THlE MICHIGAN DAILY sr OSU Upsets Min Illini, 57-50; In 0 Gophers Win Lim COLUMBUS, O., Feb. 14-(A')-O Ohio State upset Illinois tonight, 57-50, with a second-half splurge (Conti of 35 points in a spotty Big Nine - ___- basketball game. Harris, kn The, bouncing Bucks turned the apiece and trick with a complete reversal of a ten-mini form in the final half. During that Earlier in wild period, they hit 14 of 33 at- Hodgins an tempts at field goals. In the first Lindegard's half, the Bucks hit only eight of Gophers N 35 attempts. It took ij Dick Schnittker, ace Ohio State 37 seconds forward, changed pace right along for Minn with his mates. In the first half fourth goal he was colder than the ice which one up on covered the ground outside, sink- Then at 5:5 ing only one of 11 shots. But, he game on ic connected for six of 10 in the final ing Hodgins half and with eight free throws puck past paced the winners with 22 points. McDonald. Al Renfre CHICAGO, Feb. 14--(/P)-Lofty Blue in the Jim McIntyre rolled in 21 points goal of the to hike his eight game total to overtime p 289 points in the Gophers' four verines we victories and four setbacks, and game ended lead his team to a 53-51 win over scoring asT a game Northwestern. with four f Lagging 31-23 at halftime hap- The Gop less Northwestern forged into a in the fast 51-51 deadlock with one minute Hodgins ne left. Chet Tomezyk, flashy Gopher of the open guard, then raced under the hoop Grant had for a lay-up in the last seconds to breakaway. decide the issue,. McMillan E Outlast ckey Sextet; riesota Nets Two Goals vertime To Cop 5-4 Tilt r : 1. .' degard Scores Twice in Last Period, cc in Overtime to Sh ie for Gop1ers CagersWin Cagers Take Over Second Slot in Conference Standing Suprunowicz Sparks Win with 17 Points; Score Largest Against Purdue This Year 69-5 S . nued from Page 1) otting the score three forcing the game into ute overtime period. the final session, Bill Ld Jerry Remole set up first tally. otch First Overtime ust three minutes and in the overtime period esota. to score their of the evening and go the Wolverine sextet. 54, the Gophers put the ce with Lindegard tak- s' pass and flipping the Michigan goalie Jack ew kept the Maize and running with his only evening at 9:25 of the eriod when the Wol- re shorthanded. The d, however, without any Michigan went all-out orwards and a goalie. hers drew first blood t moving game, when tted the puck at 2:54 ing stanza after Wally missed the net on a vens Count Gordie McMillan evened the count less than three minutes lat- er, taking Renfrew's pass to bea Gopher netminder Ken Austin. Rough play marked the open- ing of the second period with four penalties being handed out. With Frick off the ice for slashing, Dick Starrak gave the Wolverines a one goal margin, flipping a beautiful shot past the Minnesota goalie at 12:15 of the middle session . Gacek Makes It 3-1 Waly Gacek made it 3-1 six minutes later tallying on passes from M Milian and Renfrew, Michigan's last goal until Ren-r frew's counter in the overtime stanza. Minnesota came out fighting in Uhe, third period and dominated the play through most of the pci-- iod. The Wlverines had several chances en breakaways, but they couldn't seem to get the puck a-- cio>s the crease. At the horn ending the third period, the Wolverine pucksters were jubilant, feeling that they :}; :;s ti > t ' 4 q ' ' S'; r F (Continued froin Page 1) and easily looped the ball through the net. Harrison played his usual ster- ling game at guard. He took very few shots, but made every one count to give him his 13-point total. Wisniewski Gets Hot Irv Wisniewski starred in the waning minutes of the game when Coach Ozzie Cowles sent his re- serves into the game. He slipped in five points in the last minute to bring his count for the night to nine, third high for the Wol-I verines. The game was an unusually clean affair in the first half, espe- cially. The Wolverines were the principal offenders committing nine personals in the first period. Purdue was caught only three times, and Michigan made but one of these charity tosses. The battle was close in the first ten minutes of the game, but Michigan swished ten points to Purdue's three in the next five minutes to take a 25-15 lead. The tomorrow evening they face a strong and unpredictable Indiana quintet. which Cowles regards as the cruciai test of Michigan's title hopes. 'Siiper'-D per' LEADING SCORERS-A1 Renfr w and Mack Suprunowicz led the hockey and basketball teams in scoring last night as Renfrew notched a goal and two assists in a losing cause and Suprunowicz netted 17 points to pace the cagers to victory over Purdue. Jayvee FiveSe*ores 49.-24 Purdue Caudell, f Axness, f Williams, f Butturfield, f Horn, f Butchko, c Banks, c Berberian, g Thiessen, g , Hartman, g Totals MICHIGAN Sulrunowicz, f MacIntosh, f Mikulich, f McCaslin, f Wierda, f Stettlebauer, f Roberts, c Wisniewski, c Harrison, g Elliott, g Morrill, g TOTALS G 5 4 4 2 0l 3 0 1 0 1 20 G 8 3 3 0 0 0 4 4 4 0 2 28 F PF 1 4 0 1 5 4 0 4 1 1 5 0 1 0 3 2 0 3 0 0 16 15 F PF 1 0 1 5 0 2 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 3 5 3 3 4 2 1 13 22 'TP 11 1 8 13 [4 11 11 a1 5 10 a2 556 TP D 17 7 w6 0 1 U 8 19 13 [3 .6 69 29, V _.___ - _ - - - * - -- - - - __ - -- -- __---- - Numbers Confuse You? TH E SE - They're straight facts about the '48 'ENSIAN 50 years of HISTORY 56 pages of SPORTS 450 pages of MICHIGAN 4500 pictures of CAMPUS Maur tije cM* MICH IGANENSIAN ON SALE-NOW! Student Publications Building had climbed the playoff berth byf the 3-3 tie. But it was decided to jfl " I play one ten-minute overtime per- iod in order to settle the game one way cr another. Bert Katzenmeyer's Michigan Smith Shnes on Defense jayvee squad, featuring half a Ross rith, sophomore defense- dozen varsity footballers and an man from Toronto, was the Wol- equal number of associates, open- verine stair of the evening. His ex- I ed with a rush, and coasted to a cellent work in the Michigan zone 49-24 victory over Michigan Nor- kept the Gophers at bay during mal yesterday afternoon at the most of the evening. Yost Field House. Puck men To y irst o Two Tilts with California Tomorrow With the Big Nine mythical championship safely under wraps in the Michigan hockey camp by virtue of the squad's three wins in four starts over Minnesota, Vie Heyliger's lads will be out Mon- day night to show the westcoast that Michigan produces more than just a top-flight gridiron aggre- gation. The mid-western representative to the NCAA tournament in Col- orado will be decided in March when Michigan plays host to Michigan Tech in two games. Coach Julius Schroeder will bring his California skaters to Ann Arbor to finish up a stren- uous road jaunt which began February 4. In the most impor- tant games on the road trip, the Bear met Colorado College in the first of the away games played. By winning the two games, 6-5 and 12-4, Colorado clinched the far-western representative's spot in the NCAA tourney, and, along with Dartmouth, will meet the mid-western team in Colorado Springs next month. The Ivy League's representative is till undecided, but it is al- most a certainty that it will be either Boston University or Bosi on College. Monday night's game gill be the second between California and the Wolverines, Michigan having won the first match last year on California ice, 8-1. The third game of the series will be played Tuesday night. Coach Schroeder's Bears will be at full strength for the games fol- lowing the return of Larry Colli- son, high-scoring left wing,Cwho has picked up 11 goals and six assists this season. The rest of the fii'st line will be made up of Pat Finnegan at center ice and Cy Cardiff on the other wing. This trio has accounted for over two thirds of California's total point- age. Jim McIntyre and Hugh Du- berly will start at the defensive positions for the visitors and Ian Watson will be in the goal. Michigan's pilot, Vic Heyliger, will counter with his high-scoring first line of Gordie McMillan, Al Renfrew, and Wally Gacek. Con- nie Hill, Ross Smith and Dick Starrak will alternate in the de- fensive slots 800 tickets for each game are still available at the Athletic Ad- ministration Building and it is stressed that students should bring their I.D. cards with them at time of purchase. .'. 1 1 l rouerma ers beg; net though and -- -- ---- -to 29-23 at the h With center George Poretta, Michigan Stretch pacing a well balanced attack, ac- Michigan he counting for four baskets and two lead with fifteen free throws, the Jayvees encount- then went to wo ered little difficulty. game iced at Jayvees Master Backboards mark leading by Biggest factor in the easy Wol- From then on verine victory was their mastery make one, I'll m of both backboards. Dick Kemp- Cowles began pu thorn, Bob Holloway, and Bump serves and Purdu Elliott along with Jim Manilla and on the heat in a Captain Al Topping captured a salvage a lost ca vast majority of the rebounds to The Wolverines completely bottle up the Michigan to sit back and Normal attack. pressive showing< The Hurons' leading scorers center Roberts and guard McNary, tallied only six points each on two buckets and two charity toss- es. BOX SCORE MICHIGAN FG FT P T Klum, f 31 0 7 Conrad, f 1 0 3 2 t1 Elliott, f 1 1 0 3 Royce, f 2 0 0 4 I Peterson, f 0 0 0 4 Poretta, c 4 2 3 10 Holloway, c 3 1 1 7 Erben, g 2 0 2 4 Manilla, g 1. 2 2 5 Yerges, g 0 1 3 1 Topping, g 1 0 0 2 Kempthorn, g 2 1 2 3 20 9 16 49 2 NORMAL FG FT P T Tsehiphart, f 1 0 1 2 Campbell, f 0 1 4 1 Wells, f 1 1 4 3 Foglef 0 1 0 1 Roberts, c 2 2 1 6 Berg, c 1 1 3 3 McNally, g 2 2 3 6 Savag'e, g 0 2 3 2 7 10 19 24 an to dent the closed the gap half. es Lead ld a five-point minutes to go, rk and had the the ten-minute a margin of 49- it was a "you ake one" affair. tting in his re- e began putting vain attempt to ,use. 3have little time view their im- of last night for IVORY PHOT( 1030 E. University Tel. 8413 Half-time score-Michigan Purdue 23. APPLICATION PHOTOS 24-Hour Service of last night for if you can U problem on the 1 understand the n ways having your promptly.. Indiana Cone From Behind To Upset Iowa BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Feb. 14 -(AP)-.Indiana came from away back tonight to knock Iowa's hb6& ketball team out of a first-place tie with Wisconsin in the Big Nine standings. The Hoosiers won, 49 to 47, after trailing by 11 ponts at the half. Don (Tex) Ritter, chunky In- diana forward, popped in two free throws in the last minute for the Hoosiers' final margin. Iowa outscored Indiana from the field by two goals, 19 to 17, but made only nine of 21 free throws while the Hoosiers were converting 15 of 23. The Hawks ran up a 31-20 lead in the first half and seemed head- ed for an easier victory than their 61-51 triumph over Indiana four weeks ago. Then the Hoosiers came back with a balanced attask which had the crowd of 10,056 on its feet most of the last period. Indiana led for the frst time 4f- ter 13 minutes of the second half. Guard Lou Watson's long one- hander put the Hoosiers on top 41- 40. Iowa tied the score at 43-43 and again at 47-47 before Ritter pitched the winning free throws. Little Murray Wier of Iowa, av- eraging better than 22 points a game, got 23 tonight on 10 field goals and three free throws. Iis mates were stone cold, though, and six points was the best any of them could do. PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS IN STOCK Coronas - Underwoods Remingtons OFFICE EQUIPMENT SERVICE CO. 1ll South 4th Ave. inderstand the )oard, you can ecessity for al- shoes repaired :REPAIR' rext6cfk4 M4 rt u OKIx 10A Ur E(IABROS. SHOE 1109 South University I 1111 'I ! I ,_- -_ - a _ ____ ._ _ _. . a __ .:_ . _ _ _ _ ._ - _ -_ LfaiTeJ anCenS LEATHER JACKETS JUST ARRIVED Reduced 25% ,. :; :: ;;. ; , ,, _. ti:.: ' r4 ? r z Also We have a NICE SELECTION of DRESS PANTS New Shipment of 100% WOOL ARMY OFFICERS PINKS Designed for Dress, Soft Wear, and Long Living "-- All Sizes $1 95 -ill 4 For that Yew $tii ynente o TEST B 0 SMOOTH AND ROUGH LEATHERS !jil I1 7l ' .1r m - - - f i ® ®-®-® -...