TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 SCagers THE MICHIGAN DAILY Up Big Nine Lead, Trounce Purdue, 46-35 Hi-Lites of Game That Put 'M' Cagers on Top Si { t 1 i I Bring onIt owa Action. in Lead Gaining Battle By PRES HOLMES The camera staff of The Micli- igan Daily has combined with the sports staff to present several photo highlights of the Michigan- Indiana basketball game, the game which gave Michigan the lead in the Western Conference for the second time this year and also marked the first time in over two decades that a Wolverine quintet has ruled supreme in Big Nine .Basketball after the three quarter mark in competition. Michigan dumped the touted Hoosiers, 66-54, in champion- ship style and seem headed for their first undisputed title in 21 years. The Wolverines had to share their 1929 cup with Wis- consin, and it is necessary to go back to 1927 to find Mich- igan in sole possession of the Conference championship. Then followed the lean years, not only in financial circles, but for Michigan quintets. They con- sistently held the position of the on-looker-occupying- a sec- ond division berth perennially. Then came the revolution, or rather the renovation. To be even more explicit Ozzie Cowles ap- peared on the scene. Last year, in Cowles' first sea- li "' higa n 2upiiunohwiCZ McCaslin, fV M cIntosh, f Roberts, c Wisniewski, Harrison, g. Elliott, g . . Morrill, g .. Ga. F. .1 0 .3 1 .2 0 c . 0 0 ........6 1 ........2 2 ..2 0 .21 4 Totals,. PF. 1 0 1 3 0 0 3 0 8 PF. 0 4 3 2 0 0 9 TP. 10 7 4 0 13 6 4 46 TP. 7 4 4 16 0 4 35 Purdue Williams, f ...... Caudell, f.... Axness, C..... Butchko, g ...... Theissen, g Banks, g ........ Totals ........ G. F. ...3 1 ....2 0 ...1 2 ...7 2 ...0 0 ...2 0 . .15 5 Harrison Dumps 13 Points To Pace Wolverine Scorers (Continued from Page 1) in 16 points to lead all scorers for the evening. He sent home four buckets and two free throws in the first half, but his mates trailed at the intermission 28-20. In fact, the first half developed into quite a scoring duel between Butchko and Mack Suprunowicz, the cat-like Wolverine forward and top point maker in Michigan's three previous tussles. Suprunowicz clicked for five baskets out of 17 floor attempts in the initial half. However, he was held scoreless throughout the sec- ond session. Coach Ozzie Cowles' victorious outfit moved along at a steady, methodical pace in the first half, never falling behind. Harrison's set neatly swished the cords a few seconds after the opening whistle to start Michigan's drive to its fifth straight conference win. 28 Per Cent The Wolverines connected on 14 out of 46 floor shots in the first half, and missed all its three foul shot chances. Their over-all shoot- ing for the night read 21 hits out Halftime score-Michigan 28; Purdue 20. Free throws missed: Michigan- McIntosh, Roberts, Harrison 3; El- liott. Purdue-Williams, Axness 2, Butchko. BULLETIN CLEVELAND, Feb. 23-(/P)--- The Cleveland Browns tonight gave up draft rights to Bob Chappuis, Michigan's great halfback. Details of the deal were not revealed, but Coach Paul Brown said the All-America Confer- ence campions traded their draft rights to Chappuis to an- other Conference club for play- ers to be named later. of 5 attempts-for a 28 per cent accuracy range. Purdue cagers found the basket on only nine occasions in the first half, missing 25 floor shots. After that, they could only hit on six of their ensuing 41 tries-for a 22.7 percentage. Michigan saw an early 12.5 lead, dwindle until the Lafayette lads climbed to within a two-point dif- ference, 18-16, on Norrie Caudel's leaping one-hander. That was the closest Purdue ever came to the league-leading Wolverines, for the Ann Arborites found the target again to zoom to a 28-20 edge at half-time. Purdue, which absorbed a hu- miliating 98-54 thrashing at the hands of Illinois last Saturday night, missed the services of one of its regulars, Capt. Bill Ber- berian, a leg injury in the Illinois tiff kept him out of uniform to- night. Dick Axness, he Boilermaker's top offensive threat, was limited to one basket and one free for his night's work. You suggested it- Pete Elliott guarded him pretty closely. Daily-Lipsey. WEARING THE VICTORS' SMILE,... Don MacIntosh (10) and Hal Morrill lead the way up to the Wolverine locker room. JUST KIBITZING By DICK KRAUS Daily Sports Editor' Daily-Lipsey. WE'LL GIVE YOU A TIP... Bill Roberts (6) puts his height to use and taps the ball out of Michigan territory. Don Ritter (7) Hoosier Hot-shot watches and waits for his chance to net a bucket. son, Michigan garnered a .500 av- erage in Conference play. Not im- pressive, but good enough so that the pre-season prophets in the fall of '47 gave Michigan the handle of "The team to beat." Coach Cowles'quintet has proved these would-be experts correct. They are the team to beat but only two teams have man- aged to do it this season, and as a result Michigan's cagers lead the league. The Wolverines had the Hou- dini's worried at the beginnin- of the season. They got off to a wobbly start against Minnesota by edging the Gophers 43-41. Their second contest was against the cellar-dwelling Wildcats and Michigan lost this one 51-48. It looked like Michigan was on the way when they handed the Wisconsin quintet their first loss of the season with a 43- 38 upset. Then they dumped Northwestern, but the following week Ohio State wound up on the long end of a 70-66 score to give the dopesters and Mich- igan fans another case of jitters. With a record of 3-2 and Illi- nois, Purdue, Indiana and Minne- sota ahead of them things looked gloomy for any title aspirations the Wolverines might have had. The cagers turned on the steam though and won four straight to capture the Conference pace-' maker position. Michigan has two games left to play, since they retained their league lead with their 46-35 win over Purdue last night, and must win them both to win an undis- puted title. A split would give them a tie and loss of both would give Michigan the runner-up slot behind Iowa's quintet. FRITZ CRISLER, the nation's top football teacher is also just about the nation's tops when it comes to handicapping winners, (coach- ing winners, that is), and one of his selections-Mr. Ozzie Cowles- bids fair to take all the marbles in this 1948 cage derby. No one has been able to saddle a winner from this Michigan basketball stable in a long long time, but Ozzie, the erstwhile top dog of the Ivy League, has his entry out in front and winging as the field turns into the home stretch. When Cowles got here a year ago, he had Pete Elliott and Bob Harrison from the 1945-46 squad, a long clumsy sophomore, Bill Roberts, a transfer from Dartmouth, Boyd McCaslin, and a slightly terrific, but green, freshman, Mack Suprunowicz. For a whole year he schooled his charges chiefly on the niceties of keeping the other guy from throwing the ball through the bucket. Operating on the theory aimed at getting more shots than the other guy, Ozzie worked on defense, defense and still more defense. In the process he turned Pete Elliott into one of the best guards in the business, converted Harrison into a better than average de- fensive player without hamstringing his scoring abilities, performed a remarkable teaching job on Roberts, turning the big clumsy New York stater into an acceptable ball player. With Suprunowicz, a great natural ball player, and McCaslin, this quintet moved fast down the stretch of last year's campaign, closing with a® brilliant victory over a tough Ohio State club at Columbus. It only took a few games this cage year to show Cowles that his club needed something. He found it in Don McIntosh, an I-M league hotshot a year ago. Ozzie moved the 6-3 in. sophomore in to the pivot slot on offense, dropped Roberts out to a forward spot, which usually draws the enemy's biggest men away from the basket. McIntosh, deadly accurate from around the free throw circle with his hook shot, combines with Suprunowicz and Harrison to give Cowles three consistent scorers. Whether or not Ozzie's boys bring home the Big Nine bacon by turning back Iowa next Monday night, there ain't no doubt about the direction of Michigan basketball from here on out, it's up, straight up. Badger Five Beats Wildcats Daly-Lmanian' ON THE CHIN . . . Irv Wisniewski takes a hard one as the myriad of hands grope for the elu- sive ball. Just in case you're wondering that's the ball in the upper right hand corner, not the moon beaming eerily down. Daily-Lmanian UP IN THE AIR...?. Mack Suprunowicz catches Bud Watson (12) of Indiana flat-footed as he leaps up to swish another two-pointer for the Wolverines. Big Nine Standings Hold Those Bands ! r W. L. Pet. Pts. Op.- Michigan ....... Iowa......... Wisconsin...... Illinois ......... Ohio State .... Purdue ......... Minnesota...... Indiana ........ Northwestern .. .8 2 .7 3 .7 4 .5 5 .5 6 .5 6 .4 6 .3 7 .3 8 .800 .700 .636 .500 .455 .455 .400 .300 .273 556 554 567 580 621 557 520 526 551 485 507; 577 544 6331 606 543 540 593 LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS MICHIGAN 46, Purdue 35. Wisconsin 59, Northwestern 54. Ohio State 60, Indiana 45. This Week's Games: Illinois at Northwestern. Purdue at Indiana. Minnesota at Iowa. Ohio State at MICHIGAN. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all .members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Sat- urdays). Notices WINS POPULARITY CONTEST TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, VOL. LVIII, No. 98 1948 their new 1948 license numbers. If students desire to retain their driving privileges, the 1948 license should be reported to Mr. Gwin or Miss McDowell in Rm. 2, Univer- sity Hall either by postcard, in person, or by phone (6115). College of Literature, Science, and the Arts; Schools of Educa- tion, Forestry, Music and Public Health: Students who received marks I, X, or 'no report' at the close of their last semester or sum- mer session of attendance will re- ceive a grade of E in the course or courses unless this work is made up by March 9. Students wishing an extension of time beyond this date in order to make up this work should file a petition ad-! dressed to the appropriate official in their school with Rm. 4, Univer- sity Hall where it will be trans- mitted. Student Loan Frints: All re- maining prints will be displayed in Rm. 206, University Hall the week of February 23 from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for students wishing to rent a picture or to secure an ex- tra print for the semester. Rental fee, 50 cents. Each student must present his identification card. Varsity Debating: All debaters check bulletin board, 4th floor, Angell Hall. Tle Board of Examiners of the Newark, N. J. Board of Edu- cation, announces examinationsi for teachers in Kindergarten and Elementary Grades. Applications must be filed by March 1. For fur- ther information call at the Bu- reau of Appointments. University Community Center, Willow Run Village. Tues., Feb. 24, 8 p.m., Garden Club. New members invited. Wed., Feb. 25, 8 p.m., Wives' Club Board; 8 p.m., Plays and Games Group. Thurs., Feb. 26, 8 p.m., The Arts and Crafts Group. Sat., Feb. 28, 3:30-5:30 p.m., Wives' Club Tea for new wives at WRV. Lectures Thomas M. Cooley Lectures. General topic: "Our Legal Sys- tem and How It Operates. Sec end Lecture: "Operation of Stan- dards," by Burke Shartel, Professor of Law. 4:15 p.m., Tues.. Feb. 24, Rm. 120, Hutchins Hall. The pub- lic is invited. University Lecture: Grove Pat- terson, editor-in-chief of the To- ledo Blade, will speak on "The Fifth Freedom" at 8 p.m., Wed., Feb. 25, Rackham Amphitheatre. The lecture is open to the public. Mr. Patterson will also address journalism students on "Social Responsibilities of the American Newspapers" at 3 p.m., Rm. E, Haven Hall. Coffee hour, 4 p.m. in the News Room. (Continued on Page 4) ,.i Bulletin HOUGHTON, Mich., Feb. 23-(/P)-Michigan Tech scored in every period to win an easy 4 to 0victory over Colorado Col- lege in a hockey game tonight. * * * Michigan will face each team twice in completing its 1948 season. TOWN AND CAMPUS SHOES Month-End Clearance WOMEN' SHOES Style Shoes and Casuals British Walker... Penaljo By The Associated Press Wisconsin kept alive its slim Big Nine title hopes by coming from behind to down Northwestern, 59- 54, while OSU's revitalized Buck- eyes defeated favored Indiana, 60- 45. The Badgers were forced to overcome three Wildcat leads in the second half, but Bob Mader, Wisconsin forward scored 14 of his evening's total of 19 points to lead the Cardinal and White to victory. Scoring honors for the night, however, went to a Northwestern guard, Bill Sticklen. A long shot artist, >ticklen dropped in 23 points. At Columbus, the Buckeyes promised Michigan a tough con- test, as they trounced Indiana, 60-45, to gain their fourth consec- utive Conference triumph. Driving privileges: Students are reminded that their University driving permits are rendered in- valid by their failure to report Available This Weekend Tom McNall's ENDS SATURDAY Friendly Sports Other brands of play shoes 156 PA IRS MOST SIZES Regularly 7.50-16.95 Sale Prices: 2.88, 5.88, 7.88, 10.88 MEN'S SHOES Dress and Sport Oxfords I Edwin Clapp British Walker NO, the man in this picture ;s not upside down! You must be reading this standing on yc, ir head. Little wonder you can't pass the Finger-Nail Test. 1 etter straighten up and AA --- __ - 4 02- ENDS Chas. A. Eaton SATURDAY Jarman I 60 PAIRS 7 I1 I II i I _I