THE MI-CHICGAN DAILY 0 Ohio State Loses To Pittsburgh's Old-Fashioned'Footbt all, 6-0 U~~ Attack Late In Fourth Period Causes Defeat Pitt's Hopes For National Chanpion'hip Raised As Result OfVictory COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 10.-(P)-By the exclusive and convincing use of "old-fashioned" football, Pittsburgh's Panthers overpowered Ohio State to- day, 6 to 0, and took the high-road leading toward national champion- ship heights. The climax to a hard-fought battle between two stalwart lines came sud- denly and with dramatic swiftness late in the fourth period as Ohio State's otherwise resourceful defense finally yielded to the sustained forc- ing tactics of the hard-charging Panthers. Harold Stebbins, Williamsport, Pa., backfield substitute, shook loose on a simple off-tackle play. A poor punt into the wind by "Tippy" Dye, Ohio's quarterback, had given Pitt posses- sion of the ball deep in opposing ter- ritory. Stebbins cut outside tackle and with the aid of good blocking, ran wide to elude several tacklers and completed his 34-yard scoring dash down the sidelines untouched. Panthers Dominate Completely A near-capacity crowd of 71,714 in Ohio's huge double-decked horse- shoe stadium, including the Repub- lican presidential nominee, Gov. Alf M. Landon, saw Pittsburgh smash convincingly this year's national championship hopes of the battling Buckeyes. The Panthers, without so much as attempting a single forward or la- teral pass of any description, domi- nated the play from start to finish. Sticking to orthodox attacking meth- ods, employing nothing but straight "Warner system" power tactics, Pitt registered 11 first downs to Ohio's five and rolled up a margin in rush- ing of 251 yards to 77. It was the most conspicuous vic- tory for unadulterated, fundamental methods of offense witnessed in many a moon and noteworthy par- ticularly for the thoroughness with which Pittsburgh smothered the her- alded "razzle dazzle" attack of the Buckeyes., O.S.U.'s Offense Fails Ohio's offense, built upon laterals and trick stuff, simply never had a chance. The Bucks were only inside Pitt's territory once and not for long, Pittsburgh's margin of superiority, in the main departments of offense and defense, was more decisive"than the score indicated. Twice the Panthers were within five yards of increasing their score. Their first big chance bogged down when Ohio took the ball on downs, 'nding a 55-yard Panther march at the start of the second period. The game ended with Pitt driving hard for a second touchdown and the ball on Ohio's four-yard stripe. S.M.U. Mustangs Dropped B Rams NEW YORK, N. Y., Oct. 10.-(P)- That razzle-dazzle, flying circus from Southern Methodist University backfired just once here today and the Fordham Rams, hailed as one of the East's outstanding team, evened up for the trouncing the Methodists gave them two years ago by walking off with a 7-0 victory. John Lock, a substitute Ram back, was the No. 1 hero. While a crowd of 30,000 rose and cheered, Lock snagged a Mustang pass midway in the fourth period, tucked the pigskin under his arm and galloped 77 yards down the field like a frightened rab- bit for the game's only touchdown. Andy Palau added the extra point. Fordham turned back the first of the major threats on its 1936 sched- ule with only one first down. Brown Jug Features Next Saturday's Tilt With Gopher Eleven The "Little Brown Jug" again en- ters Michigan's gridiron spotlight since the Wolverines open their road season next Saturday at Minneapolis, Minn., w.here they are scheduled to meet the powerful Minnesota Goph- ers, undefeated for the past three years. For those that are not acquainted with the meaning of the "little brown jug" it has been symbolic of the tra- ditional rivalry between the Wolver- ines and the Gophers for the past 32 years, dating as far back, as 1903 when Fielding H. Yost, present ath- letic director, was gaining national recgnition for his famous point-a- minute teams. During that time the opposing team carried their own water, thus the beginning of the "brown jug" tradition, which allowed the winner to take the jug home. The jug stands three feet high and on it is printed all of the Michigan- Minnesota scores since 1903. For the past two years the jug has been safely tucked away in the Min- nesota quarters, since the Gophers rai roughshod over the Wolverines in 1934, 34-0 and last year, 40-0. In beating Washington, 14 to 7, in their season's opener and then making it two straight with yesterday's last minute victory over Nebraska, 7-0, Minnesota has defeated two of the country's strongest teams. Washing- ton is rated as one of the favorites to take the Pacific Coast title while Nebraska, last year's Big Six cham- pions, are already being picked to beat Pittsburgh, conquerors of Ohio State, and gain the Rose Bowl bid. There is no doubt that the Wolver- ines are in for a tough afternoon. The last time the jug was in Mich- igan's possession was in 1932 when a field goal by Harry Newman, All- American quarterback, beat Minne- sota, 3-0. WAR ADMIRAL FAILS LAUREL, Md., Oct. 10.-()-War Admiral, S. D. Riddle's likely Man O'War colt lost Johnson handicap. Incomplete Passes And Fumbles Tell I Story Of How Indians Beat Michigan Ind. Mich. Indiana scoring: Touchdowns, Dal Vanderwater, Heikinen, Brennan Down ....................6 4 Sasso, Kenderdine. Points from try Ziem. Center: J. Jordan. Yds. gained rushing . . . ..120 110 after touchdown, Miller 2 (place- Referee: Frank Birch (Earlham); Forward passes attempted . 9 17 ment). Umpire: Dr. E. P. Maxwell (Ohio Forward passes completed.. 2 2 TXinl...cr " State). Field judge Lee Daniels , s Ypsi Hurons Bow To Bowling Green BOWLING GREEN, O., Oct. 10.- (,") - Bowling Green University squelched every scoring attempt by the Michigan Normal football team today and emerged victorious, 6-0. The Ohioan's marker came mid- way in the first period . on a for- ward lateral from midfield. The Hu- ron left tackle, Mayfield, blocked the try for ektra point. The Ypsilanti boys threatened to score several times in the second and third periods, but Bowling Green stopped their rushes. Once the Hu- rons fumbled at the one-yard line. FOOTBALL GITTERS DONORA, Pa., Oct. 10.-(iP)-Dr. J. Add Sprowls died today while listen- ing to the Pitt-Ohio game today. ~i LITTLE THINGS Forward passes intercepted by ...................... Yards by forward passing .. Lateral passes attempted ... Lateral passes completed.. Yards by lateral passes .. Punting av., scrim. ...... x Totals yds. kicks ret'd ... Opponents fumbles re'd .... Yards lost by penalty ..... x-includes punts and kicko Score By Periods Indiana ............0 14 Michigan ...........3 0 Misgan scoring: arlaygoal,Ever hards (ub fr Brcly). 1 2 IndianaH substitutions: Quarter- 26 2 2 21 backs, Anderson. Halfbacks, Fox, 0 1 Whitman. Gunning, Norton, Cava- 0 -1 cini, Oliver. Fullbacks, Graham. 34 40 Ends: Openchain, Widaman. Tackles: .114 116 Zoll, Brown, Haak. Guards: Risher, 4 2 Olmstead, Wunsch, Szabo. Centers: 45 0 Sloss, Weiss. 4ff5 Michigan substitutions: Quarter- back: Levine. Halfbacks: Everhard- us, Phillips, Ritchie, Campbell. Full- backs: Stanton, Farmer. Ends: 0 0-14 Smick, Gedeon, Loiko. Tackles: (Loyola). Head linesman: J. J. Lipp (Chicago). The lineups: Indiana (14) Kenderdine Livingston Gileo Miller Sirtosky Dal Sasso Beasley Huffman Cherry Eads Fowler pos. LE LT LG C RG RT QB LH RH FB Michigan (3) Patanelli Janke: Garber Rinaldi Marzonie F, Jordan Valpey Barclay Cooper1 Smithers Sweet May make Difference su I ts-We tain our Standards. a Big in Re- main- High T AT E ITPET WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING "tF Quarry" 317 S. State Dial 2-3109 0 0- 3 Luby, Siegel, Greenwald. Guards:) OWN 6 Your New Topcoat demands a New Hat . . . or, at least, one that Looks Like New! With a machine such as Dobbs, Mallory and Stetson use in their factories for blocking hats, GREENE'S can turn out a hat cleaning job that will make you proud to wear your OLD Hat with your new topcoat. 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