SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY Ohio State, Minnesota Win Big Ten Games; Penn Triumphs -v, Buckeyes Drub Indiana Team By 28-6 Score Chicago Beats Wisconsin To Win First Big Ten Contest, 13-7 BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 28. - (P) -For five astonishing, almost un- trelievable minutes, Ohio State's famed "Scarlet warriors" football team was shackled and licked by"Indiana today, but it finally broke away with its old, relentless force and crushed the valiant Hoosiers 28 to 6 under an avalanche of sec- ond half touch- downs. Fifteen thousand spectators, many of :. them old grads who came back hoping against hope for an Indiana upset, " y' stood in amaze- rnent as the Hoo- siers, rated at no ' more than a 10 to 1 shot, pushed over a ouchdown on a 42- SCHMIDT yard pass from Vernon Huffman to Roy Eads who dashed 15 more yards for a total gain of 57 yards and the score. But no sooner had the cheering died away than the Buckeyes capital- ized on a bad Indiana pass from cen- ter sent their one and only "jump- ing Joe" Williams into action. Taking Tippy Dye's pass, "Jump- ing Joe" swept around his right end for 13 yards and the tying score. Dickie Beltz added a perfect kick from placement to send the Scarlet Scourge on its way to another tri- umph, its-fourth in the season and the tenth in succession. BERWANGER STARS Important Cog Of Unbeaten Minnesota Team Gopher's Rally Downs Purple; Illinois Loses Iowa Wins 19-0 To Retain Unbeaten Record; Ozzie Simmons Stars MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 26. - (P) - Minnesota's great football line tamed Ncrthwestern's Wildcats today while fleet-footed Gopher backs combed the flying fur of the invaders for three touchdowns and a 21 to 13 triumph before a homecoming throng of 54,- 000. Not until the last period were the Wildcats subauea, acwever, and then it took the slip- pery, fast-moving reserve halfback, Clarence Thomp- son, to turn the .rick after the first Fingers had failed. Thompson was the spearhead of the bruising, driv- ing attack Minne- sota unleashed in the last half to cpen its Big Ten BIERMAN campaign with a victory and keep unblemished its record of not having suffered a defeat in three years. The two winning touchdowns were marked up by Thompson when the Wildcat's forwards wilted. North- western left the field at half-time on the big end of a 13 to 7 score. Thomp- son started the third period by re- turning the Purple kickoff 42 yards to his own 44. He alternated with Roscoe in exploding through tackle for four consecutive first downs to the 17, from where Biese, Gopher full, picked up 11 more. HAWKEYES TRIUMPH CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Oct. 26.-((P)- Iowa's undefeated football forces turned their full fury on Illinois to- day, crushing the Illini 19 to 0. The crowd of 25,000 sat in sun- drenched Memorial Stadium to watch the rout of the tricky, forward-pass- ing Illini and with bulging eyes saw the great open-field running of Iowa's negro star fullback Ozzie Simmons. Simmons, with a breath-taking gal- lop of 71 yards, broke through center on the third play after the second period opened, dashed down the field into the clear and raced on to a touchdown, skillfully dodging the last Illinois defense man. That gallop took the heart out of Illinois and started the heavier Hawkeyes on their way to a decisive victory. In the fourth period the Hawkeyes crashed through the Illini line for two more touchdowns on the punches of Captain Dick Crayne, the Hawkeye .halfback. LLOYD GEORGE IN RING Lloyd George entered a recent heavyweight boxing competition held at Wembley. But this one came from Wellington in Somerset and not Cric- cieth in Wales. And by trade he is - a barber. Demon Statisticians Pick Penn To Down Wolverines Saturday By FRED BUESSER The demon statisticians have al- ready gotten out their pencils, com- pared the scores of yesterday's foot ball holiday and with the aid of that old impressario, Mr. Comparative Scores, have prognosticated in no un- certain terms that Michigan will bow to Penn next Saturday when the Quakers journey to Ann Arbor to en- gage Herr Kipke's proteges. The bespectacled mathematicians figure thusly. Penn beat Columbia 34-0, a week ago; Michigan beat Columbia 19-7 yesterday; therefore, when Penn meets Michigan next Sat- urday, Penn will triumph. It's all very simple, comparative scores show. But the truth is that comparative scores have never been indicative of anything in football but a soft brain on the part of the expert. It has taken the ardent football world considrable time to learn this, but fallacy after fallacy have pretty well eaten the heart out of the com- parative score doctrine. Everybody has learned but the pencil sharpeners. Penn On Spot When Penn met Columbia, it was a team that had to win. The entire student body would have ridden it out of town had it lost another game. The team managed to regain student support only the day before it left for New York. It was a desperate last stand. The Quakers caught Columbia on an off day, and the result was a one-sided victory for the big Penn machine. Columbia was a vastly different team yesterday when it played Mich- igan. It was the Lions who were Spartan Harriers Drub Notre Dame Squad 15-44 EAST LANSING, Oct. 26. - (VP) - The Michigan State College cross- country team all but made it a clean sweep of the top places in defeating Notre Dame, 15 to 44, here today. It was the second victory of the year for a Spartan team that has not lost a dual meet since 1931. Edward Bechtold led the Spartan harriers home in the fast time of 17:49.4 for the 3 -mile course. Ken Waite was second, Nelson Gardner third, Jimmy Wright fourth and Har- old Sparks fifth, all wearing the green of Michigan State. Leo McFarlane was the first man to break into the scoring column for Notre Dame. He finished sixth ahead of Art Green, of State. playing the part of "last standers." They had nothing to lose by defeat, everything to gain by a victory, and as a result they were willing to take desperate chances. Forward passes deep in their own territory, laterals on the kick-off, dangerous trick plays at all times show only too clearly how badly Lou Little's men wanted to win. But they - couldn't win because they were op- ba pcsed by a Michigan team that played fa heads-up football and refused to al-(t low Columbia's enthusiasm to make to up for the apparent difference in the th power of the two teams. Keeping 67 this fact in mind, it becomes self- evident that the circumstances in a the two games were entirely different, ha and that the relative scores mean less than nothing. af Crush Lafayette ha Penn yesterday whipped a vastly tw inferior Lafayette team by the over- co whelming score of 67-0, but even the most kindly expert could hardly call ur Lafayette, buffeted about so far this to season by the smaller Eastern schools, - a formidable opponent. The Lafay- ette game may only serve to give the Penn squad a bad case of overcon- fidence. The Woverines on the contrary had a real ball game on their hands yes- terday. They will be aiming for Penn and they are definitely improving each week. Furthermore they will be out to avenge the last Penn game which was played in 1917 when the Quakers walked off Ferry Field on the long end of a 16-0 score. The game shoud be one of the best of the day and will in all probability be a closely fought battle between an Eastern and a Western team which are both on their way up. RADIO ELIMINATED Oklahoma U. has ordered out foot- ball broadcasts on the grounds they cut down attendance. II', 3I. -Associated Press Photo. George Rescee (above), filling the left-halfback post on the Univer- sity of Minnesota's unbeaten eleven came into his own as a runner in the Gopher's 21-13 victory ever Northwestern yesterday when he exploded the Wildcat line in the drive kciading to the winning touchdown after the Purple had left the field at the end of the half with a six- point lead. Heretofore the 195-pound Minneapolis product who tops six feet by an inch had been considered primarily as a passing star and a capable kicker. CHICAGO, Oct. 26. -(P) --Out of a medley of fumbles and intercepted forward passes, Chicago's Maroons fashioned their first victory of the Western Conference season today over Wisconsin's battling Badgers, 13 to 7, in a wildly exciting struggle at Stagg Field. While each team concentrated on efforts to carry the football goalward, an alert defensive play in the first period set the Maroons up for their first touchdown. Big Jay Berwanger, as usual the workhorse of the Chi- cago team, got off one of his long kicks to Wisconsin's five-yard line where Gordon Pedersen, tall end, downed the ball. The Badgers at- tempted to get away with a surprise lateral pass play, behind their own goal line, but Johnny Wilson fumbled, Eddie Jankowski's lateral and Ewald Nyquist for Chicago recovered two yards from the goal. A QUARTERBACK TOO!- Bill (Kayo) Lam, Colorado Uni- versity's 147-pound quarterback, is a broncho-buster ,crooner with a dance orchestra,.player of six musical instruments, sprinter, quarter-miler, broad-jumper, boxer, wrestler and amatuer actor. Last fall he carried the ball 906 yards in 110 plunges. ataneili Stars In Michigan's 19 To 7 Victory (Continued from Paae 1) The Line-ups Bissell and John Viergever, until his removal, made the left side of the Michigan line impregnable. Unable to gain against the left, Columbia tried the right side of the Wolverine forward wall, but the heads-up play of Sol Sobsey and Mel Kramer held the Lions in check there. After two years of inactivity on the bench, broken only by little play at odd moments, Johnson proceeded to justify Kipke's choice in picking him to pay a great part of the game at right end. Battling every minute, he broke up several Lion plays at their outset and was on the receiving end of Renner's scoring pass. As in every other game to date the Wolverines were outgained from rushing, but as in the past weeks almost all of these extra yards were picked up outside of the 20-yard line. The Lions more than doubled Mich- igan gaining 309 yards to the visitors 145. The losers made 14 first downs to the Big Ten eleven's 10. MICHIGAN Patanelli Viergever Bissell Wright Sobsey Kramer Savage Renner Everhardus Smithers Sweet Officials: COLUMBIA LE E. Furey L T Saffa La Davis C Checkovich R3 Coviello RT Klingensmith RE Waldo Q G. Furey LH Barabas RH Hudasky FB McMahon Referee-C. G. Crowell, sunday supper special grilled sirloin steak, complete dinner 50c dancing in the but cellar 9- 11 the hut fingere operated Swarthmore. Umpire-George H. Lowe, LaFayette, Linesman-Austen R. Lake, LaFayette. Field Judge-A. W. Halmer, Colby. AFFIRMED BACHELOR Goose Goslin, who drove in the run that gave Detroit the world's base- ball championship, won't admit he contemplates matrimony. "I can say I'm fond of lots of girls, but I haven't met the one yet I'm going to marry," grins the Tigers' bachelor. I; .- Oratorical cAssociation Lecture igtt --I -- I ~,1 I ,! ractio RIDING TOGS TBR EECH ES JODPHURS COATS - VESTS HATS BOOTS GEO. J. MOE 1. I SEASON TICKETS PRICED AMAZINGLY LOW' .....Average Cost of lectures SEASON TICKETS $3.50 - $3.00 - $2.75 HON. WILLIAM R CASTLE "Our Relations With Other Nations" OCTOBER 31 HILL AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE w I3 OpenDaily 10 until .12 and 2 until 4 .. .. .. . .. .. . . . ,. .. ,