TUESDAY, OCTOBElt 30, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE-THREE THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Tw Tennessee Again'. FUTURE FOES: O s pO Ground A ttaek Paees Unbeaten Illinois I TWO Teams Capture I-M tiGrid. Crowns Williams, Hayden Win Tight Games Two teams clinched division championships yesterday in I-M football in close contests. Williams had to go into overtime to edge Adams, 12-6, while main- taining an undefeated record. Adams scored first on a pass from Fred Adams to Bob Olsen, but Herb Eibler tossed an equalizer to Don Anderson a few minutes later. With a tie at, the end of regula- tion time, both teams got four downs and Williams won by gain- ing nine yards and holding Adams to a minus 14 yards. S MILT LANDAU proved the hero for Hayden as he gathered in. a pass from Dick Dennis for the only tally of the Hayden-Gomberg game. A goal line stand in the final minutes kept Gomberg from scoring and provided Hayden with its division championship. Huber sported the most one- sided victory of the day with a 30-0 win over Cooley. Bob Szczarba passed for two counters and scored another while Dick Kennedy, his, teammate, scored twice on pass receptions. Sparked by Al Price, who heaved to Don Deagan in the end zone for one touchdown, ran for another, and ran and passed for two extra points, Hinsdale defeat- ed Chicago, 20-13, in the last minute of play. Bud Turner caught a pass for the winning score." Strauss won its first game this season in a 13-0 shutout of Tyler. Phil Jacobus scored twice for the winners, once on a run and again after snagging a Kelley Tarachas aerial. Pro Football Encounters MSC, Illini Marked by Close Scores Trail Leader Four of the six National Foot- ball League encounters last Sun- day were decided by a margin less than a single touchdown. The world champion Cleveland Browns streaked by a stubborn New York Giant eleven, 14-13, and the Green Bay Packers came from behind to clip the New York Yanks, 29-27. TWO OTHER close games saw the Washington Redskins win their second straight game under Coach Dick Todd, 27-23, over the ft.ia. Vt SPORTS ED WHIPPLE: Night Editor Philadelphia' Eagles, while the Chicago Bears had their hands full in getting by a spirited Detroit squad, 28-23. In the other two professional tilts, the Pittsburg Steelers, led by former Michigan star Chuck Ortmann, downed the Chicago Cardinals 28-14, and the San Francisco 49ers crushed their West Coast rivals, the Los An- geles Rams, 44-17. A missed point after touchdown costs the Giants their hold on first place in the American Con- ference. * * * OTTO GRAHAM, outstanding Brown quarterback, threw two first quarter touchdown passes- one a 64-yard pass play to Dub Jones and the other a 26-yard toss to end Dante Lavelli-and Lou Groza made good on both ex- tra point attempts. The Bears downed an inspired Detroit team, 28-23, and took over first place in the National Conference. A blocked Lion punt, which was recovered in the end zone for a Bear tally, proved to be the game's winning margin. Bear coach George Halas un- covered a devastating power run- ner in former Mississippi fullback All men interested in becom- ing student track managers please report to Ferry Field at 4 p.m. today. 1 -Mary Horwitz John Dottley. Dottley ripped the Lions' forward wall for 105 yards on 17 trips with the pigskin. Chuck Ortmann threw a 33 yard pass to end Elbie Nickel for what proved to be the Steeler's margin of victory over the sinking Cardinals. The Cards ,led going into the fourth quarter; 14-7, but three fast Steeler tallies gave the South Side squad its fourth loss in five starts. Toronto Tiesr Detroit2-2 DETROIT-(P)-Max Bentley's goal with eight minutes left brought the Toronto Maple Leafs a 2-2 tie with the league leading Detroit Red Wings in a National Hockey League game before 12,217 fans in Olympia Stadium last night. And in Montreal, Floyd Curry scored three goals and Maurice Richard two last night to lead the Montreal Canadiens to a 6-1 rout, of the New York Rangers before a capacity crowd that included Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh. The contest had been postponed from Saturday night so that the Princess and her husband could attend. Wolverines Advance To Fifteenth Position By The Associated Press NEW YORK -- Tennessee and Michigan State clung to the num- ber one and number two positions in the Associated Press football poll yesterday but the rest of the top ten underwent a minor shake- up. Wisconsin, which spoiled North- western's perfect season, 41-0, showed the greatest gain, leaping from the 14th notch to number ten. The Badgers replaced Texas,I which tumbled to 12th despite a' 14-6 victory over Rice. * * * an I L L I N O I S, Maryland a n d Princeton moved up on t h e strength of impressive triumphs last Saturday. Georgia Tech,, Southern California and Baylor lost a little ground but stayed in the top-rankings. California held firm to the No. 9 spot. The Illini, whipped up with Rose Bowl fever, moved into the third position after humb- ling Indiana, 21-0, and sent un- beaten Georgia Tech, close- shave 8-7 victor over Vanderbilt, skidding to fifth. Michigan, rated twenty - first last week, vaulted to fifteenth place in the current poll. The top 20, with team records and first place votes in parenthe- sis: FIRST TEN (Another in a series highlighting last Saturday's performance of Michigan's future 1951 grid foes.) Michigan gets its chance Satur- day to do what no other football team has been able to accomplish this year-beat Illinois, now gen- erally rated the team to defeat for the Big Ten title. The Illini took a stronger lease on the' flattering but often inac- curate "team to beat" classifica- tion with a 21-0 whitewash of In- diana last week. Previously Illinois had edged Wisconsin, 14-10, for another Con- ference win. AS MIGHT HAVE been expect- ed, Illinois Saturday made the most of its powerful running game sparked by Johnny Karras, who scored all three touchdowns. Somewhat more surprising was the defensive play, especial- ly against the paspes of Hoosiers Lou D'Achille and Dick Ash- burner, who passed OSU dizzy,. 32-10, the previous week. Al Brosky, Illinois safety man, dragged in two Hoosier passes in- side the Illini 20 yard line that were destined forytouchdowns. Brosky's second interception began a drive climaxed by Karras' second score. Prior to the Hoosier contest, Orange and Blue defenders had al- lowed 553 yards via the aerial route, but Saturday the Hoosiers made only 65. MICHIGAN rushed for 124 yards through the Indiana line which allowed the Illini better than 300 the same way. To balance the running attack, Coach Ray Eliot has Don Engels and Tom O'Connell, two passing quarterbacks who have demon- strated their ability to produce in the plutch. When Illinois defeated Wash- ington, 27-20, prior to Indiana, it was sophomore O'Connell who passed for the winning touch- down in the final two minutes of the game. Against Indiana one of Karras, touchdowns was an 88 yard run from scrimage, longest in Big Ten history. ELSEWHERE in the realm of future foes, Cornell and North- Princeton comV passes for 236 ya, 272 more yards ri ed 15 of 17 s. and added .lng, DON . . promotion 1: western, previously undefeated, were devastated, by Princeton and Wisconsin, respectively. Princeton's All American Dick Kazmaier led thec 53-15 rout of the Big Red, scoring two touch- downs and passing for three others. At the same time his mates bottled up Cornell's high- ly regarded Stu Merz and a flock of other impressive run- ners. EVANS delayed by injury MW To Feature Defense, In Preparing for Illinois REPORTS F I Evanston give little in the Way (l constructive in- formation on Northwestern per- formances, since the Wildcats were completely overshadowed by the Badgers, 41-0. All through the game Wiscon- sin's Johnny Coatta found easy, targets with his passing and Alan Ameche spearheaded a strong ground attack. Ohio State came to life to de- feat Iowa 47-21 at Columbus. Neither team showed anything re- sembling defense, as OSU had a net gain of 399 yards and the Hawkeyes gained 342. The Buckeyes completed 11 of 18 passes, good for the excessive total of 308 yards. Campus Interviews on Cigarette Tests No.25 THE :r. bor $EA so different *a HORSEco V. AA k t his little gee-gee was all at sea. It was enough to upset his equine-imity. He'd been Sreading about those rush-rush cigarette testsf k 4 -the quick sniff, the fast puff.' Hardly the v r< scientific approach,' he said in his confusion. But then he i-ealized that one test is an equine of a different pigmentation-a thorough, u conclusive test of cigarette mildness. "° ,0t It's the sensible test... the 30-Day Camel Mildness Test, which simply asks you to try Camels as your steady smoke-on a day-after-day f? Y ~basis. No snap judgments! Once you've tried ' Camels for 30 days in Your "T-Zone" .sz.s.. Points 1. Tennessee (5-0) (59)......... 1,213 2. Michigan State (6-0) (25) ... 1,131 3. Illinois (5-0) (15)...........1,022 4. Maryland (5-0) (22)......905 5. Georgia Tech (6-0) (9)....... 904 6. Princeton (5-0) (14).......... 891 7. Southern California (6-1) (7) 664 8. Baylor (4-0-1) .........345 9. California (5-1).............. 319 10: Wisconsin (3-1-1) (2)........ 287 THE SECOND TEN 11. Stanford (6-0) (2)............208 12. Texas (5-].).................. 205 13. Notre Dame (4-1)............95 14. Kentucky (4-3) (1) ...........60 15. MICHIGAN (3-2)........52 16. Washington State (4-2).......50 17. Oklahoma (3-2) (1).......... 38 18. Texas A.& M (3-1-1) 36 19. Mimai (Fla.) (4-1) ...........29 20. San Francisco (6-0) ..........26 The accent will be on defense this week as Michigan's Big Ten- leading Wolverines prepare for Saturday's crucial clash with Illi- nois. Michigan's offensive explosion against Minnesota last weekend proved once and for all 'that Ben Oosterbaan has all the scoring po- tential a coach could wish. How- ever, it will take more than just offensive might to upset the pow- erful Illini, currently ranked third in the Associated Press poll. THE WOLVERINES have been opportunists extraordinary in both the Minnesota and Iowa contests. In both games the Maize and Blue was outgained through the air and bested in the first down column. Iowa also ran up an even hundred yards more than Michigan by rush- ing. The reason, in part, may be found in enemy errors. Fumbles hit Indiana and Iowa hard, and intercepted passes stopped six Minnesota attacks. Against Illinois the Wolverines will have to makestheir own breaks, and line coach Jack Blott will work to make the Michigan forward wall a little bit tougher in practice ses- sions this week. OOSTERBAAN gave his blue charges a well earned rest yester- day afternoon. Nothing more strenuous than touch football was on the program. The injury list provided the only sour note. Trainer Jim Aunt disclosed that Roger Zat- koff and Don Evans had been hurt in weekend contests. Evans, a promising freshman tailback, suffered a kidney injury in Friday's Junior Varsity win over Michigan State. Hunt reported that the blow will probably sideline Evans for the remainder of the season. The pill was an especially bitter one to swallow because he was due for a promotion to the varsity squad behind captain Bill Putich and freshman Don Eaddy. Evans was kicked in a pileup after the whistle had sounded by an unidentified MSC payer, and the Spartans were assessed a 15 yard roughing penalty at the time. The freshman ace had impressed observers with his fine passing and hard running. ZATKOFF favored an 'ankle in yesterday's drills, but will be ready for Illinois. Today the Blue team will knuckle down to four days of hard work with scout Bill Orwig's reports on Illinois to aid them. Last might Oosterbaan and his staff showed movies of thb Minne- sota game and Orwig delivered his report which stressed the need for a strong defense to stop the ef- forts of halfback Johnny Karras and quarterback Tommy O'Con- nell. "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Try a Collegiate; 0 Crew-Cut * Personality Style The Baseola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre -----'"'--Y Casual..* comfortable! . . . 0 05 * $750 s . * S 0 MA f, , [0RYN0Z CUE CLUES: Peterson To Present Billiard Trick Shot Exhibition at Union Charlie Peterson, world famous billiard trick shot artist, will give an exhibition of fancy billiard shots at 7:30 tonight in the Union billiard room. Known throughout the world by his famous slogan, "Show me a shot I 'can't make," Peterson will perform any shot asked of him plus a number of difficult tricks from his repertoire. PRESENTLY visiting Western Conference campuses in conjunc- tion with the Big Ten, Peterson will be at the Urnion throughout the entire week giving instructions to players. His tour is designed to arouse student interest in an all-Big Ten billiard tournament. Peterson began playing almost sixty years ago at the age of fif- teen. After winning various na- tional championships, an auto accident cut his tournament jott MRADE fo M YO UR FACE play short but he went on to perfect over 525 trick shots and win the world's track shot championship. "Undoubtedly my greatest satis- faction in life has come from help- ing young players perfect their games and to derive greater en- joyment from it," Peterson said. OFTEN "ON THE GO"? Went a hat that's at home any- where? 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