OCTOBER 16, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ' O C OE96 9 1P G California Heads AP Poll; Spartans Slip to Third IOWA SOCKS PITT: Future 'M' Foes Show PotentScoring Attacks Wolverines Get Set for Iowa Battle * (EDITOR'S NOTE: At the beginning of each week during the football season The Daily Sports Staff will furnlrjit a review spotlighting the doings of Michigan's future 1951 grid foes on the previous Saturday.) Iowa gave warning Saturday that the Michigan pass defense had better be sharp when the two squads tangle at Iowa City this weekend, or the Wolverines may follow Pittsburgh to defeat at the arms of the Hawkeyes. Already known to possess a run- ning threat in sensational sopho- more halfback George Rice, the Iowa crew unleashed an aerial at- tack by quarterback Burt Britz- iman that accounted for 203 yards and a 34-17 triumph over the thrice-beaten Pitt eleven. ALTOGETHER Iowa went to the air 27 times, completing 14 passes for 248 yards. Individually, Britzman connected on 12 of his heaves to tie his team's record for the most completions in a single game-. On the ground the Hawkeyes were almost as potent, as Rice and his backfield mates Loran- zie Willianis and Bill Reichardt rushed for 217 yards. Against this same Panther out- fit, Indiana, conquered by Michi- gan 33-14, rolled up 349 yards net offensive gain, but Lou D'Achille, the talented Hoosier thrower, at- tempted only four aerials. Indiana eked out a 13-6 decision over Pitt. CORNELL served further notice that it could be rough on the Wolverines when the teams meet early in November. The Big Red blasted Harvard, 42-6, last week- end for its third straight win by a lopsided score. Ohio State, apparently suf- fering a hangover from that 24- 20 defeat by Michigan State, rallied from behind to tie Wis- consin, 6-6. Of particular signi- ficance are the OSU statistics Wisconsin stopped Ohio's Vic Janowicz, and in the process held the Buckeyes to 61 yards rushing and 45 passing. The Badgers by contrast gained 174 yards rushing and 172 passing. * *K * JOHNNY KARRAS and Don Stevens gained 175 yards between them as Illinois pulverized Syra- cuse, 41-20. Illini quarterback Don Engels also had a commend- able afternoon, completing nine of 12 passes for 180 yards. Illinois, unstoppable in three starts this season, meets Michi- gan November 3 in the tilt which should go a long way in deter- mining Maize and Blue Con- ference potential. Northwestern downed Minne- sota, 21-7, at Minneapolis to grab its third straight victory this year. The Wildcats had rushing and passing totals of 289 and 130 yards, respectively. By DICK SEWELL Coach Ben Oosterbaan and his band of rejuvenated gridders ig- nored all talk of another Western Conference championship yester- day, and began preparation for the task at hand, namely Satur- day's clash with Iowa. Reluctant to give much weight to the Wolverines' 33-14 win over Indiana, Oosterbaan pointed out Men interested in competing in the All-Campus Cross Coun- try meet October 30 must sign up at the IM Building as soon as possible. Five separate prac- tice sessions must be held be- fore Oct. 30, the date of the meet. --Dave Edwards that the Hawkeyes will field one of the strongest squads in recent years against Michigan this week- end. * * * IOWA'S EARLY performances seem to back up this observation. The Hawkeyes boast lopsided vic- tories over Kansas State and Pittsburgh against a narrow de- feat to Purdue. Despite his caution, Ooster- baan was noticeably pleased with his charges' performance against the Hoosiers. He had a right to be. PaSSer Aims At Sectional Aerial Markl DALAS-(A')-Fred Benners,. the Southern Methodist passer who bombed Notre Dame, is run-; ning behind schedule. Flingin' Freddie, a tall young' man with a crew haircut, was completing a pass a minute until this season., It might be difficult to convince Notre Dame that he has slumped for he connected on 21 of 42 throws for 326 yards against the Irish Saturday when SMU won the big intersectional game 27-20. But while he has fallen behind his pace for his first two varsity years at SMU, Benners still is hot on the trail of the greatest pass- ing record in the Southwest-that hung up by Sammy Baugh at Texas Christian in the mid-thir- ties. Baugh, who became the star of the Washington Redskins, coi- pleted 274 passes in 599 attempts for 3479 yards in three seasons. Benners, after two seasons and four games of a third, has thrown 374 passes and connected on 210 for 2,739 yards. He has six games to get 64 completions and 740 yards in order to equal Baugh's mark. He already has beaten all Southwestern marks except those set by Baugh and Davey O'Brien, also of Texas Christian, who com- pleted 227 passes for 2932 yards in 1936-37,-38. This season Fred has completed 54 passes in 97 tries for 672 yards. But he has played 65 minutes. Last year he completed 109 passes in 108 minutes of play. In 1949 it was 47 in 55 minutes. the Maize and Blue had piled up a big 26 point lead. Offensively Michigan unveiled a sparkling attack which com- pletely befuddled a flat Indiana eleven. Veterans and freshmen combined to pile up 124 yards rushing and 197 passing. Perhaps the most encouraging feature of Saturday's game was Michigan's ability to score once they got within the opponent's 20- yard line, where the yards get "longer." * * * SENIOR fullback Don Peterson ,was the running star of the game, grinding out 70 yards on 16 tries. This effort gave him a rushing average of 3.9 yards per try, topped only by end Lowell Perry with an average of 4.3 yards on seven car- ries. Perry's incredible pass catch- ing ability was a major factor in the Wolverines' triumph. Time and time again he made great catches, as he scored once and set up at least two other touch- downs. Perry's five catches were good for 124 yards. Yesterday's practice called for brief limbering up exercises for the first team, and a short scrim- mage between the reserves. Last night the Wolverines viewed movies of Saturday's game and went over scouting reports on Iowa. TOM JOHNSON . . leads defense * * * Almost everything the Wolver- ines did, they did well. The pass defense which was so woefully lacking in the Michigan State and Stanford contests covered Hoosier receivers like a tent, limiting the invaders to a meager 66 yards through the air. THE DEFENSIVE line, sparked by big Tom Johnson, stopped cold all Indiana scoring attempts until I-M Ganmes Produce One Hayden House scored a decisive victory over Tyler House yester- day in I-M play, as they won go- ing away 34-0. Hayden scored on the second play of the game when Don Kiefer caught Doug Tech's aerial and raced into the end zone. Kiefer tallied again later in the game and Tech matched this with two TD's of his own. Bill Rahn led his Chicago House teammates in a 13-0 shut- out of Michigan House. Rahn passed for both touchdowns and ran for the extra point. In a third shutout, Fred Adams of Adams House set up one touch- down on a pass interception and Sophomores interested in be- coming varsity basketball man- agers should report to the I-M Building today from 3-5 p.m. -Phil Webb passed for a second as Adams House outdistanced Cooley House, 12-0. Two brothers combined talents in leading Anderson House to a 14-2 win over Taylor. Vince Schoeck ran for the first tally of the game, and then passed to his brother Jim for the second couniter. SLloydHouse had to come from behind to edge Kelsey House in a tight 7-6 contest. Kelsey scored in the first quarter but Marvfi Stempien caught one of Art Wynne's passes for a third quarter touchdown, and Wynne coolly threw to Calvin Kline in the end zone for the game-winning point. In other games, Winchell de- feated Allen-Rumsey, 6-0, Huber beat Prescott, 6-0, Fletcher tri- umphed over Gomberg, 10-6, Hins- dale defeated Wenley, '18-0, and in fraternity play, Phi Delta Phi won over Alpha Chi Sigma, 14-0. NEW YORK-(I'--The lUniver- Win Over Indiana Give Spot In Ratings to M' sity of California Golden Bears were voted the No. 1 college foot-' ball team today in the third week- ly nation-wide poll of the Asso- ciated Press. Michigan State, the top team for the first two weeks,. skidded to third place, as Tennes- see moved into the No. 2 spot. Coach Pappy Waldorf's Bears, winner of four straight games aft- er defeating Washington State last week, 42-35, received 50 first place votes out of a total of 138 ballots sent in by sports writers and sportscasters. California had indicated a week ago it was gaining respect and voting strength, when the Bears were only 10 points back of Michi- gan State in the second poll. Tennessee, which picked on un- dermanned Chattanooga to the tune of 42-13 last week, received 26 first place votes and 977 points. In a pre-season poll, Tennessee had been tabbed as the probable No. 1 team of the land. Otherwise, there was consider- able scrambling of positions, with two newcomers moving ino the select top 10 teams - Princeton and Baylor, nine and ten, respec- tively. r war COV C(KE-WEE) SHOE PO1LISH They replaced Notre Dame, fifth a week ago. and Ohio State, which was No .9. Notre Dame dropped out after suffering a 27-20 defeat at the hands of Southern Metho- dist Saturday. Ohio State, beaten a week ago by Michigan State, and tied by Wisconsin last Saturday, 6-6. fell to No. 17. The first ten teams with first place votes in parenth1esis: TEAM Points t. California (50)}..............1,1 2. Tennessee (26)............977 3. MVichigan state (16)...........935 4. Texas (6) . ... .............. 719 5. Georgia 'tech (12)........... 6881 6. Texs .& (8)..........652 7. Maryland (14)................634 8. Illinois (3)...............58a 9. Princeton (1)................'221 10. Baylor.......................148 SECOND TEN 11. Sou. California..............12 12. Villanova....................97 14. Cornell,........«..««,... 76 15. Sou. Meitist............... 67 16. College of The Pacific (1) , 6i 17. Onho State.................;...5 18. Northwestern ...............28 19. Oklahoma.................... 26 20. Washington...................2 Others: Notre flame 24, Wisconsin 20, Cincinnati 18, Auburn (1) 11, Tu- lane, Kentucky, San Francisco, Colo- rado, and Michigan 5 each, Columbia, Marquette 4 e achl, Oregon State ', Penn State, Kansas, South Dakota State, Washington & Lee, 1 each. ' i Discus Champion of Sweden. AmongForeign Athletes Here The 1951-52 version of the Wol- verine track and field ensemble has been greatly strengthened by the addition of a new crop of stel- lar foreign athletes. Foremost among these new sophomore faces on the squad is six-foot, six inch Roland Nilsson, Swedish National shot-put and discus champion. As a freshman, Nilsson bettered the records set by the former Michigan great, Char- ley Fonivlle, in his freshman year. * * * TWO Canadian newcomers in- cluded with the ten northerners on the team are miler John Ross, and quarter-miler Jack Carroll. Ross, a high school team-mate of Don McEwen, won the Open In- vitational Mile at the Drake Re- lays last year, in the time of 4:20. Carroll scored in the K. of C. 600' at Cleveland last spring. Other standouts of last year's freshman unit include Pat Mon- tagano, Elkhart, Indiana pole vaulter. Montagana cleared 12 feet 6 inches to become Indiana State High School champion. * . FORMER Michigan State high, jump champion, Milt Mead, and Sudbury, Ontario shotputter Roy Pella also figure to add class to the Michigan aggregate, which boasts several other good prospects throttled only by eligibility prob- lems. Coach Canham is now prepping the cross-country combine for the Big Ten Championships to be held in Chicago on November 16. * '/ THE RUBBING VERS SCUFF MARKSI GIVES SHOES RICHER COLOR I Black, Tan, Brown, t Dark Tan, Mid-Tany Bl 8ue, Oxblood, ., " $ Mahogany, -. - and NIeutra) r "- ..> . .v 1 . - ' ' ;.:.>:.: C f SIQUID CREAM SHAMPOO More than just a liquid, more than just a cream ... new Wildroot Liquid Cream Shampoo is a combination of the best of both. Even in the hardest water Wildroot Shampoo washes hair gleaming clean, manageable, curl- inviting without robbing hair of its natural oils. Soapless Sudsy ...Lanolin Lovelyl I '5 THIREE SliESs 294 59d 98¢ -Whit. button-dowu I oxford, soft roll to ~... . te collar. Popular @5 o h* rda witth follows and the gas. P.S. To keep bair neat between shampoos use Lady Wildroot Cream Hair Dressing. pi I' -r ..., :.-..- -, New Styles . . . First at Wild's STY LE FLASH The Mtichigan Crew . Cut, blended and shaped to your facial features. Try One!_ . , :.: ",.};; r >: >:: ' ': i 4 : ;' ; :;±: ;' 3 <. :' i F !; ; ' ,u {{ 4 >> .QUUU..:.. . y2( :::;:$ja Y, ' ,,:MMA1 Z 4 v i k " ;tc, 1" 4} 1 ' i ii; t \\.' :i; :,v;{ ? ',Y iii ?';' a k':. :: j 'd.{ C;l : }' ' 4;k 1tiY .{" ' + ,1 '''1 :iy::< 4 1 ' y ;:h i? ^ , t ,! t} i: P'ti' v: , . { '.\ 1.;.. ,n. , ,; 1 :: }' .. SC:i Ji',, '. : ,:":, R ."y. Ka 'L{; { } ti; ::{ ',' ti ' ' t \ ::51 ?: '';;' " ,,' <.:,; i '";;, No. 24 THE CLAN Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests I r "I should have kept my bic mouth shut" The Dascola Ba.rbers Liberty near State r ', i , r. %: r i Y 'I 1'1 / //f, c; ;. I t a ., , ., " - The Harris Tweed Sport Coat This fine imported fabric is hand loomed on the Isle of Harris. ... Made from 100% pure Scottish wool. In regular and long sizes. Priced at $3950 The Botany Flannel Slax $g750 ) I --Firr brodcloth,e widespread Sharpest shir q**dr"g'es th extreme d collar. t on the is year. *s tye-Cos co.v Fresh out of Bivalve, N. J., he arrived on the campus all bug-eyed and his big mouth hanging open. He was immediately sucked into a "shell game" and found himself making all the quick-trick cigarette tests. But his native instinct told him that such an important item as cigarette mildness couldn't be tossed off lightly. Millions of smokers evIrywhere have discovered, too, that there's but one true test of mildness. It's the sensible test ...the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke... on a pack-after-pack basis. No snap judgments! Once you've tried Camels for 30 days in your "T-Zone" (T for Throat, T for Taste), you'll see why... [.1 4; t_. C I; w.w -- - - -- - Y - -