)AY, OCTOBER 28, 1934
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
Minnesota Powerhouse
Rolls Over
Iowa Eleven,
Lund Stars As
Minnesota Wins
Big Ten Opener
Buckeyes Rout Wildcats;
Chicago, Purdue, Win,
Wisconsin Loses
Trampling the Cornhuskers of
Iowa beneath a barrage of seven
touchdowns and four conversions, the
great Minnesota football machine of
1934 started an impressive Big Ten
campaign before a great homecoming
crowd.
Led by the indomitable Pug Lund,
and ably supported by the vicious as-
saults of Alphonse and Kostka the
Gophers turned the contest into a
rout in the first quarter when they
scored two touchdowns in rapid suc-
cession to accumulate a 14-0 lead.
Three more touchdowns were chalked
up for the Gophers before the gun
ended the half, leaving Iowa 34 points
behind.
The second half saw Minnesota
substitutes hold the Hawkeyes on
even terms. Each team counted twice
amid the flurry of long passes and
spectacular runs, making the final
score Minnesota 48, Iowa 12.
Lund Opens Scoring
Pug Lund, All-American and Goph-
er captain, opened the scoring early
in the'first quarter when he took a
lateral pass on the 11-yard line to
race around end for a touchdown. He
added the point a moment later with
a successful placekick. A few sec-
onds after the initial score Alphonse,
behind beautiful blocking, raced
through the entire Iowa team for 77
yards and another touchdown. Lund
again converted the extra point.
The dophers were content to rest
for the remainder of the quarter, but
opened another sustained drive at the
beginning of the second period. Ros-
coe, Kostka, and Alphonse carried
the ball across for the three Minne-
sota touchdowns in this period and
Beva made good on two of the con-
versions.
The second half saw the Hawkeyes
start a determined offensive, but
fumbles by Crayne and other Iowa
backs prevented any long marches,
The most spectacular Cornhusker
play, however, came in the third per-
iod when Tyro heaved a long pass to
Page who outran the whole Minne-
sota secondary for a score. Page al-
so added the extra point. The Goph-
ers matched both Iowa touchdowns
in this second half and clearly out-
played Iowa throughout the game.
BUCKEYE BEAT WILDCATS, 28-6
A heavy, fast charging Ohio State
eleven overcame an early six-point
Northwestern lead to completely van-
quish the lighter Purple team, 28-6.
The victory gave Ohio State two
wins out of its last three starts. It
was Noi'thwestern's second defeat
and virtually eliminated them from
any title consideration.
All the late customers missed the
most spectacular play of the entire
game when Potter took the opening
kick-off on his own eight-yard line
and weaved through a diving, fight-
ing O.S.U. team for 92 yards and the
first score of the game.
This was Northwestern's only real
scoring threat, however, and there-
after Ohio State pushed the Purple
around the field at will, scoring four
touchdowns and making four success-
ful conversions.
MAROONS BEAT MISSOURI
CHICAGO, Oct 27 -()-Chicago
defeated Missouri 19 to 6 today to
chalk up its fourth victory of the
season. Aided by Chicago fumbles,
Missouri was dangerous for three
periods, but Chicago's superiority ex-
erted itself in the fourth with the
Maroons, scoring twice. Missouri's
score was the result of a Chicago
fumble of a punt on the three-yard
line. It was the first time the Mar-
oons had been scored on this season.
It also was Missouri's first score of
the year.
PITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 27- Sit-
ting patiently in the midst of driving
showers, a small crowd of 6,000 per-
sons looked on as the Boilermakers
of old Purdue unloosed a spectacular
offensive in the second half to score
three touchdowns and trim the Ski-
bos, 20-0.
A staunch Carnegie Tech defense
heroically repulsed every Purdue
threat in the first hallf and drove
the invaders back into their own ter-
Borgmann Outstand ing In Michigan Line
A ry Defeats
Yale; Colgate
Is Also Victor
Buckler Stars As Cadets
Outplay Game Eli Team3
In Yale Bowl
YALE BOWL, NEW HAVEN, Conn.,1
Oct. 27 - Army's high-powered foot-
ball team defeated Yale here, today,
20-12, before 45,000 spectators, fqr its
fifth straight win of the season. Jack
Buckler, Army's All-American, scored{
two touchdowns and was the out-
standing star of the game.
Army scored its first touchdown
four plays after the game opened,
capitalizing on Rankin, Eli fullback's
fumble of the kickoff when Buckler
recovered on Yale's 42-yard line.
Buckler then passed to Stancock for
12 yards, gained 23 yards in two run-
nings plays, and heaved another pass
to Stancock for the touchdown.
Buckler kicked the extra point. A
blocked punt midway in the second
quarter gave Army its second touch-
down.I
Rankin broke around Army's right
end, from the West Pointer's 15-yard
line to score his team's only touchc-
down, late in the second quarter.
Buckler ended Army's scoring for.
the day, in a sustained 47-yard march,
passing, running, and finally plung-
ing over for the score.
WORCESTER, Mass., Oct. 27 --(P)
- Four new magicians from the hills
high above the Shenandoah valley
practiced their dizzy feat of legerde-
man on a lot of big game, but unsus-
pecting Holy Cross boys today, and
Colgate toppled the crusaders from
the undeated class 20 to 7.
A crowd of 23,000, all the stadium
would hold, saw all the eastern and1
national title aspirations knocked out
of their heroesasSteveaKuk, Gene
Kern, Clair Lyon and Harry BauschI
pulled touchdowns out of the brisk
air like magicians producing rabbits
I on a vaudeville stage.1
Ford Plays Stellar Game Against Zuppkemen
It was Bill Borgmann's stellar line play that was largely responsible
for the two great goal line stands made by the Wolverines against the
fighting Illini. Borgmann was on the bottom of every pile up in the
line, breaking through often to nail the ball carried for a loss.. His re-
covery of a blocked punt was one of the highlights of the game and
characterized the alert defensive game which the Michigan line played
all afternoon. Borgman was the first lineman down the field on punts
and aided in bottling up Beynon, Illinois safety man.
B
battle Creek Griffith Denies That Ruth Will
Defeats AnnI
Ak .1.1 H i l
AnuOr 1n
An inspired, hard-driving Battle
Creek team rode through Ann Arbor
High for one touchdown and a 6-01
victory this morning at muddy Wines I
Field to push the locals out of a tie
for the Five-A leadership with Lan-
sing Eastern.
The Bearcats scored the only points,
of the game near the end of the thirdj
quarter after line bucks and a pass
from Al Sebo to Red Edmunds placed
the ball on the Purple's three-yard
line.
John Sherrod, negro back, carried
the ball over left guard to score.
Merline Mitchell's try for the extra
point failed.
Elmer Sootsman, all-state center,
led a Battle Creek line that pushed
the local forward wall around at will.
Mitchell, Sebo, and Sherrod of the
Bearcat backfield tore the Purple
line to shreds.
Dick Warner and Gene Kurtz did
yeoman work in the Ann Arbor back-
field.
ritory on several occasions. Scratch-
ing, fighting, yielding inches slowly
after the most stubborn resistance,
the Tech men held for downs time
after time and managed to keep their
goal line inviolate during the first
two period's.
The crushing power drives of the
Boilerriakers were too much for
Carnegie in the last half, however,
and they succumbed after a hard bat-
tle on the rain-soaked gridiron,
yielding three touchdowns and two
points after touchdown to Carter,1
Purvis and the vicious assaults of!
WASH
Clark G
engineer
would p
for the
young m
per, Joe
Cronir
yesterda
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follower
pennant
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last cam
stricken
Washi
whether
- appar
great clu
Not o
move fr
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Lo
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Lynford
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many b
the shor
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The p
er, such
aid the
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as Griffi
Be New Washington Manaroer
IINGTON, Oct. 27 - (P) -- The club president definitely spiked
riffith's problem today was to reports that the famous Babe might
some startling deal that lead the capital's American League
lacate capital baseball fans entry with the word that he "never,
sudden sale of the popular had been regarded as a managerial
nanager and star shortshop- possibility here by me nor will he be
Cronin. so regarded."
n, sold to the Boston Red Sox Griffith's conference with Harris,
y for an amount estimated however, freshened speculation over
y at between 125,00 and $250,- the leadership of the team, though
ew top price for an athlete - Griffith denied he had sought the
iensely popular with diamond meeting.
s here in his American league Cronin In -- Harris Outf
winning season two years Harris, who led Washington to its
e held the fans during the first pennants in 1924 and 1925, lost'
,paign, even with his injury- his job as Boston manager when the
seventh place club. Red Sox bought Joe Cronin from
ngton fans were wondering Griffith yesterday.I
Griffith had let them down Griffith refused to commit himself
ently shattering hopes for a on the question of a team manager.
ub in 1935. "I greatly respect the Babe- as a
nly did the Cronin trade re- man and for his great work in the
om the Senators one of the game," Griff said. "He is of manager-
ielders in the business but ial timber, I believe.. But he is defi-
took away a battling young nitely out of the picture so far as the
r, with a bag of stratagems management of my ball club is con-
nspirational leadership. cerned and he never was in the pic-
Dse Inspirational Leader ture."
ocal fans are certain that There had been reports that Grif-
Lary, obtained in the deal fith offered Ruth $15,000 and a cut
e Red Sox, will not success- in the gate receipts, but that Babe
1 Cronin's shoes, either at had asked for a flat $30,000.
s~ bat Alt hu GLr rifguthsays Griffith spoke highly of Harris, but
aseball experts herebeliev insisted there was no significance in
tsto will be sent elsewhere the conference with him.
Jerry Ford played a great game
the form which caused many to no
before the start of the seas'on. Hand
hail, his passes from center were co
igan backs no trouble. Ford played
up the line and came in fast encut
and Theodore after they had siftedt
effective in stopping wide end swe
little or no gain.
YESTERDAY'S LINEUPS
MICHIGAN ILLINOIS
Patanelli ...... LE........Nelson
Viergever ..... LT ......... Dahl
Hildebrand ... TG..... Gryboski
Ford ......... C.......... Sayre
Borgmann .... RG.......Bennis
Austin .......RT ... Galbreath
Savage ....... RE .......Dykstra
Jennings ......QB....... Beynon
Regeczi .......LH. V... Lindberg
Ward.........RR... Froschauer
Sweet .........F ........Carson
Scores by quarters:
Michigan .........0 0 6 0-6
Illinois............0 7 0 0-7
Touchdowns-Theodore, Ward.
Points after touchdown-Lind-
berg by placekick.
Substitutions: Michigan-Beard
for Hildebrand, Jacobson for Vier-
gever, Hildebrand for Beard, Vier-
gever for Jacobson, Ellis for Sav-
age, Oliver for Regeczi.
Illinois-Portman for Froschau-
er, Cummings for Dykstra, Theo-
dore for Carson, Froschauer for
Portman.
Referee - Fred Gardner, Cor-
nell; Umpire - Arlie Mucks, Wis-
consin; Fields Judge - Col. H. B.
Hackett, West Point; Head Lines-
man - Nick Kearns, DePaul.
SATURDAY'S STATISTICS,
Mich. Illinois
First Downs
By rushing.......0 3
By passing........0 3
Through penalties ..0 0
Total...........0 6
Yards Gained from Scrimmage
By rushing .......28 100
By passing.........34 72
Total ..........62 172
Passes
Attempted ........6 6
Completed ........1 4
Intercepted .......2 1
Yards Lost by Penalties
Total ..........30 25
Punts.
Avarage yardage 38.3 37.2
Return of punts,
average yardage 5 4.7
Fumbles
Own fumbles
recovered.........0 0
Opponents'
fumbles recovered 2 0
'>ii;.?i~:<i< s s:.};}}..,:}"s anmormia, --U, neore
Crowd Of 50,000
SEATTLE, Oct. 27 -P)- Califor-
.':c: ;nia's football bear was chopped down
. V:..' to a teddy bear today as the unde-
feated, untied University of Wash-
ington Huskies continued their sen-
sational march toward the Pacific
Coast conference football champion-
ship by winning 13 to 7.
Burl Buskin, Washington halfback,
{{~'' t y r}" "+connected for the winning touchdown
on a fourth down buck from the one-
foot line. The Huskies moved from
California's 25-yard line to a touch-
down in the first five minutes on the
wings of two passes. Quarterback
at center yesterday and returned to Jay Hornbeck fell over the goal line
Dminrte him for All-American fame for the score.
ing atba ael-Averysleeandam In the second period, Arleigh Wil-
ling a ball made elusive by sleet and liams, Bear halfback, carried the Cali-
nsistently good, and gave the Mich- fornians to the Washington 33-yard
a great defensive game in backing line on a series of sharp bucks and
gh to bring down Lindberg, Beynon, then came back with the help of
through the line. He was particularly Mountford Reedy, Charles Cotton and
eps around his side of the line for Dick Moyer to push over a touchdown.
STANFORD DEFEATS TROJANS
AndPALO ALTO, Calif., Oct. 27 -(IP)-
Both Cubs And Sox To all the football world Stanford's
red jerseyed touchdown troopers
Shake Up Rosters' swung a challenge today with a great
16 to 0 victory over Southern Cali-
CHICAGO, Oct. 27 -(P)- The ma- fornia in game that brought thrills
neuvers of the Chicago Cub front Ito.50,000.
office will be no mystery to Manager 1 Not until the second quarter near-
Charlie Grimm as long as he pilots ed a close did the Indians reveal their
the club - for he is a member of true strength. For 64 yards they
the front office family, marched to a, touchdown on ground
P. K. Wrigley formally took over plays, making five first downs on the
the presidency of the club yesterday, way. Fullback Bobby Grayson crash-
succeeding William Walker, who re- ed through time and again before he
signed Tuesday. One of his first went over from the one-yard line.
sJustebeforedthe closefofitheithird
moves brought Grimm upstairs as quasrte Stanford tloseothe bl wh
a vice president. qatr tnodto h alwe
Grimm's first action sent Pat Mal- a weak Trojan kick by sul fullback
oneGrig'shfitaedn hurerr Pth Wotkyns went out on his 14-yard line.
Ione, a righthanded hurler for the Th nin dacdtoyad e
Cubs since 1928, to the world champ- Thfore Indians advanced two lards be-
ion Cardinals. In return, St. Louis
turned over J. Kenneth O'Dea, a
young catcher who worked for the ENTIRE TEAM SCOUTS
Columbus American association team, The entire University of Detroit
a Cardinal subsidiary, last season. squad attended the recent Michigan
The Cubs, determined to dispose of State-Carnegie Tech game at East
Malone, who failed to get along with Lansing. After State's sensational vic-
Grimm, also gave the Cardinals tory over Michigan, the Titans wanted
some cash. to "scout" the Spartans, whom they
On the south side, where the White meet Nov. 17. This game will settle
Sox hold forth, there were rumblings the championship of the State of
of a big shakeup, in which $250,000 Michigan.
was said to be at the disposal of _
I Manager Jimmy Dykes for rebuilding TRY OUR SPEEDY AND
the club. Harry Grabiner, vice-presi- EFFICIENT CLEANING AND
dent of the Sox, insisted once more' PRESSING SERVICE
however, that the rebuilding would
be done around Al Simmons, rather C!John's Tailor Shop
than using him for trading material "Ann Arbor's Popular Tailor'
as has been persistently reported. r09 Packard (near state _
STETHOSCOPES
PJFRTERNITY
JEWELRY
Ford's, Bowles, Gomco,
Burro PoCarsberg's, Fleischer's,
Chest Pieces, Bells.
I.::Binaurals and Tubing
at Minimum Prices.
THE QUARRY, INC.
Corner N. University and S. State
READ THE WANT ADS i7611 -Phone - 76i6
d in on another trade.
urchase of some star pitch-
as Schoolboy Rowe, would
Senators immensely and
lso swerve Washington fans
oughts of Cronin's going. But,
th notes, the established good
their mates, who crashed into the pitchers aren't for sale, not at prices
Tech line time after time for sub- any sane person would give for them.
stantial gains. After a conference today with
IRISH BEAT MINNESOTA Bucky Harris, in his search for a
Led by George Melinkovich and new manager for Washington's base-
Fred Carideo, Notre Dame ran rough- ball team, Clark Griffith announced
shod over Wisconsin in a rough and that Babe Ruth was "out of the pic-,
tough football battle at South Bend ture."
here yesterday before a crowd of ap-
proximately 25,000 spectators to win
19 to 0. EXPERT PRINTING
It was Notre Dame's last home game LETTERHEADS - ENVELOPES
of the season and they won it in de- PROGRAMS - BIDSR
cisive fashion. Melinkovich broke loose The ATH ENS PRESS
in the third period to score two touch- 206 N. Main - Downtown
downs and put the game on ice. (Next to Postoffice)
Imported Granulated
PEAT MOSS
Turf Mull
OUTLINE OF ITS USES
BULBS AND TUBERS
Mulch all Fall planted bulbs with
"GPM" Peat Moss 4 to 6 inches deep.
In exposed places the mulch should
be covered with evergreen boughs,
burlap or straw, to prevent the strong
winds from blowing it away. Remove
the mulch in Spring and use Peat
Mvoss in your other gardening work.
Dial 2-1713
H ERTLER
BROS.
210 South Ashley
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TIHERE'S no means of transpor-
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Established 1863
Oldest National Bank
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