SATURDAY, OCTOBER: 20, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1951 PAGE Waldorf 's Bears Tennessee Encounters Alabama; MSC Goes East To Meet Penn State Ri e, Commack, Williams Bear Brunt j Of Iowa's Dangerous Running Attack CIRISIEK05 NEW YORK--P)-The Univer- sity of Ca]fornia's Golden Bears put their No. 1 national footbaal rating smack on the line today against the ever-dangerous Tro- jans of Southern California. For that matter, so do all of the other highly-ranked college out- fits, risking reputations and votes in big games from coast to coast. A SELLOUT throng of 81,500 in Berkeley's Memorial Stadium will watch the Bears go after their 39th consecutive regular season victory. Coach Lynn Waldorf's high-scor- ing California club rules a two- toucdown favorite over the men of Troy. Another capacity crowd of 45,000 at Birmingham will sit in on the game between Ten- nessee, the No. 2 team, and thrice-defeated Alabama. Ten- nessee is favored by two touch- downs in a traditional game for these Southeastern Conference rivals. First place in the Southeastern Conference is at stake in Atlanta, where 35,000 will turn out to see -. Auburn engage favored Georgia Tech. S* * AT COLLEGE Park, Md., Mary- land faces a stern test in North Carolina. Maryland is listed No. 7 in the land. Eastern fans will get a chance to see why Michigan State is rated No. 3 when the Spartans tackle Penn State before a ca- pacity crowd of 30,000 at State College, Pa. Michigan State was the No. 1 team until displaced this week in the Associated. Press poll by California. Another intersectional fray be- tween Pitt and Notre Dame at Pittsburgh will lure a sellout crowd of 60,000 into Pitt Stadium. Notre Dame, hoping to come back after being defeated by Southern Methodist last week, hasn't lost to Pitt since 1937. Illinois, which invaded the East last week to beat Syracuse, travels West this time to tangle with powerful Washington at Seattle. Illinois, the No. 8 team, is a five- point favorite in the game which . is a 55,000 sellout. Cornell is at Yale tomorrow, while unbeaten, untied and un- scored upon Columbia goes to Philadelphia to meet Ptennsyl- vania. AEPi Seven. First Victim Of Theta Chi esleyans Romp; Hawaiians Score By DICK LEWIS Two first half touchdown passes from Roy Haukinson to Ty Ricki gave Theta Chi its first gridiron triumph of the season, a 13-7 vic- tory over Alpha Epsilon Pi. In addition to the Z0- and 10- yard payoff heaves, Haukinson al- so hit Bob Moeller in the end zone for the thirteeneth marker. A thir- ty yard pass from Warren Robbins to Larry Gray accounted for the sole A E Pi touchdown. Bob Satin added the extra point on another throw from Robbins. * * * INDEPENDENT play saw Wes- leyan trounce Roger Williams, 22- 0, for its third straight win. Dave Church inaugurated the romp by gathering in a 30-yard Bob Heller pay dirt aerial. Church, in turn, intercepted a Williams pass and ran 40 yards for the second tally. Ed Wolven added the final Wes- leyan touchdown by turning end for forty yards. Wolve'n also counted with an extra point on a toss from Howie Berkman, who had scored a one-pointer earlier. The hard-charging Wesleyan line trapped a Williams back in the end zone for a safety and the final two points. Hugo Seto capped a twenty-five yard drive to score from one yard out, thereby giving the Hawaiians a 6-0 win over Nakamura. The pay-off tally was set up by a twenty yard pass from Seto to Cle- ment Tam. (Continued from Page 1) But it's been a far different story since then. While the Wol- verines hold an overall edge of ten victories to two for Iowa and one tie, all but two of the eight games since 1902 have been set- tled by not more than eight points. And that was a 10-2 Hawkeye vic- tory in 1924, the last time they were able to beat the Wolverines. TODAY'S GAME promises to be' just as close as its predecessors: Although Iowa lost its only Big Ten game to Purdue, 34-30, two weeks ago, the Hawkeyes have ex- * * * for an average of 170 yards per game. Five of Britzmann's aerials have gone for touchdowns, three of which came at the ex- pense of Pittsburgh in a 34-17 Iowa triumph last weekend. His 12 completions (of 25 attempt- ed) against the Panthers tied the Iowa record made by Glenn Drahn against UCLA in 1949 and his passing yardage was just seve yards short of the Hawk- eyes' mark. The sophomore signal caller also scored once himself on a quarter- back sneak, but the big running attraction was Williams' 47 yard scamper that produced another six points. * * * DEFENSIVELY, Iowa has held opposing runners to an average of 72.3 meager yards per game, * * * GEORGE RICE . . . sophomore flash hibited an offense that is capable of blowing the top off any team that would be so foolish as to under-rate them. Heralded as the most versa- tile and explosive attack pos- sessed by Iowa in recent years, it relies on the standout run- ning of George "Dusty" Rice, Loranzie Williams, Don Com- mack and Bill Reichardt, second best ground gainer in the Big Ten last year. With Williams and Rice averag- ing 7.6 and 6.3 yards per carry re- spectively, this foursome has ram- bled for an average of 283 yards per game in three outings this year. * * *. IN THE AIR lanes quarterback Burt Britzmann's passes have found their mark 49% of the time DON COMMACK . .. another speedster which ranks as fourth best in the nation. In the air, however, the Hawkeyes have permitted 39 of 69 passes to pass through for com- pletions, and, with Michigan's aer- ial warfare beginning to pick up, this could be a deciding factor this afternoon. But Oosterbaan' is not selling Iowa short. This he emphasized to his players at the end of a light drill at Cedar Rapids yes- terday. Michigan spirits, however, were high. The only unhappy notes were the absence of wingback Frank Howell, who remained in Ann Arbor with an ankle injury, and the realization that Wes Bradford would be starting at right half for the last time for awhile, now that he has to re- port for induction into the army next Tuesday. BUT THE REBIRTH of the Michigan passing game - with leaping Lowell Perry hauling them in from either Don Peterson or Bill Putich - and the improving smoothness in the backfield-fea- turing the running of Putich, Pe- terson and Bradford-are the en- couraging factors for the task at hand-to beat Iowa. Add to that the presence of the indestructable Tom Johnson, who successfully fought off an attack of the flu this week, and the pos- sibility that Ted Topor will be backing up the line again in ad- dition to playing quarterback and you have a Wolverine defense that will be out to give the Hawkeye defenders a dose of their own medicine. Redskins Sign Todd to Head Coaching ,Job WASHINGTON-(4')-Pro foot- ball commissioner Bert Bell yes- terday ruled that Heartley (Hunk) Anderson could not sign as head coach of the Washington Red- skins. The Redskins promptly gave the job to Dick Todd, former Texas A. and M. star. Todd succeeds Herman Ball, who had been head man since the middle of the 1949 season. Todd had been one of his assistants. * * * BALL WILL stay on with the Redskin organization in the same job he had when he started with them-as a scout. , The announcement of the de- velopments came from Redskin general manager Dick McCann. McCann said that Bell had ruled that Anderson was under contract to the Chicago Bears, and that since the Bears now say they want him back, Anderson could not sign with another team. IRONICALLY, Anderson had held a news conference at the Redskin office yesterday, and had explained what plans he meant to carry out when he became top hand. Anderson had been line coach for the Bears for 11 seasons, but quit this year to sell steel in Detroit. But even though he is no longer with the Bears, his contract with them still runs until Dec. 31. McCann said Anderson will not SPORTS GENE MACKEVICH Night Editor return to the Bears, but will go back to peddling steel in Detroit. Todd, 37, was a great high school football player at Crowell, Tex., where he scored 318 points in one season. Even though he was playing with comparatively weak teams at Texas A. and M., he still managed to stand out, so much so that he went into pro ball weighing but 170 pounds. -T LOST AND FOUND MISSING-Black & white English Bull- dog. Answers to "Jiggs." Beta Theta Pi. Telephone 2-3143. )18Lj FOR SALE MEN'S RUBBER HEELS-All types and styles. 65c Fast Service.HP DE MARCO SHOE SHOP 322 E. Liberty\ )41 BUBBLE GUARDS-25c PINS CHAINED-$ .00 BURR-PATS, 1209 S. "U" )5 ARMY-NAVY TYPE OXFORDS - $6.88 Sizes 6 to 12, A to F widths Sizes 13 & 14 $7.95. Open 'til 6 P.M. SAM'S STORE, 122 E. Washington )3 CANARIES-Beautiful singers and fe- males, parakeets and California lin- nets. 562 S. 7th. Ph. 5330. )4 '36 CHEVY SEDAN-Good motor, bat- tery. $40. Small Remington type- writer $25. Call 2-3418, 5-7 p.m. )45 78 RPM RECORDS-4 albums totaling 32 records. Excellent condition. 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Last Times Today (2XA -NX- Starts Sunday -- SKIES!. ,, _ In the Midwest, Indiana is at By HERB NEIL Ohio State, Michigan plays at When Michigan engages the Iowa, Wisconsin at Purdue, and Iowa Hawkeyes this afternoon it Colorado at Kansas State. Navy, will mark the first time the two trying to get in the win column, teams have met in five years and meets Northwestern at Evanston, the first trip to Iowa for Wolver- ine gridmen since 1937. The Hawkeyes, who have not defeated the Wolverines since 1924, have been able to garner only two victories at the expense of Michigan, while losing ten times since the series was inaug- urated in 1900. The 1929 game ended in a scoreless tie. THE WOLVERINE victory over the Hawkeyes in 1902, established a Conference scoring record as a.Fielding H. Yost's "point a min- ute" team rang up the astronomi- cal figure of 107 points against the hapless Iowans. After tchis landslide Iowa did not meet Mich- igan on the, gridiron for another f ! 21 years. What will Elizabeth's J Although all the Wolverine ' Jwins have not quite measured Stow accomplish? I up to the score of the 1902 bat- tle, one of Michigan's most Find out in J noteworthy victories over the Hawkeyes came in 1939 by a 27-7 count. This battle pitted two of the Western Conference's greatest all- E C EGtimegbacks against each other, Michigao's< Tom Harmon, and F US E EIowa's Nile KMinnick. ody J Harmon won the honors for the LGetourcOpy Ztod yday as he accounted for all of the Y- Wolverines' point - production, while Kinnick was throwing a touchdown pass for Iowa's loie score. - * * KINNICK WAS the first to get the scoring underway, as he threw a 50-yard pass to Floyd Dean less than five minutes after the contest had started, and then drop-kicked the extra point to put the visiting Hawkeyes in front for the only time all afternoon. After this early reversal, how- ever, Harmon quickly led the Wolverines back into the lead. The Michigan halfback's pass- ing sparked a 39-yard drive cul- minating in Harmon's one-yard smash through left guard to paydirt. His conversion then put the Wolverines even with Iowa. Harmon personally accounted for two more tallies in the second quarter, one coming on a two- yard run through guard, and the other on an eight-yard runaround end. *' * * THE WOLVERINE star's pass to Forest Evashevski and his end run of 11 yards had set up the first score, and his end run from the Iowa 38 to the 8 preceded his third touchdown of the day. Harmon's final touchdown came in the third quarter on the most spectacular play of the day, a 95-yard dash down the sidelines after he had intercept- ed one of Kinnick's passes. The Wolverine halfback's conversion ended the Michigan and Har- mon scoring for the day. The Wolverine victory over the Iowans cost the Hawkeyes their first Big Ten championship since 1922, as Iowa finished second to Ohio State. * * *; ALTHOUGH Michigan has no back this year to compare with Harmon, the Hawkeyes, who are still looking for their first Con- ference crown since 1922, have the makings of another Kinnick' in sophomore left halfback "Dus- ty" Rice. Rice won the Associated Press award for "Back of the Week," returned a kick-off 100 yards, scored on a 69-yard running play from scrimmage, and caught a 55-yard pass for another touch- down in his first three weeks of intercollegiate football. I I h W ILAM NICOLOR F L+iMG OWADPAULA ANN KEENA RAYMOND - MILLER -"WYNN TOMTUL w 25-27 LYDIA MEND The STUDENT PLAYERS present )ELSSOHN bA'rne8 pi c 4JQ .c 1'.' Ak" Mat. 'til 5 P.M. - 30c Nights, Sun. - 44c I hJANIS CARTER JAY C. FUPPEN S.M.U. "CAR OF TOMORROW" Color Cartoon Day with F. B.1. AN RKO.RADIO PICTURE I I. ! _ ... a 4 Now Playing THE SULKY FIRE By Jean-Jacques Betnard Continues Nightly, Except Monday, Through Nov. 4 THE ART'S THEATER CLUB Ann Arbor's Professional Theater ENDS TONIGHT A WARNER BROS. PICTURE FA RLEY RUTH ROBERT GRAIIER ROMAN WALKER," a tn O QC. C R VU..S-,,,Piny ty R.so,dC.'sd tra Cra _____Plus-- i Ii I ono "" Phone 5651 S. L. Cinema Guild with the Russian Circle and American Society for Public Administration present The differentest movie in a decade! Eisenstein's Final Masterpiece "Ivan the Terile $1 ATIREk "iagonally Yours" With- BOB ELLIOT'S Orchestra ill A rl+n-r im PR - STARTS SUNDAY - Cinema Triumphs From All the World 1 I 11 1 ;, j 4.. II I C ° .. I t &IbJb,.