WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1952 Sig Eps Triumph; Betas Down SAM 7-6 Win Over Kappa Sigma Gains Semi-finals for Sig Eps in I-M Play THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIRES TH IHGA AL PAETU By DIANE MOWREY Sigma Phi Epsilon entered the social fraternity, football semi- finals, by defeating Kappa Sigma yesterday by a 7 to 6 score. The first half of the Kappa Sig- Sig Ep game was uneventful, with neither team gaining much ground, but in the second half of play, Sig Ep Dave Davidsen tossed 10 yards to Tom Stone for a touch- down. The extra point was made on a pass from Tony Naylor to Burwell "Bumpy" Jones. KAPPA SIGMA retaliated with a 30-yard, touchdown aerial from Don Mitchell to Chuck Heimer- ; dinger, who made a diving catch. The Kappa Sigs failed to tie up the score when Mitchell faded pack for the extra point pass and slipped and fell. Sigma Alpha Mu bowed to Beta Theta Pi, 6-0, in another first-place playoff. The -Betas made the only score of the game when Dick Fisher launched a 15-yard toss to Terry Iverson. The Sammies vaunted passer, Warren Wertheimer, never could get an attack generated against the Betas defense. In the second-place playoffs, Sigma Alpha Epsilon had a tie ball game with Lambda Chi Al- pha until the last five minutes of play, when it got two points on a safety. * * * LAMBDA CHI had sent Hal Kruger back into the end zone to pass but Kruger rushed hard, in- tentionally grounded the ball. The official ruled a safety for the SAEs on the play, and Lambda Chi played the rest of the game under protest. IM officials rule that the safety was good, how- ever. In another second-place play- off game, Alpha Tau Omega took an early lead over Chi Psi and won, 13-6. Achilles Tara- ches led the passing attack of the ATOs, tossing to Jim Dreyer and Jay Mills for touchdowns and to Bill Munroe for the extra point. Chi Psi's only score came on a pass from Bob Sabo to Russ Johnson. Sparked by the playing of Dick Kline, Jack Levy, and Hank Good- man, Zeta Beta Tau humbled Phi Sigma Kappa by the score of 19 to 0 in the third-place playoffs. M' Gridde's Drill..to Stop Illi*ni Passes Coach Bennie Oosterbaan sent his league-leading Wolverines through a brisk two hour drill yes- terday as the Michigan squad pre- pared defenses to stop Illinois' vaunted Tom O'Connell. The Illinois aerial game, coun- trary to all expectations, has far surpassed the running attack. Constant injuries have decimated the running backs to such a de- gree that at no time this season have the Illini been at full strength. O'CONNELL has stepped into the breach and with two capable receivers in John "Rocky" Ryan and Rex Smith he has given the Orange and Blue a powerful aerial game. With pass defenders at a pre- mium, a gloomy note was sound- ed when a recheck of injuries revealed that Don Oldham and Stan Knickerbocker may miss Saturday's encounter due to a pulled back muscle and a sprained ankle respectively. The Michigan offense has been exceedingly potent this season judging from statistics released yesterday. The Wolverines have amassed an average of 359.2 yards per game, the best offensive per- formance since 1947 when the "Magicians" of Fritz Crisler av- eraged 412 yards per contest. The Maize and Blue has been rushing for an average of 224.3 yards and passing for 154.4 in the five games played. ROW products liinois' Eliot To Employ New Attack By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN -Illinois' varsity scrimmaged against freshmen us- ing Michigan plays and defenses Tuesday as coach Ray Eliot pol- ished up a new offensive unit. Tom O'Connell directed the unit at quarterback. New halfbacks were Ken Swienton and ,Bud De- Moss. Pete Bachouros filled in at fullback for the injured Bill Tate. Safetyman Al Brosky worked out lightly for the first time since he injured his back. WISCONSIN MADISON-Coach Ivy William- son threw everything but an actual scrimmage at his Wisconsin foot- ball team yesterday in a rugged workout that lasted nearly 21/2 hours. Offensive blocking, which wasn't up to snuff last Saturday as the Badgers lost to UCLA, got a good going over. The Wisconsin offense worked on blocking and timing against a strong reserve outfit. OHIO STATE COLUMBUS -Doug Goodsell, Ohio State University back, Tues- day earned himself a starting linebacker spot for the Northwest- ern tilt at Evanston Saturday. Coach Woody Hayes was pleased with Goodsell's performance in yesterday's 40-minute defensive scrimmage during a light snowfall. NORTHWESTERN EVANSTON -Northwestern's defense excelled yesterday in a rugged scrimmage against fresh- man employing Ohio State plays. . Tackles Tom Roche and Dick Elrod and guard Ralph Jecha stood out. IOWA IOWA CITY-Coach Forest Eva- shevski gave his Iowa football squad a long, hard workout behind closed stadium gates Tuesday in preparation for a Big Ten game with Minnesota Saturday at Min- neapolis. Hawkeye defensive and off en- sive teams scrimmaged freshman squads using gopher formations. MINNESOTA MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota's Gophers appeared to be in high spirits and hopeful for a victory as they prepared Tuesday for their Big Ten clash with Iowa Satur- day. The contest will be Minne- sota's homecoming. The defense spent the practice session working on Iowa rushing and pass defense. The offensive lineup concentrated largely on Minnesota scoring plays. DETROIT - (P) -The Detroit Red Wings' front office, annoyed by the Stanley Cup champions, three - game losing streak, an- nounced two player changes yes- terday. Defenseman Larry Zeidel and utility forward Vic Stasiuk were shipped to the Wings' Edmonton farm club in the Western Hockey League. Brought from Edmonton to Detroit as replacements were defenseman Bill Folk and right wing Lou Jankowski. * * * THE DEFENSIVE change was made as an aftermath of the three road trip losses, most stunning of which was the 9-0 defeat at Mon- treal, worst in Detroit's history. Folk, who gets his first real chance after five years in the De- troit system, is known as a heavier body checker than Zeidel. The offensive change was made to secure more scoring punch. Jankowski, 21, scored 125 points two years ago in junior hockey at Oshawa, Canada. Folk got a previous four-game tryout with the Wings and Jan- kowski played in the final 1950-51 contest with the Wings. It took a while for the nation's grid experts to lift Michigan out of the bottomless pit of unrated football teams, but the Wolverines are up with the big boys now. This week's Associated Press poll, representing the opinion of 121 football writers, rates the Maize and Blue 15th in the coun- try with 48 votes. Another national pigskin poll, which has as its board of selec- tors some 35 coaches, puts Michi- gan in 14th position with 14 votes. The Wolverines great rivals, Michigan State, still hold on to the top spot in the AP tabulation, but only one Western Conference Team is placed over Michigan. The Purdue Boilermakers, who have shown themselves to be the class of the Big Ten by virtue of their impressive win over Illinois, got one first place vote and 164 tallies for the eighth slot. Here are the complete findings of the AP pickers: 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Purdue (1) ........... Kansas............... Villanova......... . California ............ Tennessee......... Notre Dame ..... .... Texas........... MICHIGAN '.......... Virginia ......... Pennsylvania....... Wisconsin............. Alabama.............. Florida............... 164 138 134 99 91 63 58 48 39 26 19 18 16 Canadian Newcomers Folk, Jankowski Join Red Wings GETTING THERE: Wolverines Advance in Grid Ratings 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Michigan State (38) ...1042 Maryland (32)........1016 Oklahoma (20).........850 Georgia Tech (7).....767 Southern Cal (7)......745 Duke (10)............688 UCLA (6)........... 605 Read and Use Daily Classifieds E I1 I a .I 00002 lllll l f II11ll llflll li l lllflll<[I 1111> f 8 11111 111 1| f 11| ll illll l||lgl|||| ll|||||7. I«ll ll llllllll lll ll lllllllllllllllllll llllll lf illlu fflfllllll llllilll l!!II! -,. ,7T.fme %Y7.1217 0 f 0 " " 0 0 " 0 J/IN UP AND YOURE AUTOMATICALLY SOY DO SHE ,f ALL 8.H /M.O.C. AROUND WOMEN GO FOR BEST GUYS / HERE! A iT/ ARE/r,-SQUARE SQUARE. 1 - - - --- --AND T E // :--AHOUSE IS QNLY TIME WILLTELL ABOUT A FRATERNITYR AND ONLY TIME WILL TELL ABOUT A CIGARETTE! TAKE 'YURTIME...MAKE THE NSIBLE 30-DAY CAM-L. MILDNESS TEST. 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