,,i _., PAGE SEX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1951 Wolverines Capitalize on Breaks To Stop Hawkeyes I * * ? Illinois Defeats Huskies On Last Period Touchdown Peterson Scores Twice To Pace Michigan A tack SEATTLE - - Sophomore Tommy O'Connell, cool as a fall frost when the going was tough- est, pitched Illinois to a fourth- quarter, tie-cracking touchdown and a 27-20 football victory yes- terday over the ever-challenging Huskies of the University of Wash- ington. The invading Illini, ranked eighth in the nation, had freed two flying phantoms - Johnny Karras and Pete Bachouros - in the first half to run up a 20-7 margin before a stunned crowd of 54,000. *~ * * count at 20-all and wreck the Illi- nois running attack. With seven minutes left, O'- Connell launched an 81-yard drive to the victory. Plungees took the Illini to midfield and when Washington threatened to halt the parade there, O'Con- nell went upstairs and pitched five strikes to reach the goal, throwing every one off the deep punt formation. There were only two minutes left-too little for the Huskies to generate a retal- iatory drive. Center Charles Boerio was the spearhead of the Illinois defensive platoon, reaching the peak of a brilliant day when he stopped three Washington plunges inside the Illini eight yard line. (Continued from Page 1) down to the Wolverine nine in the waning moments of the second quarter. With four downs to take it over, the Hawks ran into a steel-plated Wolverine defense. On the first play Reichardt gained four, but was mangled on another rush and two passes by quarterback Burt Britzmann were knocked down by an alert Michigan pass defense with Don Oldham, Roger Zatkoff and Dave Tinkham doing the dam- age. At the start of the second half Iowa looked like it was going to make a game of it-that is until the Hawks reached the Michigan 18. Eight plays had carried from the Iowa 37, when Tinkham in- tercepted a Britzmann aerial on his own two and ran all the way back to the Hawk 49. better average yardage (40 yards) but the two quick kicks of Peter- son and the great out-of-bounds punts by Bill Billings were the more decisive. Both Wolverine kickers kept the Hawks back on their heels out of danger. Michigan scored i t s first touchdown the second time the Wolverines got their hands on the ' ball. Bill Putich took a Denning punt on his own 41 and fought his way back to the Iowa 14. Wes Bradford, who made his fi- nal appearance in a Michigan uni- form in quite a while, charged for five on the reverse and Petersoti piled over right guard for a first down on the Iowa 34. Red Wings Romp over Montreal 6 DETROIT -(P) - Goalie Terry Sawchuk hung up his second shut- out of the young National Hockey league season here last night as the Detroit Red Wings whipped the Montreal Canadiens, 3-0, be- fore 12,036 fans. The Wings scored in every period to gain some revenge in their first meeting this season with Back on Top Iowa Michigan Former Kentucky Hoop Stars Admit NIT Bribe CHICAGO-(M)-The spreading collegiate basketball fix scandal engulfed the University of Ken- tucky's fabulous 1948-49 team- one of the greatest in the history of the sport. Investigators from the New York district attorney's office seized the two former All-America greats, Alex Groza and Ralph Beard, in Chicago, and ex-Kentucky team captain Dale Barnstable, in Louis- ville. AFTER questioning, the investi- gators said, the three admitted accepting $500 bribes each to shave the point spread in a 1949 Na- tional Invitational Tournament game March 14, 1949, in Madison, Square Garden, New York. (. The fix scandal now has im- plicated at least 34 players from seven teams. Other schools in- volved are Bradley, Toledo, CCNY, Manhattan, Long Island and New York U. GROZA, six-foot seven-inch cen- ter, and Beard, a guard, were ar- rested Friday night at the Chicago Stadium, where they watched the Rochester (N.Y.) Royals defeat the College All-Stars. Assistant District Attorney Vin- cent A. G. O'Connor, of New York, took them to the Criminal Courts Building where they confronted Nick (The Greek) Englisis and Vat Brown-gamblers under in- dictment in New York on charges of game-fixing. i. WASHINGTON came back for touchdowns in and fourth quarters to pounding the third knot the -- It For your leisure time.. DON PETERSON ... triple threat Vols Trample 'Bama,_2'7-13 BIRMINGHAM, Ala.-(A)-Lit- tle Hank Lauricella, triple threat star for unbeaten Tennessee, cracked Alabama resistance with a 76-yard quick kick, passed like a zipper for a touchdown and ran through Alabama for another score yesterday as Tennessee won, 27-13. Even at the end of this great football afternoon, Lauricella still was hot and a genuine threat in whatever he tried-kicking, run- ning or passing. For a sellout house of 45,000 fans, the New Or- leans kid was a return to the old days of versatile players and sin- gle wing formation power. Also at the end of this game between Tennessee, the nation's second ranked power and Alabama, the ninth ranker, Alabama man- aged to hurl a touchdown thrust and make it stick. First Downs .......... 15 Ruhsing Yardage. 51 Passing Yardage.......59 Passes Attempted .... 12 Passes completed ..... 5 Passes Intercepted .... 1 Punts.................S Punting Average . 40 Fumbles Lost.......... 3 Yards Penalized....... 25 LINEUPS 145 82 7 4 2 9 35 0 25 I'M A LUCKY GUY by Frank Gilbreth, Jr........... . THE GRASS HARP by Truman.Capote.......... . .. . MELVILLE GOODWIN, U.S.A. by John P. Marquand........... THE BLESSING ; 'by Nancy Mitford.......... . . HOUSE OF LIARS by Elsa Morante ............ . . THE PRESIDENT'S LADY . .3.00 .2.75 . . 3.75 S..3.00 . 4.00 by Irving Stone... .......... AND RIDE A TIGER by Robert Wilder.......... CAIRO TO DAMASCUS .. .3,50 ,... .3.50 I National Football Roundup by John Roy Carlson.............. .. WA S UJNVERSITY BOOK STORE .4.50 MIDWEST Indiana 32, Ohio State 10 Michigan 21, Iowa 0 Oklahoma A & M 27, Drake 14 Minnesota 39, Nebraska 20 Wisconsin 31, Purdue 7 Colorado 20, Kansas State 7 Oklahoma 33, Kansas 21 Iowa State 21, Missouri 14 Northwestern 16, Navy 7 Navy Pier 21, Carthage? Morris Harvey 14, Kent State 14 (tie) Oberlin 40, Hamilton 14 Muskingum 31, Wooster 3 Miami (M.) 7, Ohio University 0 Ohio Wesleyan 21, Denison 14 r 1 I I f, I IN~i .