AGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1951 :, SPEAKING ofop BY GEORGE FLINT HAMPAIGN-You could have taken a script of last year's snow bound 7-0 Illinois defeat of Michigan and replayed it yesterday as y Eliot's team proved once again that it can throw that ball around slippery weather. Last year a Norm Major-Tony Klimex pass yielded the only ni score, coming in the second quarter after an 80-yard drive. This time they waited until the final period, and a couple If new faces appeared in the drama. Tommy O'Connell, who ad done an impressive job of bringing his team down the field- with a mixture of' passes and quick-opening ground plays, threw ne to a wide open Rex Smith in the white-coated end zone. And that was the ball game. Illinois rooters, who braved 40-mile winds and 27-degree tem- rature to cheer on their Rose Bowl hopeful team, went wild as iith squeezed the ball as if it were a new-born babe, looked to see it he was really in paydirt, and then joyfully tossed the pigskin the air. 'o Breaks This Time HE ELEMENTS, which have worked in Michigan's favor in the past, were just not playing footsie with the Maize and Blue yes- day. Snow had been even a greater concomitant in the 9-3 conquest Ohio State which sent Oosterbaan's men to the Rose Bowl last year. But Champaign was not Columbus, and it took only a misplaced ting to turn the tide in one direction or another. Michigan came up with a variant of its single wing in the early ges of the contest. It loaded the strong side of the line with five tead of the usual four men. This yielded results during the Wolverines' one real threat. ith Don Peterson, a fullback who seemed to delight in the crys- alline moisture which covered the hard-packed gridiron, carry- ng the mail. The Michigan line was able to open gaping holes ver the right side of the Illini forward wall. The rugged fullback carried the ball a total of 27 times. He netd 104 yards on the slippery turf and carried the brunt of the ack. Michigan employed a 6-2-2-1 defensive formation throughout st of the first half. Then, in the second half, they shifted occa- ally to a 5-3-2-1. The big defensive trouble came against the ead. That formtaion, which Minnesota employed so effectively the 54-27 Michigan victory last week, was eminently successful in Illinois touchdown drive. * * * * rouble with Spread Defense ICHIGAN SPREAD its linebackers and halfbacks to meet the threat of the wide backs and the ends, who were split as much ten yards from normal position. But this left weaknesses in the ddle, and in the fourth-quarter, last-gasp drive of the Illini, quar- back O'Connell took excellent advantage of it. The touchdown play was off the spread, too. End Smith had split wide to the right, with the ever-danger- ohnny Karras right behind him, expecting a plunge. The Mich- gan defense pulled in tight, and Smith had room to do a tango Jr two before receiving the ball. This was only the 12th time Illinois was able to defeat the Maize Blue, who have beaten them 25 times. Oddly enough, the two ms have never tied, although yesterday's close match looked like othing-across struggle until the Illini eruption in the fading mm- s. Purdue . . Penn State . 28 Ohio State . 0 Northwestern W3 isconsin 0 Indiana 0 ! tJ Minnes sota. . 20 Notre Dame . . . . 20 Navy . . . . 19 Columbia .0 Cornell . . 21 .. 20 oIIowa Last Quarter Rally Drops Wolverines O'Connell-to-Smith Pass Saves Unbeaten Status * * 'x '? Underdog UCLA Bruins Upturn Clifornia 27 (Continued from Page 1) pass for a 23 yard advance and a first down on the Wolverine 46. Out of this spread formation came Illinois once again and this time O'Connell connected with hero Smith in the middle of the Wolverine secondary for another first down, this one on the snow-faded 30 yard strip. Then the right end, Joe Ver- nasco, made a vitalncontribution by leaping high in the air to pull down an O'Connell rifle shot be- fore tumbling out of bounds at the 19. ** * THE ROAR of the crowd mounted in intensity as the Illini raced out of the huddle once again, and as O'Connell took his position under the cen eruhe calmly waved his arms for quiet. As the noise subsided he handed the ball off to fullback Bill Tate who smashed up the middle for 13 precious yards and a first and goal to go at the six. With two minutes left, Wolver- ine line-backer Larry LeClaire broke into Illini blocking to toss Pete Bachouros for a two yard loss to the eight. THAT SET the stage for O'Con- nell, who moved his players into place and executed his perfect, throw into the heart of a con- fused Michigan secondary. Sam Rebecca's conversion pro- duced an unnecessary extra point to cap the storybook triumph. Michigan had made a des- perate first half touchdown bid but was unable to win a race with the clock as the gun sound- ed with the Wolverines in pos- session on the enemy seven yard line. Tinkham had set the drive in motion by intercepting an O'Con- nell toss at the Wolvesine 32 ; nd running it back to the Illini 46 with 22 minutes remaining in the half. i.* " TAILBACK BILL PUTICH hit Ted Topor with a perfect ten yard throw as Topor was shoved out on the 36. Peterson, who car- ried Michigan's ground attack all afternoon, added five yards in two cracks at the line and a defensive holding penalty gave the Wolver- ines a first down on the 23. Peterson hit the middle for three and Putich's incomplete pass stopped the clock with 10 seconds left. On a bootleg play Putich whipped around his own right end and was pushed out of bounds at the seven, but quar- terback Topor fumbled the sub- sequent pass from center as the half expired. TOM O'CONNELL ... saves Illini Michigan set another drive motion late in the third period, final serious scoring threat. , , - in its (Advertisement) rsonal Christmas Cards at Follett's 25 outstanding lines at Fol- 's, State St. at N. University, caused quite a stir among the ly shoppers. The quality of the ction is at its finest. Students ticularly should order them LATE HOCKEY SCORES Detroit 3, Montreal 2 New York 2, Toronto 1. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Boilermakers Blank Penn St. LAFAYETTE, Ind.-W)-Purdue broke a three-game football losing streak yesterday by cutting up Penn State's defense with a gang of unknown sophomores a n d freshmen. Sophomore Max Schmaling, sub fullback, scored the first two Pur- due touchdowns in the 28-0 vic- tory. Quarterback D a 1 e Samuels was the only starting regular in Purdue's injury-riddled back- field. He threw two touchdown passes to Jim Whitmer, but Pur- due's youngsters already had more than enough points to win. Freezing cold and snow-filled gusts of wind up to 45 miles an hour caused frequent fumbles. Penn State lost the ball three times in fumbles, once on the Pur- due 8, but it recovered four Pur- due fumbles. TENNESSEE 27, NORTH CAROLINA 0 CHAPEL HILL, N.C.-('P)-Hank Lauricella, Tennessee's potent lit- tle butcher knife, passed and flashed North Carolina into sub- mission 27-0 today to extend the winning streak of the nation's number one football team to 16 games. STARTING FROM their own eight, the Wolverines ate up big chunks of yardage, mostly on Pet- erson's powerful plunges. The courageous full back picked up a first down on the Illini 40 just af- ter the final period began. Wingback Wes Bradford col- lected three yards on a reverse and then the Michigan attack collapsed when Putich's pass down the eastern sideline in- tended for Bradford was inter- cepted by Al Brosky at the Illi- nois 18. The rest of the game was a duel of punts and fumbles, with the Wolverines coming out on the short end of both, although the losers seemed to have better com- mand of the situation when in possession of the ball, until the final six minutes. O'CONNELL AND Smith, of course, were the game's offensive big guns. They saved their fin- esse for the crucial stages and performed like champions. the Wolverines with a Big Ten mark of three victories against It was Michigan's third defeat in six games this season, and left one setback. Statistics Micig* Plenty-Passing Packers Play Hosts to Lions GREEN BAY, Wis.-(R)--Green Bay's pass-happy packers enter- tain the Detroit Lions in a Nation- al Football League game today with a first division berth at stake. The Packers, who have thrown and completed more passes than any other club in the league, go into the game with a 3-2 record. Detroit, rated in pre-season fore- casts as the team to beat, hasn't won a game in a month and is lugging a 2-2-1 slate. The loser today will drop out of National Conference contention. Lion Coach Buddy Parker has reshuffled his front line in an at- tempt to bolster an attack which has failed to produce a victory since Oct. 7, but has indicated he'll stand on his regular backfield of Bobby Layne, Doak Walker, Bob- by Hoernschemyer and Pat Harder. Green Bay's aerial offense, which has outgained its ground attack nearly three to one, will be han- dled by Tobin Rote and Bobby Thomason alternating at quarter- back. LOS ANGELES-(P)-The UCLA football team blasted some more shine off the glittering Golden Bears of California yesterday, up- setting the heavily favored visi- tors, 21-7, in one of the nation's biggest surprises. Led by a sensational sopho- more tailback, Paul Cameron, thrice beaten UCLA handed the big brother Bears theirs second setback of the season. It also was Cal's second loss in 41 regu- lar season contests stretching back to 1947. Outplaying the bigger, power laden Bears in every department, and gaining revenge for their coach, Red Sanders, for the 35-0 walloping inflicted on them last year, UCLA broke a 7-7 deadlock in the third quarter and clinched the decision with a third touch- down in the final period. California went into the game, a Pacific Coast Conference en- counter watched by 56,418 fans gathered under warm skies, as a solid two touchdown favorite. NOTRE DAME 19, NAVY 0 BALTIMORE-(P)-Notre Dame and Navy spent most of the time smearing each other in the mud of Memorial Stadium here yester- day, but the Irish long distance scoring paid off with a 19-0 vic- tory over the Midshipmen. It took the Irish only 55 sec- onds for two touchdowns in the second quarter. Bill Barrett, senior speedball from River Forest, Ill., went 74 yards on a punt return in the matter of several seconds in the fourth quarter. Navy had the full house of 44,- 237 chilled fans on their feet at the end of the game when it failed to crash over the goal one yard away on the last play. Navy had only one other scoring opportunity in the game, and it fumbled that away on the Notre Dame 10 in the third quarter. Except for the Irish lightning scores, a fighting Navy line and the slop of Memorial Stadium combined to keep Notre Dame at bay. Navy got nowhere at all in the first half, winding up with a loss of three yards. Notre Dame Ci didn't do much better in the second half, carrying the ball past midfield only once. * * * STANFORD 21, WASHINGTON ' STATE 13 PALTO ALTO, Calif. - () - Stanford's unbeaten Indians, tra- veling football's victory highway toward the Pacific Coast Confer- ence title and the Rose Bowl, wrote their toughest win into the record today by defeating Wash- ington State's Cougars 21 to 13. A crowd of 49,000 fans, sit- ting in summer-like weather, saw the red shirted Indians score touchdowns in each of the first three periods, then get scored upon twice in the final quarter. Stanford chalked up its seventh victory of the season in beating the rugged, ever-threatening Cou- gars from the north. The victory was doubly impressive in the fact that Washington State up to yes- terday had scored not less than 21 points per game against six pre- vious opponents. The inspired Indians made their youthful coach, Chuck Taylor, a prophet for the seventh time. He has predicted a winning effort be- fore every game. Big Ten Standings W L T Pct. Illinois ......... 3 0 0 1.000 MICHIGAN ..... 3 1 0 .750 Wisconsin ...... 3 1 1 .700 Ohio State......2 1 1 .625 Purdue.... 1 1 0 .500 Northwestern.. 1 2 0 .333 Indiana .......1 3 0 .250 Minnesota ...... 0 2 1 .167 Iowa ............ 9 3 1 .125 LOSE THAT LEAN Hall of Fame Accepts '11' Grid Greats NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.-(P)- Thirty-two players and 21 coaches were elected yesterday to the foot- ball Hall of Fame at Rutgers Uni- versity, The selections by the honors court were the first for the $5,- 000,000 project and chiefly were of famous figures of the past cen- tury or early part of the present era. NINE OF THE eleven men select- ed by the nation's sports writers and sportscasters for the Associat- ed Press All-Time All America team were included in the list. The 32 players chosen included Adolf "Gsrmany" Shulz, and Benny Friedman, of Michigan. The 21 coaches chosen included Fielding H. Yost, Michigan. Yale placed four men in the Hall of Fame to lead the list. Notre Dame, Michigan, and Iowa were the only other schools to win re- cognition for more than one. Robert Suffridge, Tennessee guard, and Benny Oosterbaan, Michigan end, were the two mem- bers of the AP first team not in the Rutgers group. RENT a typewriter and keep up with your work r. I - Former Men of Vaughan House KELSEY HOUSE (our new Home) invite you to attend "NOVEMBER KNIGHT" A SEMI-FORMAL DANCE Saturday, November 17, 1951 for further information contact Phil Agnifilo, 3-0521 Ext 628 First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized Illinois 11 173 16 z 10 32.5 1 45 Michigan . 11 165 50 9 3 2 10 28.5 3 15 AQUARIUMS -An ideal cohJe/atioknalpiece. See our live tropical fish display this weekend - open every day except Tuesday. NNERSITY J4QUARIUM 2208 PACKARD MICHIGAN LE-PERRY, Green LT-JOHNSON, Bennet, Balog LG-KINYON, Dugger, Beison C-O'SHAUGHNESSY, Zatkoff RG-WOLTER, Timm RT-STRIBE, Pederson RE-OSTERMAN, Knutson, Stanford, Pickard. QB-TOPOR, Zanfaga LH-PUTICH, Tinkham RH-BRADFORD, Rescorla, Oldham FB-PETERSON, Le Claire, Billings ILLINOIS LE-WODZIAK, J. Vernasco, Nosek LT-BERSCHET, Baughman, Ulrich G-LENZINI, Studley, Bauer C-BORMAN, Popa, Sabino, Cole RG-ERNST, Gnidovic, Murphy, Val- entino RT-D. TATE, Jenkins, Weddell RE-SMITH, L. Stevens QB-O'CONNELL, Miler, Brosky, En- gels LH-D. STEVENS, Neathery, Bachour- os RH-KARRAS, Wallace, Rebecca FB-W. TATE, Dusenbury, Boerio Score by Periods: Michigan .........0 0 0 0........0 Illinois ...........0 0 0 7........7 Illinois Scoring-Touchdown: Smith; Conversion: Rebecca. eki ii In cosmetics. too, phy. sicians know best. Ask your doctor about AR-EX Cosmetics.- a ; : r, : t f I