THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA Tie, 7-7; Illinois Defeats Wisconsi C., In C. Vanderbilt Is Whipped Easily By Ohio State COLUMBUS, Oct. 14.-(P)-Ohio State defeated Vanderbilt University 20 to 0 here this afternoon in an in- tersectional game before 21,000 per- sons. Ohio scored in the first, second, and fourth quarters and was holding the ball on the Commodores' four- yard line when the game ended. The Buckeye lineup was riddled all day long with substitutions, the varsity never playing together for more than five minutes. Vanderbilt was forced to punt from behind its own goal soon after the period started and Ohio put on a touchdown drive from the 43-yard mark. Smith, substitute for McAfee, crossed the goal on a dash around left end for 18 yards. The period ended soon afterward. Vanderbilt 0; Ohio State 6. The Commodores turned two Ohio State scoring threats back early in the second stanza but got in a hole when Oliver, substitute halfback, had to punt from behind his goal. Cramer returned the kick to the 19-yard stripe and a couple of plays later circled right end for 14 yards and the Buckeyes' second touchdown. Vuchinich place kicked the extra point. Vanderbilt 0: Ohio State 13. The Buckeyes, content with their lead, kicked on second down in the third period and the Commodores held them in check. Heekin skipped around right end for 37 yards to give Ohio a scoring chance that availed nothing. A fumble gave Ohio the ball on Vanderbilt's 12-yard mark and the buckeyes advanced it to the 7-yard stripe as the period ended. Vanderbilt 0; Ohio State 13. On the first play of the final pe- riod, Wetzel, sub for J. Kabealo, cut through tackle for the touchdown. Monahan, another sub, place-kicked the extra point. Ohio resorted to a defensive game but just before the game ended Drackutich, a substitute halfback, intercepted a Commodore pass on the Ohio 30 and raced 35 yards to Van- derbilt's 5. Final score: Vanderbilt 0; Ohio State 20. YESTERDAY'S SCORES Purdue 7; Minnesota 7. (tie) Illinois 21 ;Wisconsin 0. Stanford 0; Northwestern 0. Notre Dame 12; Indiana 2. Ohio State 20; Vanderbilt 0. Chicago 40; Washington 0. Michigan State 20; Illinois Wes- leyan 12. N. Y. U. 13; Lafayette 12. Harvard 34; New Hampshire 0. Syracuse 40; Ohio Wesleyan 0. Brown 13; Springfield 6. Pit4sburgh 34; Navy 6. Army 52; Delaware 0. Columbia 15; Virginia 6. Fordham 20; West Virginia 0. Yale 14; Washington & Lee 0. V. P. I. 13; William and Mary 7. Princeton 45; Williams 0. Pennsylvania 9; F. & M. 0. Dartmouth 14; Bates 0. Colgate 25; Rutgers 2. Nebraska 20; Iowa State 0. Georgia Tech 10; Alabama Poly Institute 6. Bucknell 19; Villanova 17. Lebanon Valley 32; City College (N.Y.) 0. Massachusetts 40; Connecticut 7. Holy Cross 14; Providence 0. Duke 10; Tennessee 2. Monroe Defeats Local High Team Outweighed and outplayed by a strong Monroe line, Ann Arbor High yesterday lost their second Class A encounter to Monroe High, 7 to 6. Only a spirited running attack and a great goal line stand in the last pe- riod prevented a worse defeat. Monroe scored their first and only touchdown early in the second half when Masters, Monroe tackle, busted through and blocked Seeger's kick, recovering in the end-zone. The win- ning point was a perfectly booted placement by Reau. Immediately following their score the visitors began a march from mid-field -to the one-foot marker where the Ann Arbor line held them for four successive downs. Ann Arbor then took the ball and a 70-yard punt by Warner, the Purple quarter, car- ried the ball out of danger. Ann Arbor's scoring bid came in the last period when Coach Lou Hol- lway sent Bus Smith, colored speed merchant in at half. After cutting off a six-yard gain through the line Smith took the ball on a brilliant sweeping end run across the goal, outrunning the entire Monroe sec- ondary. Pegan's attempt to convert the extra point was wide. Defensively, Carl Hahn, Ann Arbor tackle, was the star of the game, ac- counting for the majority of his team's tackles. Playing roving center on defense, he was an important ele- ment in keeping the score down as it was. American Honor Roll American League honor awards for the last seven years and their re- ceivers. 1927-Lou Gehrig, New York. 1928-Mickey Cochrane, Phila- delphia. 1929-Lew Fonseca, Cleveland. 1930-Joe Cronin, Washington. 1931-Lefty Grove, Philadelphia. 1932-Jimmie Foxx, Philadelphia. 1933-Jimmie Foxx, Philadelphia. Beer and football must not mix, is the opinion of University of Minne- sota officials who refused to sanction radio broadcasts of Minnesota foot- ball games -if sponsored by brew- ery concerns. CANOES FOR RENT SAUNDERS Foot of Cedar Street on Huron River Trojans Boost Four Men For All m.American (By Associated Press) Although All-American football selections are three months away, Southern California critics and fans have been nominating and publiciz- ing players for many weeks.- Four members of the University of Southern California Trojans, nation- al champions, have been boosted as All-American possibilities. The players are Homer Griffith, quarterback and fullback; Aaron Ro- senberg, guard; Capt. Ford Palmer, end, and Bob Erskine, tackle. U. S. C. Has Stars Southern California stars hold an advantage over other Pacific Coast players, writers believe, because the Trojans play under Coach Howard H. Jones, and in meeting Notre Dame at South Bend, give mid-Western and Eastern critics a chance to see them in action. Griffith is a triple threat back, weighing 187 pounds. Last year he became Troy's "man of the hour" when he was called Orv Mohler at quarter. During the remainder of the season he started at quarter and then shifted to fullback when Irvine Warburton entered the game. Grif- fith has power for line-smashing plays and speed in the open field. Tojan coaches consider him the "spark plug" of the team. -He is one of the three best passers on the Coast. Rosenberg Best Guard "Rosenberg is the best guard I ever have seen," is the way "Navy" Bill Ingram, California coach, rates him. "Rosy," weighing 210 pounds and six feet, one inch tall, leads Trojan plays out of the line and on defense is stationed at the fullback position. He is one of the fastest players on Jones' squad and a fine blocker. Few ends in Western football his- tory have the all-around ability of Ford Palmer, Trojan captain. Six feet tall, weighing 187 pounds, he is a solid type of player, who can stand 60 minutes of gruelling football. Last year he caught passes which scored touchdowns against Pittsburgh, Stanford, Oregon State and Washington State. Plays Defensive Back He played defensive halfback in most of last year's games. He prob- ably is the best ball hawk on the Trojan club. They call him "King Kong" Er- skine. Yes, Bob Erskine is the play- er many expect to become Jones' seventh All-American tackle. As a freshman he weighed 180 pounds. Today he weighs 215 pounds, but has lost little of his speed and agility. As a freshman he played end. He was shifted to tackle dur- ing his sophomore year and last year played offensive halfback and defen- sive end. Unlike the English, the Russians are willing to try anything once and spoil it.- William Allen White. Big Ten W. L. T. Iowa ..........1 Illinois ........1i Indiana ........0 Purdue ........0 Minnesota ......0 Northwestern ...0 Wisconsin ......0 Michigan ......0 Ohio State.....0 Chicago ... .0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 1. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 Standings a Results Illinois 21, Wisconsin 0. Purdue 7, Minnesota 7. Next Saturday Ohio State at Michigan Purdue at Chicago Indiana at Northwestern Wisconsin at Iowa Michigan Teamn Defeats Cornell By BigMaroin (Continued from Page 1) played the outstanding game for the Big Red, but he lacked the supporting cast necessary to even the greatest of runners. Time and again, Cornell's phalanx of blockers broke and spilled on such solid rocks of defense as Whitey Wistert, Ted Petoskey, Ber- nard, and Regeczi. "Zit" Tessmer, Maize and Blue quarterback candidate, will be out for the season. His collar-bone was fractured as he made a hard tackle during the third quarter. Throughout the past week, he was figured to have a good chance to understudy Captain Fay in his duties of running the team. The Lineups Cornell Pos. Michigan Wallace.. ....LE.......Petoskey Puterbaugh..LT........Wistert Borland.......LG........Savage Brock.......... C ........Bernard Shaub .........RG.....Borgmann Kossack ........RT........Austin Irving .........RE.... . Ward Switzer .. .1B QB..... (c) Fay Ferraro ......2B LH.. Everhardus Goldbas ......3B RH...... Heston Frederick. . ...4B FB...... Regeczi Officials: Referee: J. Masker, Northwestern; Umpire, John Schom- mer, Chicago; Field Judge, Col. H. B. Hackett, West Point; Head Linesman, Jay Wyatt, Missouri. Scoring by quarters: Michigan .....7 6 21 6-40 Cornell .......0 0 0 0- 0 Touchdowns: Regeczi, Everhardus (3), Fay, Malaschevich. Conversions, Everhardus (3), Savage. Nation Gets Account Of Game In Typical MacNaree Manner nouncing, he is unusually self-con- scious about what he says and flushes instantly when he makes an error. The explanation of many of the mistakes he makes appears to be, not that he isn't awake to what is going on, but that he is too anxious to tell his public what happens. In a game, he starts describing a play the mo- ment the ball is snapped, then must look away to check on the runner, and when he turns back to the play a double lateral may have been ex- ecuted while he was telling who ran with the ball. Then he has to correct himself or let it go as just another error. Voice Is Penetrating Graham has an unusually vivacious speaking voice for his age and he undoubtedly irritated some of the correspondents as his chatter floated out through the press box. In fact, many of the detailed accounts of the game did not check with the stories of several pressmen on opposite sides of the booth. An able substitute for Graham was Ford Bond, a former football player at Chicago and now an outstanding NBC sports announcer. Ford writes out the data he expects to give and is cool and collected during the game, at least in comparison to MacNamee. Ford alsouhas admirable oratorical powers, but the adjectives do not slip from his tongue as easily as from Graham's. 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