was ranked third nationally. Crawford aver- aged 21.9 points a game. But the Bonnies were eliminat- ed in the Eastern semifinals of the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament. A short time later, it was learned that both Stith and Crawford had tu- berculosis. 'Sounded Bad' "I didn't know exactly what to think," Crawford recalled. "It sounded bad." He and Stith went to Mount Morris, N.Y. Tuberculosis Hospi- tal. They were released about five months later. Stith did not play the next year. He was with the New York Knickerbockers of the National Basketball Association last season but did not make the team this fall. Crawford also sat out the 1961- 62 season. He was sometimes on the Bonnies' bench, but always in street clothes. Slow Return Then last season he returned to action, but slowly. He would play a few minutes, then he rest- ed a few. "It's a precautionary measure to guarantee that I wouldn't hurt myself," Crawford said. Because of the lengthy rests, he said, "I could never get in real good shape." Crawford averaged 12 points a game for the first two-thirds of the season. He was given the go- ahead to play full-time from there on, and he finished the year with an average of 19 a game. No Stopping Him This year, he's been unstop- pable. He scored 40 points, a ca- reer high, as the Bonnies tram- pled Niagara Saturday.. Crawford, 23, is a native of New York City. Asked if he wanted to play pro- fessional basketball, Crawford re- plied: "I'd love to if the opportunity presented itself." : ?---- By The Associated Press Michigan's Wolverines used last Saturday's 77-70 victory over Pur- due to climb past Kentucky to third place in this week's Asso- ciated Press poll of the nation's broadcasters and sportswriters. Meanwhile, unbeaten UCLA, the only team to have defeated the Wolverines, increased their lead 1. 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. 8. 9.' I4,. UCLA (35) Chicago Loyola (1) Michigan (2) Kentucky Davidson (2) Vanderbilt Oregon State (1) Cincinnati Villanova Duke 13 11 11 12 12 12 13 9 11 10 L Pts. 0 404 1 312 1 298 2 242 0 217 1 205 2 107 3 100 1 91 3 72 with back-to-back victories over Southern California. Michigan coach Dave Strack, whose team absorbed a 98-80 beating in the Los Angeles Classic last month from the Bruins, said: "They walloped us. I sure don't know who's better." The Bruins beat USC, 79-59 and 78-71, last week and lifted their record to 13-0. Kentucky, runner- up a week ago, was defeated by Vanderbilt in its first of three games last week and tumbled to fourth. UCLA drew 35 first place votes and 404 points in the latest vote by a special panel of 41 regional selectors. Loyola of Chicago moved up one place to second with 312 points while Michigan also advanced one place to third with 298 points. Kentucky had 242. Points were awarded on a basis of 10 for a first place vote, 9 for second etc. By MIKE MEYERS Now that all the facts and figures of holiday basketball ac- tion have been collected and sort- ed, the third-ranked Wolverines find themselves listed among the leading major colleges in the country in the departments of re- bounding, field goal percentage, and game point average. In the individual honors, guard Cazzie Russell placed in the free throw percentage category as well as scoring average. According to the official basket- ball statistics released by the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Bureau complete through games of Jan. 4, Michigan's 88.2 points per game was sufficient for 15th place. Detroit Scores Detroit, victims on New Year's Eve to the Wolverine five, are fourth nationally in this depart- ment with an average of 95.4. Immediately behind the Titans in the fifth position is top-rank- ed UCLA, the only team to de- feat Michigan thus far, at 94.3. Another former 'M' opponent, Western Michigan, came in 11th with 89.4 points per game. Others receiving votes in alpha- betical order: Brigham Young, Creighton, DePaul, Illinois, La- Salle, New Mexico, NYU, Ohio State, Oklahoma State, St. Bona- venture, St. Louis, Stanford, Ten- nessee, Texas Western, Utah, Utah State, Wichita. Other Big Ten teams in the top' 20 are Michigan State, eighth with 92.1, and Wisconsin, 16th with 88.1. The 'M' cagers placed tenth in field goal percentage with an accuracy quotient of .485. 'M' Rebounds Michigan's big men under the basket, Russell, Bill Buntin and Oliver Darden, each with over 100 rebounds this season, helped to secure the 15th spot in rebound- ing percentage, recovering 5951 boards out of 1035 for a average of .575. A hair ahead are the De- troit Titans in the 13th position- also with .575. The fact that Buntin's name is missing from the list of the na- tion's top rebounders, where he occupied the 11th spot last sea- son, is readily explainable by the added depth which sophomores Russell and Darden have supplied under the boards. Similarly, the All-Big Ten cen- ter's disappearance from the lead- ers in scoring is attributable to the more balanced attack which Dave Strack's squad has fea- tured this season. Buntin was 24th last year with a 22.7 average. His mark thus far this season is a shade under last year as he has posted 21.7 with 435 points in the 11 games in which he has played. Buntin and Russell combined have totalled 43.7 points per game. This total places them among the top pairs in the nation. The lead-, ing pair in the nation is Loyola of Chicago's two jumping jacks, Les- lie Hunter and John Miller who manage to put in 46.8 between them. Many players which Michigan has seen or will see during the year appear on the list of the top 50 individual scoring leaders. M a n n y Newsome, Western Michigan star, is second in the nation, scoring 32.8 points per game. Ohio State's Gary Bradds ranks 17th with 26.6, and North- western's Richie Falk is 20th with 25.7. Also ranked are Dick Dzik of Detroit, Harold Hairston of NYU, and Jeff Mullins of Duke. Besides Bradds, the Wolverines are yet to encounter Pete Gent of MSU, listed 32nd at 24.0, and Dick VanArsdale of Indiana, in the number 39 spot with an aver- age of 23.0 points per game. Russell No. 41 Michigan's Russell is in the 41s't position with his game average of 22.7. Russell's 50 for 58 free throw percentage .862 secured the num- ber 20 listing in that department. Ahead of him in eighth place is Newsome of Western Michigan, ,897. Detroit's Dzik came in third in individual rebounding, grabbing 20.3 per game. Former opponents Jay Buckley of Duke and Ray Bennett of NYU placed in the field goal percent- age department. IBradds Top Scorer In Big Ten Ohio State's Gary Bradds, who emerged as the Big Ten's leading scorer last season after spend- ing his sophomore year as a re- serve, is at it again. The 6'8" Bradds is averaging 29.5 points for two games to hold a narrow lead over Illinois' Tal Brody, Purdue's Dave Schellhase and Minnesota's Lou Hudson. Michigan's Bill Buntin, the con- ference's best sophomore last year and the second-best returning scorer, holds down seventh place with a 22.5 average. Sophomore Cazzie Russell has a 20.0 average in a tie for tenwh. I jl i G Bradds, OSU 2 Brody, Illinois 2 Schelihase, Purdue 2 Hudson, Minnesota 2 Lopossa, Northwestern 3 T. Van Arsdale, Indiana 3 BUNTIN, M 2 Falk, Northwestern 3 Ricketts, OSU 2 RUSSELL, WM 2 D. Van alrsdale, Indiana 3 TP' 59 57 55 55 77 68 45 62 41 40 60 Avg. 29.5 28.5 27.5 27.5 25.3 22.7 22.5 20.7 20.5 20.0 20.0 AM ICIN lm I I i On twnpu AL (Author of Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and "Barefoot Boy With Cheek.") %.n 1964: YEAR OF DECISION Well sir, here we go into 1964, which shows every sign of being quite a distinguished year.First off, it is the only year since 1954 which ends with the Figure 4. Of course, when it comes to Figure 4's, 1964, though distinguished, can hardly compare with 1444 which, most people agree, had not just one, not just two, but three Figure 4's! This, I'll wager, is a record that will stand for at least a thousand years! 1444 was, incidentally, notable for many other things. It was, for example, the year in which the New York Giants played the Philadelphia Athletics in the World Series. As we all know, the New York Giants have since moved to San 1an- cisco and the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City. These is a movement afoot at present to move Chicago to Phoevix- the city, not the baseball team. Phoenix, in turn, would of course move to Chicago. It is felt that the change would be broadening for residents of both cities. Many Chicago folks, for example, have never seen an iguana. Many Phoenix folks, on the other hand, have never seen a frostbite. ."'. iii WoW V geyaNTO- d ! There are, of course, certain difficulties connected with a municipal shift of this size. For instance, to move Chicago you also have to move Lake Michigan. This, in itself, presents no great problem, what with modern scientific advances like electronics and the French cuff. But if you will look at your map, you will find Lake Michigan is attached to all the other Great Lakes, which in turn are attached to the St. Lawrence Seaway, which in turn is attached to the Atlantic Ocean. You start dragging Lake Michigan to Phoenix and, willy-nilly, you'll be dragging all that other stuff too. This would make our British allies terribly cross, and I can't say as I blame them. Put yourself in their place. What if, for example, you were a British costermonger who had been saving and scrimping all year for a summer holiday at Brighton Beach, and then when you got to Brighton Beach there wasn't any ocean? There you'd be with your inner tube and snorkel and nothing to do all day but dance the Lambeth Walk. This, you must agree, would not help make you NATO-minded ! I appeal most earnestly to the residents of Chicago and Phoenix to reconsider. I know it's no bowl of cherries going through life without ever seeing an iguana or a frostbite, but I ask you-Chicagoans, Phoenicians-is it too big a price to pay for preserving the unity of the free world? I feel sure that if you search your hearts, you will make the right decision, for all of us-whether we live in frostbitten Chicago, iguana-infested Phoenix, or narrow-lapelled New Haven-are first and foremost Americans! But I digress. We were speaking of 1964, our new year. And new it is! There is, for one thing, new pleasure in Marlboro Cigarettes. How, you ask, can there be new pleasure in Marlboros when that fine flavorful blend of tobaccos, that clean efficient Selectrate filter, have not been altered? The answer is simple: each time you light a Marlboro, it is like the first time. ; I SIN