- WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Pucksters Face MSC ILLINOIS CHIEF THREAT: Tn1 i l'w Sprinters Face Strong Opposition 'q i Rulemakers Crack Down On Roughing WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W. Va.-(O)-College football rule- makers tried to make it clear yes- terday they want unnecessary roughness stopped. The NCAA rules committee re- worded the regulation to get across the idea it wants flagrant violators of roughing rules thrown out of the game. IT ALSO ACTED to charge a team with a time out for sending in a player just to punt. This is the only change made in the sub- stitution rules which are the basis of the two-platoon system. Under the new rules, a player may be banned from the game and his team penalized 15 yards for striking with the forearms, elbows or locked hands. Before, 15 yards only was the penalty. The Rules Committee also sub- stituted the word "shall" for "may" in making a flagrant viola- tor of the personal foul rules sub- ject to disqualification. "THIS MAKES it mandatory in- stead of discretionary," explained Fritz Crisler, chairman of the committee. "It also will impress on both officials and coaches that the penalty is meant to be severe." The rulemakers also revised the section on clipping and pil- Ing on. The penalty for illegal defensive holding also will be more severe, 15 yards instead of five. Kansas Still Rated First, OverIllinois NEW YORK - (R) -Duquesne's fast improving and unbeaten bas- ketball team moved into the top 10 for the first time this season in the Associated Press poll as Kansas held on to its No. 1 rank- ing by a narrow margin over Illi- nois yesterday. Duquesne (11-0), Kansas (13- 0), Illinois (11-0), Iowa (11-0) and St. Bonaventure (9-0) are the only major college teams still able to boast perfect records. All five are in the top 10 as Duquesne jumped from 16th to seventh place. The law of averages caught up with previously undefeated Indi- ana and Seton Hall during the week. Indiana was beaten by both Ohio State and Iowa while Siena knocked off Seton Hall . Indiana dropped from 4th place to 14th and Seton Hall slipped from 9th to 12th. Illinois actually received more first place votes than Kansas this week, 23 to 22, but the Kansans accumulated enough second and third place votes from the sports writers and sportscasters to nose out the Illini, 790 to 773. Points are based on 10' for first, nine for second, eight for third and so on. 1. Kansas (22) ................. 790 2. Illinois (23) .................. 773 3. Kentucky (9)................714 4. Iowa (6) ..................... 517 5. St. Louis (3) ................ 414 6. St. Bonaventure (9).......... 326 7. Duquesne (4) ................307 8. Washington (6) .............. 295 9. Kansas State (3)............281 10. West Virginia (13)............ 192 Irish Hoopsters Drop MSC, 56-48;_Stephans Tallies 18 By DICK LEWIS and ously steal the ball, which was a GENE MACKEVICH direct result of a full court press. EAST LANSING -- It should only happen to Michigan. THE SPARTANS' heads-up-play Notre Dame completely out- proved to be their best opportunity played Michigan State here last to gain possession of the ball, since night to coast to an easy 56-48 the Irish controlled both boards triumph, throughout the contest. The South-Benders fought IN AVENGING an early sea- through a pressing Spartan de- son 12 point setback, the fighting fense in the third period, widen- Irish led at one point by 17 mark- ing the gap to 13 points at the ers in breezing to their tenth win end of three sessions, 44-31. in thirteen contests. Carey hit with three quick hook The Spartans, who now boast shots as the final period opened an 8-3 record, meet the Wolver- but Stephans, who was the high ines at Ann Arbor this Saturday man for the night with 18 markers night. began to find the hoop again. Coach Pete Newell's aggressive A late Spartan spurt cut a 54-37 charges were miserable from the deficit to 54-46 but Stephans hit field. Let by center Bob Carey's on a drive in and his teammates 13 point effort, the Spartans were stalled the rest of the way to ic held to six two-pointers in the the verdict for Notre Dame. first half, and wound up with sev- F enteen in 66 attempt Bertrand ,F........4 4 1 12 Leslie, F0............ 1 4 1 MICHIGAN STATE took a 7-2 Gibbons, F.......... 3 4 4 10 advantage early in the opening Rosenthal, C........5 0 4 10 quarter but the Irish fought back Lewinsi, C.........31 0 0 2 Strasser, G.......... 0 3 2 3 to tie the score three times and Stephens, G ........ 9 0 4 18 salvage a 12-12 deadlock after the Totals ........... 22 12 19 56 first ten minutes. sICHIGAN STATE G F PF TP The Spartans were stone-cold Furseth, F.........3 3 0 9 in the next stanza. The home Eckstrom, F ........ 0 0 1 0 team could find the range for Bower, F............2 1 3 5 only eight tallies, while Notre Carlson, F...........1 0 3 Dame, behind the shooting of Carey, c.............6 2 3 14 guard John Stephans, hit for Macmaster, C........o 0 2 0 seventeen and a 29-20 lead at Wesling, G ..... 0 0 1 0 Stauffer, G.......... 1 3 1 5 intermission. Means, G.......... 0 0 3 0' One of the major factors which Ayala, G............ 1 0 3 2 kept MSC's hopes alive in the first Schlatter, G......... 1 1 1 3 half was their ability to intercept Totals ........... 17 14 22 48 sloppy NID passes and to continu- Free throws missed: Notre Iame- ________ Stephens 4, Rosenthal 2. Lewinski 2. Win Means League Tie With Denver A strong Maize and Blue sextet will take to its home ice at 8:00 tonight to try to make it two straight victories this season over arch-rival Michigan State. The game 1s an important one for the Wolverines, since it offers them a chance to pull into a tie, with Denver for the Midwest Col- lege Hockey League lead. * * *j I i I C f t C 1 1 I r i The second in a series of articles concernin the prospects of the Mich- igan track team. Today's article cov- ers the short distance events. By JOHN JENKS Concensus of opinion has it that Coach Don Canham will have to spend the between-semester vaca- tion touring the wilds of Canada f'or ringers if Michigan is to be successful in the short distance events. While the other squads, parti- cularly Illinois, are loaded for bear in the dash activities, the Wolver- ine cinder contingent is slightly hurting in this important depart- ment. THE 60 YARD DASH provides a reasonable picture of the situa- tion. Illinois has Joe Gonzales, who won the indoor 60 and the outdoor 220 last year. Northwestern has James Gol- liday, the national AAU and Big Ten champ in the 100; while Michigan State lays claim to Art Ingraham, runner-up to Golliday in the 100. Michigan's ablest representa- tive, Bill Konrad, was pressed to finish fifth in the Western Con- ference finals last spring. An even sadder outlook is furnished by the thought of the almost complete vacuum behind Konrad. THANKS TO a very promising -SA Cirilo McSween on the basis of last year's indoor performance. Ohio State's Gene Cole, Iowa's Gary Scott, and Wisconsin's Leroy Collins followed McSween across the tape in that order. It is hard to tell how the Wol- verines stand up against other Big Ten team in the hurdles. The loss of an outstanding performer such as Don Hoover can't be brushed aside. HOWEVER, Van Bruner, who finished third behind Hoover and State's Jesse Thomas, both of whom graduated, will be bacl , as- sisted by capable Wally Atchison. Junior Stielstra and Bruno Boel- stera lends added support to this event. The chief competition will come from John Anderson from Illinois. Anderson, a South Am- erican, ran the 120 lows in 14.2 in the Pan American races. This time is better than anything turned in in the Big Ten during the last three years, according to Canham. , 7 i e t } 1 3 D z i D S a ; s DENVER currently is on top by i two points, but has played one more game than Michigan. Michigan State is in fourth place in the ice loop, and if the first game played this season between the two schools is any indication, State will probably1 find it quite difficult to move up; in the standings tonight. Michigan opened its current' campaign with a lop-sided 11-1 victory over the Spartans at East Lansing. It was a real rough- house affair which featured more penalties and brawls than goals and at times looked more like a wrestling match than a hockey game. * * MICHIGAN STATE comes into town out for revenge for their earlier loss, and fresh on the heels of their 4-3 upset of North Dakota last Saturday night. This gave them a split in their series. Michigan might take a warning from this, since they were held to a split by this same team over Christmas vacation. The Wolverines will be at full. strength for tonight's contest. George:Chin and Pat Cooney are both reported fully recovered from minor injuries and ready to see full-time action. ** * CHIN SAW limited action in last weekend's Minnesota series, since he was suffering from a groin in- jury. Cooney, sophomore spark- plug of the team, was injured Fri- day night and didn't dress for Sat- urday's game. Coach Vic Heyliger plans to start his third line of Ron Mar- tinson, Doug Mullen, and Bob Heathcott. Heathcott is in the midst of a hot scoring spree. He's gotten five goals and one assist in the last two games and as a result now heads the team scoring race with 18 points. BILL KONRAD .. . dash hope * * * sophomore, Canadian Jack Car- roll, and lettermen Al Rankin and Joe LaRue, the 440 is in better shape than the 60. At least one of the trio should be able to place in the indoor finals, a feat that eluded the squad last year. Illinois, as usual, has the num- ber one man in the person of ,LE ..... $35 Formerly to $75 We have priced the following suits for quick clearance.j All suits ore from our regular stock of fine Van Boven Clothing. 36 1 37 2 1 38 391 3 14 40 141142143144 2 222 Regular Short 1 11 1314(13(1 _ Long ( |( | 2l513!212l11 Bertrand. Michigan State - Stack- house 4, Furseth, Bower, Ayala. Studies Cause Williarns Loss To CageSquad, Michigan basketball Coach Er- nie McCoy revealed yesterday that, Dick (Stick) Williams, first-string center on the varsity five, has quit the cage squad due to the pressure of studies. The 6-7 pivot man has been a Wolverine regular since the second semester of last season. He was a transfer from Vander- bilt University. Williams' withdrawa'l leaves Mc-; Coy with only three veterans on his green team, Captain Jim Skala, Doug Lawrence and Carl Brun- sting. Playing in the final half of last year's Big Ten campaign, the 22- year old Detroiter chalked up 42 points, all in Conference games. "Stick" has played in all eleven games this season, scoring an even hundred points for a 9.1 average. His best performance this winter came in the first Conference game with Indiana, scoring 16 counters as the Wolverines absorbed a 58- 46 defeat. Freshman Bob Jewell will prob- ably fill in at the center post. 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