THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Wolverne s BIG TEN NEWS: To Illini-Huske Tilt Called Bowl 'View Toronto Whips Bruins To Tie .NHL Leaders Les Canadiens Play At Detroit Saturday By The Associated Press TORONTO-(MP)-Toronto's Ma- ple Leafs outscored the Boston Bruins, 4-2, with a third period drive here last night, and moved into a first place tie in the NHL with Montreal and Chicago. The loop's other foir teams see action tonight, with Detroit playing a squad of ex-Red Wings in Chicago suits in the Windy City, and New York takes on Montreal in the Forum. The top three outfits all have, won two and lost one. The Red Wings return to the Motor City Saturday night to tan- gld in Olympia with Montreal- ,Canadiens, who eliminated the De- troit regular season champs last spring from the Stanley Cup play- offs. 4 The Red Wings are still with- out the services of defenseman Leo Reise, who will be convalesc- ing from an ankle operation for another week at least. Montreal goalie Gerry McNeil suffered a cut scalp which required several stitches in a practice ses- sion early this week, but the little net wizard is expected to be ready Michigan Cagers Open Drills For Tough 22-Game Schedule By WAYNE DeNEFF On the shoulders of six letter- men and a promising group of freshmen and sophomores rests the hope of rescuing Michigan from the Big Ten basketball cel- lar. L a s t season the Wolverines dropped 15 of 22 contests and in 1949-50 lost 11 of 22. This two- year slump followed a 1947-48 Big Nine championship and a third place berth in 1948-49. * *. PRACTICE STARTED this week for the varsity under the direction of Freshman Coach Dave Strack. Head Coach Ernie McCoy is work- ing with the football team and will not direct basketball practice unitl next week. Captain Jim Skala, Dick Wil- liams, Doug Lawrence, Tom Tiernan, Carl Brunsting and Paul Geyer are the lettermen that will form the nucleus of the 1950-51 hoopsters. Skala and Tiernan are seniors and the others juniors. Top sophomores are Ray Pa- vochevich of East Chicago Roose- velt High school, Milt Mead of Bay City Central and John Cod- well of Houston. Texas. * * * A LARGE CROP of freshmen started practicing two weeks ago and will be cut as the Dec. 1 op- top scorer, Leo VanderKuy, got his diploma alogg with Captain Charlie Murray and Bob Olsen,' guards. Lyle Smith, a sopho- more member of last year's team, is in the Navy. This will be Coach McCoy's fourth year at the Wolverine bbs- ketball helm, although he has been on the coaching scene here since 1940. FOLLOWING their opener with Central Michigan, the Maize and Blue wait two weeks before battl- ing Butler, December 17. Then, following five tilts with non-con- ference teams, they meet Indiana, January 5. With the exception of one, all the remaining games are Big Ten conference engage- lents. 1951-'52 Wolverine Cage Schedule DECEMBER Saturday 1-Central Michigan, there Monday 17-Butler, here Thursday 20-Pennsylvania, here Saturday 22-Colorado, here Thursday 27-Penn State, there Friday 28--Pittsburgh, there JANUARY Tuesday 12Princeton, here Saturday 5-Indiana, there Monday 7-Iowa, here Saturday 12-I11inois, here Monday 14-Minnesota, there Saturday 19-Michigan State, here Monday 21-Northwestern, here FEBRUARY Saturday 2-Marquette, there Saturday 9-Northwestern, there Monday 11-Iowa, there Saturday 16--Minnesota, here Monday 18-Wisconsin, here Saturday 23-Ohio State, there Monday 25-Wisconsin, there MARCH Saturday 1-Michigan State, there Monday 3-Purdue, here GRID RESULTS: Delta Sigs, IM Champs, Fall To Strong Tau Delts, 13-12 Polish Offense For Important Saturday Start The Wolverines, in anticipation' of a high-scoring contest with Iowa Saturday afternoon, concen- trated on sharpening up their of- fense in yesterday's practice at Ferry Field. With departure for Iowa City set for this afternoon at 5:27 aft- er a short practice, the Michigan gridmen appear confident of ex- tending their offensive power shown last Saturday into the Iowa game. The squad will leave by train and spend tonight in Chi- cago. * * IF YESTERDAY'S scrimmage against the reserves is any indi- cation of what Michigan will dis- play Saturday, the Hawkeyes can expect little different from the greeting accorded the Hoosiers last week. The Wolverines will need every bit of their potent offense, however, since Iowa has shown plenty of scoring punch in its first three games. After scoring only 16 points in their opening game against Kan- sas State, the Hoosiers tallied 30 points against Purdue in a losing cause and 34 points last week against Pittsburgh. * * * WITH FRANK Howell out for at least several weeks, Coach Ben- nie Oosterbaan alternated Wes Bradford, Don Oldham, and Tom Witherspoon at the right half slot in yesterday's drill. The three wingbacks worked with Ted Top- or at quarter, Bill Putich at left half, and Don Peterson at full- back. Putich was hitting ends Low- ell Perry and Fred Pickard with his passes for substantial yard- age against the reserves, while Peterson was crashing through the line for sizeable gains. The offensive lines looked very impressive yesterday as they op- ened up big holes in the opposing line for the backs to dash through. Defense was not neglected in the pratcice as the Wolverines prepared for the running of half back "Dusty" Rice, Iowa's sopho- more sensation, and fullback Bill Reichardt, and the passing of quarterback Burt Britzman. By ROD COOK The Big Ten will get a preview of how it may fare in the Rose Bowl next New Year's Day when power-packed Illinois takes on the Washington Huskies at Seattle Saturday. The Huskies have a sturdy squad which flattened Oregon, 63-6, last week and they are expected to be no pushover for the Fighting Illi- ni. ILLINOIS GOES into the game minus the services of two left halfbacks, Claude Taliaferro and Ronnie Clark. In addition, Coach Ray Eliot is worried that first string quarterback Tom O'Connell may not be able to start because of a damaged knee. One player which Eliot defin- itely is not worried about is elusive Johnny Karras, the Con- ference's leading scorer with seven touchdowns in three games. OSU has no injuries, but is a little groggy after having been beaten by Michigan State and then outplayed and tied by Wisconsin. * * * IN THE Hoosier camp, the bad medicine of the day was the show- ing of the movies of the Michigan * * * Return of Benson, Carey Helps MSC EAST LANSING-P)--Bob Car- ey and Wayne Benson will both be back in Michigan State's lineup when the Spartans face Penn State Saturday at State College, Pennsylvania. Benson missed both the Ohio State and Marquette games after injuring a knee while making a long gain against Michigan. Al- though playing only two games, Benson still has the most yardage of any State fullback. Carey, Captain and star end, has been out of action since the first half of the Ohio State con- test with a bruised leg. game. Coach Clyde Smith did not spare the whip in pointing out the numerous errors made by his squad during the contest. The Indiana squad is in fine shape physically and is fighting mad, so if the fumblitis and numerous offside penalties can be smoothed out in practice, the Buckeyes may be in for another nasty surprise at Columbus Sat- urday. Another squad which has been plagued by red handkerchiefs is Northwestern. In last week's game with Minnesota which the Wild- cats won handily, 21-0, there were four offside penalties and two for backfield illegally in motion, while in the Army game Northwestern lost 60 yards on such penalties. S* * THE WILDCATS have a fine running game, paced by fullback Chuck Hren who ripped for 138 yards in 21 tries against the ad- mittedly-weak Minnesota line. Minnesota has been having difficulties this year, but indi- cations of better things to come may be seen in the makeup of the team. The present defensive unit has seven freshman regu- lars, and Coach Wes Fesler may throw even more yearlings against Nebraska. Wisconsin, which will face Pur- due this weekend, is without the services of Bill Gable, a fine of.- fensive guard. Furthermore, with three halfbacks on the injured list, former JV player Jerry Will has been moved up to stabilize the wobbly Wisconsin backfield. BIGGIE MUNN, MSC mentor, having seen two games won by his "second string" backfield, com- posed of three sophomores and one freshman, still intends to start his veteran outfit against Penn State, The reason for this seems to be that it was the softening up job done by the veterans which enabled the youngsters to smash for the winning touchdowns. Penn State is not expected to provide too mucb opposition against the Spartans. U.S. Army-Navy OXFORDS =lSAVE AT SAM'S ST RIt"j' for tonight's encounter with the ener with Central Michigan ap- Rangers. proaches. Graduation has plucked three bright stars from the Michigan basketball scene. Center and f 'TOP DRAWER \ V By ROG WATSON Tau Delta Phi, spearheaded by Moe Katz, edged Delta Sigma Phi, last years' fraternity football champs, 13-12 in a thriller that was in doubt until the final gun. When the game ended the de- fending champs were on the Tau Delt five-yard marker with two downs to cover the distance. Katz had snared a pass from Gene Curtiss in the end zone to put the Tau Delts out in front, but Delta Sigma Phi quickly came back on a 20 yard pitch from Milt Heath to Dale Bryant to tie it up at six- all. BOB MOORE tallied again for the Delta Sigs on a 25 yard end around lateral after four minutes in the second half. The Tau Delts rallied and tied it up again on Gene Curtiss's 40 yard dash down the sidelines on what started as a pass play. Curtiss passed to Katz for the extra point and it proved to be I TYPEWRITERS t the winning margin when time ran out. Phi Kappa Psi downed Alpha Epsilon Pi, 7-0, on a pass from Dave Settle to Paul Keurger after Settle received the ball on a triple reverse. JERRY HASTINGS' running and passing provided the punch as Delta Chi ground out a 14-6! decision over the stubborn Beta Theta Pis. Hastings' long run set up one touchdown and he caught a pass for one and passed for the other. Jim Cape gathered in two aerials from Hastings for the points after touchdowns. Pi Lamda Phi defeated Chi Phi, 13-7, on passes from Jerry Rovner. Rovner hit Jerry Hirsch for six points and Jules Belkin for another one plus running for the other Pi Lam score on an end sweep. Chi Phi tallied on a 25 yard run by Lee Krum- holtz. Sigma Chi displayed an air tight defense to roll over Phi Kappa Sigma, 19-0. Jerry Davis passed to Paul Fancher for two Sigma Chi markers and ran 25 yards for the other. SAE won over Chi Psi on plus 11 yards in an overtime period after a 6-6 deadlock had forced a playoff. Ron Will passed to Stu Ward for the Chi Psi score and the SAE's scored on a short jump pass. Phi Rho Sigma overpowered Phi Delta Chi 22-6 in the only profes- sional fraternity contest of the day. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Tri- gon, and Sigma Pi forfeited to Sigma Alpha Mu, Kappa Sigma, and Phi Delta Theta, respectively. 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