PAGE SI1X TI-'F MTCTaTTr.AM Tl A- TTV "TTXTT*1 A TT AXY,-1TV- W T tTY 4 n 4 hall . _ ..... .. .. ... a a.i:. T H F A .r [Ta A .M f-rI ll Ant J... 1S A ti( %EMBER 16, 1930 m WHEELEH 9 S : = wr sm GIVES .. ti INES 7- , VICTORY IPKE'9 ARRIORS7BOILERMAKER STARS SMASH WAY TAK(E LAHLY L[A~ TO 33-0 VICTORY OVER BUTLJ ER MICHIGAN-MINNESOTA GAME LAY BYPLAY , ._>> ! Numerous Fumbles Mar Annuglj Contest Between Minnesota and Michigan Teams. GOPHERS OFFENSE GOOD (Continued From Page i) Michigan's 7 point lead began t look rather large at the end of th first half, but the Gophers cam out of their dressing room fighting and soon dispelled any ideas of a easy victory from the minds of th wearers of the Maize and Blue They presented a slashing run ning attack with a few telling pass es mixed in which made thing< look bad for their opponents. Wieman's Line Junctions. The invaders line, coached b Tad Wieman, former Michiga mentor, tore great holes in th Wolverine forward wall, and Brock- meyer and Manders showed wh they are considered two of th best backs in the Big Ten. Th Gopher attack rolled up seven firs downs by rushing and two by pass- ing before Marcovsky ended the game by intercepting a pass withir his own ten yard line. In this hal the Gophers did everything t Michigan but score. One of Wheel- ers punts was blocked, gains came fast and furious, and passes were thrown with uncanny accuracy One advance in the last quartey netted four first downs in a row and seemed sure for a score, but the Michigan defense tightened within the shadow of its own goal and held for downs. The one redeeming feature of the second half from the Michgan standpoint was another run by Wheeler. Catching one of Munn's punts on his own 39-yard line he fumbled the ball, picked it up and ran 40 yards to the Minnesota 21- yard line before he was downed. Riebeth pulled him down with a high tackle, which was all that kept him from scoring again. The last quarter was a long one for Michigan with the Gophers trying every trick in their bag in an attempt to score, and it appeared that they would be successful. Their running was hard and fast, and their thrusts were stopped only when the goal line was in immedi- ate danger. Both Teams Show Defensives. Both teams had a good defense, but the invaders presented a better offensive than did the Wolves. They outscored Michigan 10-5 in first downs, and gained 155 yards against the 115 for the Kipkemen. Also they lost but 6 yards from scrimmage as compared with the Wolverine's 47. Minnesota tried 12 passes, were suc- cessful on four of them and had two intercepted. Michigan ti'ed nine and completed two. Wheeler took high ground gain- ing honors for Michigan with a total of 51 yards from scrimmage, with Sol Hudson, playing his usual hard game, second with 47. For Coach Crisler, Brockmeyer proved to be the chief threat with 67 yards to his credit. Manders was next to him with a grand total of 55. Munn's punting was a feature of the game, he averaged 49 yards per boot, not counting the one he had blocked. Simrall and Wheeler averaged 40 yards on their kicks. Courtis Downs Young . to Advance to Finals Tom Courtis completed his con- quest of those in the upper bracket of the All-Campus Tennis tourna- ment by disposing of R. M. Young in impressive style. William Phelps who defeated W. I. Wilcox in two hard fought sets 7-5, 7-5, now awaits the completion of the quar- ter finals match between Sandusky and Perry MacNeal, before contin- uing his way to the finals and the right to meet Courtis. Sandusky is apt to be a stumbling block in his path, however, as he recently breezed thru a fast field to cap- ture the Freshman title. -i Two Boilermaker stars who have successfully filled the positions left vacant by Harmueson and Welch on Coach Noble Kizer's champion- ship team of last year. Risk and Pope have both been great factors in the success of the Purdue team this season, defeating Butler yesterday, 33-0. i i i I E I E 11 Jii~ U F! IERIOD Newman threw a long pass to Sim- Capt. Si ra1 of Michigan won rall which the latter caught and Annua! Hoosier Gridiron C assi the toss and chose to defend the was tackled on Minnesota's 18- yard line for another first down. Will be He.d A Ross-A!, south goal. Minnesota elected to The pass gained 23-yards. ' kickoff to the Wolverines. Brook- u. Hudson hit Stadiurn at La ay fte. rMeyer booted the ball to Wheeler tHudson loste a yard. for on yar _ who caught it on his 10-yard line t eAer e fto e ard. BOILERMAKERS FAVORED and in stiaight up the field to theA pew n aWolverine 22-yard marker whereot sf tc the Wvrine since the sees was started back line. Munn broke.. yard line. in 1891 and will 'n d Inciana striv- t h r o u . h and ing for its frst victory over the tackled Wheeler am who caught the ball but fumbled. Boilermakers since 1923. Idiana is for a three-yard He recovered however and was beginning to "water at the mouth' loss. N e w m a n forced out of bounds at Minneso- in its desire for the Old Oaken took the ball on ta's 26-yard line. MacDougal struck Bucket, established as symbol of a delayed buck through Samuels for five-yards on grid victory betwen the two foes in through Minne a spinner play. 1925, for since the trophy has been sota's left guard Bilockmeyer gained three more. in existence the Crimson has been for t w o yards. Newman He was tackled by Hudson. Dravel- unable to gain a victory, which Newman's pass over the goal line ing brooke, through and blocked carries possesion of the Bucket to Wheeler and Hozer was knocked Mann's punt and Samuels recov- along with it, although there was down incomplete. ered for Michigan on the Minneso- a 0 to 0 tie in 1925. Munn punted the ball on his own ta 18-yard line. Samuels was in- In the past four years, Purdue 23-ard line and returned it 10- ured on the play and took time has won the annual classic by de- yards to the Wolverine 38-yard out. cisive margins, 24 to 14 in 1926, marker. Newman dropped back in Newman battered Minnesota's (Continued on Pge 7) a pass formation but finding all left end for five yards. He was -- - -of hi; receivers covered he at- tackled by MacDougal. Wheeler Brilliant Fullback on Colgate Eleven Leads Individual Scoring for 1930. REGULAR LAST SEASON (By Associ1 / Pres-s) HAMILTON, N. Y., Nov. 15.- Leonard Macaluso, 195-pound Col- gate fullback, has dynamited his way into the vanguard of the nation's fullbacks. Leading the country in individ- ual scoring as the November cam- paign got underway. Andy Kerr's plunger has left an All-American impression in his wake. Macaluso is a senior at the Ham- ilton, N. Y., institution and is serv- ing his second year as a Colgate regular. The "East Aurora Thunderbolt" they call this six-foot lad who bucks, passes, kicks-off, adds extra points and backs up the Maroon forward wall with the ferocious- ness of an Ernie Nevers. With a record of 78 points scored in six games, the highest point total in the country, Macaluso's performance is all the more spec- tacular in view of the fact that Captain Les Hart, Colgate's bril- liant triple threat ace, is also in th ebackfield. In booting extra points across the bar Macaluso stands second only to Ellert, Syracuse end, in the east. Kerr's muscular giant has made good on 18 tries. P E . GAME STATISTICS First downs: Minnesota 10, making 8 by running, 2 by pass- ing; Michigan 5, making 4 by running, one by passing.. Yards gained rushing: Minne- sota, 155; Michigan, 115. Forward passes attempted: Minnesota, 12, completed 4 and had 2 intercepted. Michigan at- t.empted 9, completed 2. Punts: Minnesota punted 10 times for an average distance of 49 yards and had one kick blocked. Michigan punted 12 times for an average distance from the line of scrimmage of 40 yards and had one kick blocked. .f !I i News MOND)AY'S SCHEDULE. Speedball: 4:15-Kappa Nu vs. Delta Sigma I WINTER STORAGE For Your Car Steam Heated Delivery Service, if Desired! Phone 42198 For Particulars ELSI FOR CARTAGE CO. 117 No. 1st St. Sigma Alpha Mu vs. Phi Sigma Delta. Swimming: 7:30-Phi Epsilon Pi vs. Delta Tau Delta. Sigma Alpha Mu vs. Delta Sigma Delta. 8:30--Beta Theta Pi vs. Theta Chi. Delta Alpha Epsilon vs. Pi Lamb- da Phi. Volleyball: (Continued on Page 7) FRESHMAN BASKETBALL All men interested in fresh- man basketball report to Water- man Gymnasium 7:30 Monday night. All those reporting are re- quested to bring their own equip- ment. Coach Ray Fisher. Michigan Hozer..... Samuels. JaJeunesse. Morrison ... Cornwell Draveling Williamson Newman .. Wheeler LINE-UP Minnesota .... LE........Nelson ..LT........Boland{ ..... LG........ Apnan . C............ Stein ....R.G......... Munn .RT.........Berry . ... RE ..... Kreszowski .....Q3.... Brookmeyer ..... LH......Brownell1 Simrall ........ RH .... MacDougal Hudson ........FB ......Mariders Score by Quarters:I Michigan ...... ... 7 0 0 0-71 Minnesota .........0 0 0 0-01 Substitutions: Minnesota, Wells for Boland, Riebeth for MacDougal, Hoefier for Kreszowski, Lexsell for Manders, Olsen for Anderson, Dill- ner for Hoetler, Hass for Brockmey- er, Swartz for Brownell, Hass for Swartz, MacDcugal for Riebeth, Lexsell for Manders, Wells for An- man, Hoefler for Boland. Michigan; Auer for Samuis, Pur- dum for LaJeunesse. T or or Newman, Daniels for Hozer, Stol for Wheeler, Wheeler for Stoll, Par- dum for Auer, Marcovski for Corn- well, Douglass for LaJeunesse. PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS Corona, Underwood, Barr-Morris, Remington, Royals. We have all makes. Colored Duco Finishes 0. D. MORRILLI anonds, Watches, Clocks, Jewelry High Grade Repair Service --..-. ~-;3;..22 --.-32. .2.:. 22-(:.-C GE&CQMPY b for TI/en ce1&4& uie-v ARROW SHIRTS of BUR''ONS IRISH POPLIN MADE IN U. S. A. OF FINE COTTON ~V GUARANT E ED L2.95 FOR PERMANENT FIT! {j x 'I :( ,I °i ,I i i ! 'rr A{ I was tackled by three "Minnesota nmen for a six-yard loss. Aided by some clever interfer-t ence, Wheeler rounded Minnesota's left end for 22-yards for a first, down on the Gopher 45-yard line. - - - - 1s t 6 I X}O1 Wors ed Tex $40Q00 Nottingham Fabrics $35.00 Sold cxc sIa.vely an /nn Arbor at 99 Linenchmtt S I 1 0 I'1 gained a half yard on a wide-end run around Minnesota's right flank. Munn punted to Wheeler who caught the ball on the Minnesota 43-yard line and returned it to the Gopher 33-yard line as the quarter (Continued on Page Seven.) _-... . .F..., . b . , _... ... R, . . .., - --.. _ i ehe ans Shop I .... I 314 South State St. Phone 66151 Burr, Patterson & Auld Co. make your next social event a big success with unique and attractively designed programs. Ix Is not too early tstart thinking May we h elp you make appropriate selections. 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