I TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T"RES I m maim I=M Grid Champs Crowned Tonight Law Club Single Defending Titlist Among the Eight Contesting Teams HISTORY REPEATS? Cornell Rout Recalls Similar Win in'33 3 gfreat nee J ' M. ' ,_ c^ Four intramural football cham- pionships will be decided at Wines Field tonight, with the first con- test starting at 5:15 p.m. and the last encounter beginning at 8:30 P.M. Sigma Chi meets Phi Delta The- ta under the lights for the social fraternity title in the headliner at 8:30. Sigma Chi reached the finals last year, but were dumped by Al- pha Tau Omega. They are seek- ing revenge this year with a team that is in peak physical condition. * * * THE KEY performers for Sig- ma Chi are Jerry Davis and Paul Fancher. Both players shared the passing honors for the regular season play. Phi Delta Theta is not as for- Aunate as its opponents, since two of the players are on the injured list. Dan MacLauren, an end, has a broken collarbone and Jan Wegenka, a right half, has a pulled leg muscle. Both were potent point grabbers. The two top teams in the Resi- dence Halls League are Michigan and Strauss Houses, who will play at 7:30. The West Quaders are supported by Dale Ewart's passing to Jim Hatton and Wimp Trum- bull. THE WEST Quaders have a two platoon system except for Trum- * * * { I-M Scores VOLLEYBALL Wenley 4, Huber 2 Gomberg 3, Adams 3 Michigan 6, Winchell 0 < Hinsdale 5, Van Tyne 1 Allen-Rumsey 6, Scott 0 Strauss 5, Lloyd 1 Fletcher 3, Taylor 3 Anderson 3, Cooley 3 Hayden 4, Chicago 2 Williams 6, Greene 0 FOOTBALL Taylor 19, Hinsdale 6 Gomberg 20, Cooley 0 Anderson 6, Van Tyne 0 Williams 6, Scott 0 Lloyd 15, Greene 0 Delta Sigma Delta 20, Phi Alpha Del- ta 2 bull and Ewart who play the whole game. Strauss House in East Quad will make its first try for the football championship. The main passer is Phil Jacobus, but he alternates with Roger Peak. Their targets are ends Vince Schoeck and Ernie Andrews. Adam Roth is a standout line- man who deserves recognition. The only defending champ, the Law Club, is playing at 5:15 against Nu Sigma Nu, a team filled with former Michigan vars- ity footballers, for the profession- al fraternity crown. This may be the first team to score on Law Club in two years. * * * THE LAWYERS, in defending their title, will rely on Bob Cary, the team's best passer for the sea- There is an opening available for one more ice-hockey team in the intra-mural league. Con- tact Sports Building for infor- mation. --Earl Riskey son. Receiving his aerials are ends Tom Wilson, and -Dave Ray, and right half Bill Reamon. Len Krav- ets, a doubtful starter, may also be in at end. Nu Sigma will field five for- mer varsity men. Tom Peterson, a fullback; Ralph Straffon, full- back; John Hess, offensive ta- ckle; Bill Bartlet, quarterback; and Ozzie Clark, defensive end. Straffon, Hess and Clark made the trip to Pasadena with the last Rose Bowl Champions in their fi- nal game for Michigan. THE MEDICS were in'last years finals, but lost the game in over- time on yardage. At 6:30 p.m. the Independents will take the field. The Newman Club is facing Foresters, with both teams at full strength. Nineteen years ago last Satur- day a cocky, unbeaten Cornell squad moved into Michigan Sta- dium to battle a likewise unde- feated Wolverine eleven. The result then, just as the re- sult last Saturday, was a humiliat- ing defeat for the Ivy League team. HARRY KIPKE'S Michigan lads of 1933 rolled to a 40-0 triumph, while3Bennie Oosterbaan's boys blasted the not-so-big Red by a 49-7 score. The Maize and Blue of 1933 went on from the lopsided vic- tory over the Easterners to cap- ture the coveted Western Con- ference championship. Michigan of 1952 must overcome two rug- ged foes, Purdue and Ohio State, if history is to repeat. , To say that the Wolverines out- classed Cornell would be to pay the greatest compliment to the Ithaca team. At no time was there even the slightest doubt as to which was the superior football squad. MICHIGAN'S offense netted over 500 yards, divided evenly on the ground and in the air, while the defense allowed Cornell only 94 yards running and passing com- bined. The Wolverines added another defeat to a Cornell record which is the worst in recent years. Coach Lefty James' team has only been able to subdue Co- lumbia in seven games to date. Herb Bool, who was so instru- mental in that one victory, had Music Lover Cornell football players ap- preciate good music! The left guard playing oppo- site Wolverine offensive tackle Ben Pederson Saturday kept muttering, as the score soared upward in favor of the Maize and Blue, "The only reason we're letting you guys score so many touchdowns is that we like to hear your fight song, THE VICTORS." W Purdue 3 MICHIGAN 3 Wisconsin 3 Minnesota 3 Ohio State 3 Illinois 2 Indiana 1 Northwestern 1 Iowa 1 L 0 1 1 2 3 3 4 4 T 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Big Ten Stlandings Pet. .875 .750 .750 .700 .600 .400 .250 .200 ,200 senior had been sidelined with a sprained ankle. THE ENTIRE Michigan camp was deep in preparation for the pending struggle with conference leader Purdue. Coach Oosterbaan issued a warning to his charges that a defense must be found to cope with the Boilermakers' ex- plosive Dale Samuels to Bernie Flowers aerial combination. A repeat performance of last Saturday's defensive line play would certainly be the undoing of the vaunted Purdue passing game. The Boilermaker line however, is a far cry from the Cornell sieve. Michigan had a great schedule advantage in having Cornell as a tune-up for the show down with Purdue. Stu Holcomb's team was held to a 14-14 tie by an aroused Minnesota eleven last Saturday. The Boilermakers were forced to score the equalizing touchdown in the last two minutes of the game. This is the blue-chip bat- tle for both squads. The loser would be all but eliminated from consideration for conference laur- els. Kaywoodie pipes winning college men all over with their smart, modern styling., their smooth, easy smoking! a miserable afternoon Saturday and was able to complete only eight of twenty passes for a meager 55 yards. He spent most of the day in the clutches of Wolverine forwards Art Walker, Don Dugger and Jim Balog. Both Ted Kress and Dick Bei- son, who sustained minor head injuries in the game, were back in action in yesterday's limited prac- tice session. The squad was streng- thened by the return of wingback Tom Witherspoon. The Detroit Future Wolverine Foes Falter: Pitt Dumps OSU; Purdue Ties Two stumbling blocks on the road to a potential Michigan foot- ball trek to California next Janu- ary did a little stumbling of their own last Saturday. The class of the Big Ten (Pur- due) was held to a 14-14 deadlock by a Minnesota squad that was decisively beaten (21-0) by the Wolverines, while Ohio State dropped a non-conference counter to powerful Pitt. en- PURDUE: Trailing 14-0 midway through the third quarter, the league-leading Boilermakers came up with two second half touch- downs (one of which was set up by a pass interference penalty) to gain a standoff with the Gophers. With a little less than two minutes remaining in the clash, Purdue gained a first down on the Minnesota 12-yard line when the officials ruled inter- ference on a 29-yard heave from quarterback Dale Samuels to end Bernie Flowers. End John Kerr carried the pig- skin for the touchdown on an end around, and Samuels booted the game-tying extra point with one minute and 42 seconds remaining. Samuels, who completed 16 of 28 passes for 190 yards, com- bined with halfback Rex Brock on a 24-yard toss for Purdue's first score. Coach Stu Holcombe's eleven rolled up 14 first downs to 16 for the Gophers, with the Boilermak- ers ground attack producing sev- en of these with a 164-yard out- put. OHIO STATE: Surprising Pitts- burgh held command all the way to grab a 21-14 decision from the Buckeyes at Columbus. Ohio State counted twice on pass plays, one a 34-yard throw from sophomore quarterback John Borton to end Bob Grimes, and the other on a 21- yard pitch from Borton to Fred Bruney. Pitt's mighty line held OSU to only 51 yards rushing, while the Buckeye overhead game, in the person of Borton, was eating up 282 yards on 25 completions, in 44 tries. The Panthers were outgained 333 to 237, and the Bucks ran up 22 first downs to 10 for the visitors, but four lost fumbles paved the way for the Ohio State defeat. View from back proves Kaywoodie Streamliner is the thinnest pipe ever! Avk A Here's the new KAYWOODIE STREAMLINER. Fits your pocket without a bulge. Crafted of finest imported briar. Treats the most sensitive throat to the sweetest smoking ever. $4 and up. GIANTS RETURN FAVOR: F Lions Tie 49ers in National Conference PROOF: Kaywoodie burns cooler I The New York Giants returned a favor Sunday when they downed the San Francisco 49ers, 23-14. One week, before the Detroit Lions had 'rapped the Cleveland Browns, 17-6, to throw the Giants into a tie for first place in the American Football Conference. * s THIS TIME it was the Giants victory coupled with a 31-6 rout of the Pittsburgh Steelers by the Lions which boosted Detroit into a tie with Frisco in the National Conference. IRay Poole provided the Gi- ants' nine point margin with two 25-yard field goals and a booming 40-yard field goal. lbw York fullback Eddie Price scored one touchdown while pick- ing up enough yardage to place him at the top of the list in league ground gaining ahead of Hugh McElhenny, running from the oth- er side of the line for the 49ers. THE LIONS got off to an in- conspicuous start, holding a 3-0 edge over the Steelers at the end of the first quarter on Doak Walker's field goal but had little trouble from then on as Jug Gi- rard crossed the goal line twice, Layne hit Box on a 46-yard TD pass,and halfbackByron Bailey skirted end with two seconds re- maining to go nine yards for the final marker. Detroit picked up 321 yards on the ground, 107 of them by Bob Hoernschmeyer, while clamping the Steelers to a minus three. 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