Triii MICJw14GN )AHX'oo Keen Lauds Lightweigbhts Cliff Keen, head coach of Mich-F igan's new 150-pound football team is full of Entl-musiasm for the Western Conference's new venture in intercollegiate athletics. "It's a great thing for these big midwestern colleges where so many boys get squeezed out of varsity competition merely be- cause they're too small.' Keen who has been head wrestling coach and assistant on the Wolverine grid staff for 22 ,years, rates his lightweight squad among his top teams. "They're wonderful," said the letic staff, "I've never had a team that put out like this one has, and they really enjoyecd themselves every minute." It's a great sport from the spector angle too," added Keen. "It's fast and deceptive and the caliber of play is first class." Cliff Keen is one of, the vet- erans of the Michigan coaching staff having come to Ann Arbor in 1925 after a successful high school coaching career in Okla- Heia was national intercollegiate wrestling champ at 158 pounds while actctnding Oklahoma A & M. , , . .::. . " "}f -h, r; ; --- __ _ , . ... CONFERENCE CHAMPS-ThiC 150-pound team, which, in their first year, tied far the Western Confearence crown. Tap row (left to right) TOP: Nelson, Nahabedian, Hicks, Strong, McKee, Costa, Olson, Sipp, Kiddon, O'Connell, Wicks, THIRD: Breakey, Marshall, Parshall, Bradley, IMurrell, Hinz, Free'd, Smith, Clark, Englander, Morey, Rosatti. SECOND: Bra dbury, Sakai, Buster, Rogers, Allen Coach, Kitterer, Captain; Keen Coach; Mandeville, Singer, Whitehouse. BOTTOM: Wilcox, Shaw, Schnider, Budick, Enierling. 1j: * r ,*** * 150-Pound Football Is Very Successful By BUD WEIDENTHAL When the lid of the first 150- pound football season in Western Conference history }slew skyward on Ann Arbor's Ferrer Field early last November it was the begin- ning of football's "big experiment" for 1947. The success of that ex- BOS TITCHBO A dependable stapler at a surprisingly low price Handy to use 4Un the desk, in the hand, or as a tacker. ONY2.0COMPLETE WITH A THOUSAND STAPLES 305 Maynard pel iment has now been acclaimed not only by Big Nine Commis- sioner Kenneth L. "Tug" Wilson but by many thousands of enthu- siastic fans who followed the sea- ,-,n as it progressed. it was Michigan's athletic staff licaded by Ffritz Crisler which had long advocated lightweight foot- ball for the Big Nine, but it was ,not until this season that four members of the league - Ohio State, Wisconsin, Illinois and the Wolverines decided to take the big step) andfield teams. At ]Michigan, Cliff ]Keen, an eld-fa, thful on the athletic staff, for years head wrestling mentor and assistant on the gridiron, was given the position as coach. Late in September Coach Keen announced the first practice and approximately 75 lightweight as- pirants responded to his call. yn a matter of only a few weeks score semblance of an organ- ized, coordinated team was begin- nin ; to take shape. A remarkable achieveii~ent considering the fact thhat cualy 14 of members of the cquad had ever participated. in or- , Iisized football, and of that num- hert only fouir had ear'ned any kind ofvars<,ity letters. 'ih 'rcate.st diffic ulty en- C oiteedihowever, was that of' tF. anioriing well over half of tbe -quad from backfield posi- tions to the line. It seemed strange converting 140 pounders into tackles. The process was necessarily slow and tedious. Particularly brilliant in pre-sea- son warm-ups and scrimmages, which were parctically daily oc- currances, was Charlie Ketterer, a senior who had been a standout for the Wolverines on the basket- ball court and the baseball dia- mond. His adept ball-handling and sharp passing was just the medi- cine Doctor Keen had ordered and he jiust natur'ally stepped into the lightweight's quarterback slot.' Aroiund Ketterer the Wolver- ine mentor built an offense based exclusively on the "'T" for- mation, a complete departure from the traditional Michigan single wing. The schedule found the "little Wolverines," as they came to be called, opening their season against Illinois in Ann Arbor on November 1, followed by a contest with Wisconsin and a home and home series with Ohio State. The week preceding the opener Ketterer was elect~i captain by his teammates and was named to the starting qua rter'back position from wheire he would direct the team. On Noember' 1 sever'al thousaiad fans wer'e on hand to view the sea- son lid-lifter against the Uniersity of Illinois. After a slow start the "little Wolverines" s ud decnl1y found themselves and raced to three spectacular scores in the first half on a pass from Ketterer to John Wilcox, a sneak by Ketter- er and a short dash by Ross Marshall. The Wolveirines added two more touchdowns to their 20-0 halftime lead, on a 74 yard run by Doug Wicks and a short aerial fr'om Charlie Ketter'er's right arma into the hands of Johnny Wilcox. The final score read Michigan 33, Illinois 0, a fitting inaugural to lightweight football at Ann Arbor. Next came Ohio State, again at Ferry Field. This time over- cast skies and a driving rain greeted the grid ders as they took their positions for the kickoff. Although Michigan started fast and was able to assume a two point lead on a safety early in the (Coninued on Page 8) a Imagine SLITHER SLIP* ^i in soft-draping, cleanly tailored NYLON J-E-R-S-E-YI It's soil-resistant-long-wearing . f -washes and dries ini a flash, 5i eNo shrinking, no sagging z. a over, due to the Van Raalte j TH-ERMO-BET treatment. Aid absolutely no ironing. X in White 32-36-38-40 in Pink 34-40 I ~ SECAVSK YOU LOVE MICE THINGS-, 116 SO. MAIN ST. PH4ONE 2"2934 +Greet the Returning Team with SINCERE CONGRATULATIONS, Glorified in the Newest of the New, found at Jauckson Battle Creek Lansing r Saginaw ANN ARBOR ~ITON and COUNTRY SHOP i 108 . UNIVRS ITV 802 S. STATi 1 ___r 111 11,11 1 A IL~~r £OOZ 00 l .Cxc+wvu e. I : " *J-HOP .'SNIORPRO"M \Ve have tile gay-heai ted fashions to take you thrOLugh the party days ahlcid! a.nhvti f'rom ~and ti o ,a/ MICHIGA"N / Tops in BIG NINE Football GOODYEAR' S Tops in Fashions For You and Your Home ILc/Ii