UNAY, NOV. 11936 TIlE MICHIGAN I)AILYSA____ !'AGE SEVEN Minnesota Falls Before Savage Wildeats,6-0 IIII I r i Gopher Fumble Paves Way For Score By Toth An Impregnable Defense Halts Last Minute Rally And Unbeaten Record Purple Is Unbeaten Combination Of Mud, Rain And Slippery Ball Stops Any Further Scoring EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 31.-/P)-- The supposedly impregnable citade] of Minnesota's football power fell today before the furious charge of Northwestern's Wildcats, carrying with it the demolishment of the game's most celebrated winning streak and the 1936 championship dreams of the Galloping Gophers. Taking advantage of a sequence of extraordinary "breaks," Northwest- ern pushed over a last period touch- down to beat Minnesota, 6 to 0, in a battle that was savegly fought in the mud and rain before a shrieking crowd of 47,000 spectators in Dyche stadium. Widseth Draws Penalty A penalty for slugging by big Ed Widseth, star tackle and cocaptain of the Minnesotans, followed the re- covery of a Gopher fumble on the visitors' 13 yard line and paved the way for Steve Toth, Northwestern fullback from Toledo, Ohio, to plou'gh across for the winning score on the second play of the final quarter. "Widseth, in the pileup of a line ,play, hit an opposing player twice in the face, after the whistle blew," said referee John Getchell, of St. Thomas, after the game. The offense called for a 15 yard penalty but since the Wildcats had the ball only 13 yards from the goal line, the actual penalty amounted to 12 yards and left the home team with four chances to put the ball across from the one yard stripe.- Minnesotahtwice thrust back line plunges, with Don Geyer and Toth carrying/the ball, before and after the teams changed sides of the field for the final quarter. Toth, on 'the third play of the series and second play, of the last quarter, plunged across his own right tackle for the touchdown. Toth's Place-Kick Blocked Toth's attempt to placekick the extra point was blocked by Antil, Gopher end, but the mudacked Wild- cats took the six points that the "breaks" had aided them in collect- ing and then proceeded to fight off Minnesota's most furious counter charges throughout the last period. The Gophers went down with col- ors flying, throwing all their vaunted manpower into the game in their furious efforts to turn the tide, but they were stopped by a combination of the mud, the rain, their own loose handling of the slippery ball, and the sensational defense of the Wildcats. The defeat brought a dramatic fin- ish to the Minnesota winning streak, which had extended through 21 suc- cessive games, perched the Gophers on top of the football world, and made the system taught by Bernie Bierman the standard by which gridiron pro- duction was measured. Saw 28 Without Defeat The mighty men of Minnesota, under Bierman's shrewd tutoring, had gone through 28 consecutive matches without defeat. Just a week ago, in taking their fourth straight game of the current campaign /from Purdue by a 33-0 margin, they were hailed as another invincible machine, headed for national championship heights. Minnesota's first setback since the Gophers lost to Michigan in the final game of the 1932 season not only rocked the entire American football world but gave Northwestern com- mand of the Big Ten championship race. The Wildcats also entered the game unbeaten and their triumph. stirred a rain soaked crowd of par- tisan rooters to wild heights of cele- bration. Andy Uram 's 48-Yard Run Proves Futile For Gophers TotsYou c r~ta illy should know that it isn't cricket To go without your Formal ticket. It's money well spent, It's a big event. UNI4ON FORMAL Novemnbcr the 6th $2.50 a BID a I d- ' 1 -- Associated Press Photo Rushed to The Daily last night, this picture taken yesterday afternoon at Dyche Stadium in Evanston, Ill., shows Andy Uram, Minnesota half- back as he got away on a 48-yard run in the first period of the game which saw the Northwestern Wildcats topple the Golden Gopher from the undefeated throne which they have occupied in their last 21 tilts. Also shown in the picture are Vanzo, number 19, quarterback; Gibson, number 54, tackle; and Reid, number 44, guard, all of Northwestern. Midler, number 30, is a Minnesota tackle. Carnegie Tech Statistics Show wolverines Edged Out By Have Strong Passing -A P -.* .. Q tttacki Hawkeyes Bow before Indiana O 1 9 136 I 1u I l1Iutu' 6-LOLINEUPS .- Cecil Isbell Place-Kicks All Important Point For HairlineVictory PITTSBURGH, Oc L. 31.-(A)-Pur- due's husky Boilermakers made a dis- play of their power for three scoreless periods today, then barely edged past Carnegie Tech, 7-to 6 in a spectacular final quarter. The two teams had battled for 50 odd minutes, cautiously at first, then stubbornly, and at lastdwearily. An- thony Ippolito, a Purdue sophomore substitute, plunged through center for the touchdown after a 50-yard sustained attack by Purdue. Cecil Isbell place-kicked the all important point. Carnegie Tech's desperate drive in the closing minutes of the game caused the value of that boot to soar. The Tartans obtained the ball in mid- field on a punt which Manuel Za- wacki returned seven yards. Sud- denly Carnegie's plays all became the right plays. A pass was completed in the end zone, but called back and Carnegie penalized five yards. Un- daunted another pass, Fouse to Za- wacki, was called-and scored. The crowd of 20,000 waited anxious- ly as timeout was taken for both teams to send in substitutes. Then Coleman Kopcsak tried a placement for the extra point and saw it go wide of the posts. Fordham Ties Pitt To Stay Unbeaten NEW YORK, Oct. 31.-(k)-Pitts- burgh's mighty juggernaut puffed and puffed all over the Polo grounds today, but it couldn't oust the Ford- ham Rams from the list ofhthe na- tion's undefeated football teams. The best the Conquerors of Notre l Dame could get was an 0-0 draw.ItI was the second consecutive year in, which the two teams have battled to a scoreless deadlock. A capacity crowd of 57,000-a com- plete sell-out-watched the game, The only real scoring threat of the afternoon was furnished by the Pan- thers. Late in the third quarter they launched a 46-yard march that car- ried from mid-field to the Fordham. four-yard marker. But as the hundreds of Pitt sup- porters in the big crowd yelled for a touchdown, the Fordham line stif- fened, twice stopped Larue in his tracks and Pitt's one good opportunity went a-glimmering. Illinois pos. Sell LE Berner LT Fay L ' Sayre (C) C Kuhn R3 Skarda RT Castelo RE Strong Q3 Mazeika LH Wardley RH Wilson FB Score by periods: Illinois ...........0 Michigan.........0 Illinois scoring: Kuhn. Goal from (placekick). Michigan scoring: Sweet. Michigan Patanelli (C) Siegel Garber Rinaldi Vandewater Luby Smick Barclay Ritchie Smithers' Sweet 9 0 0-9 0 0 6-6 Touchdown - field - Strong Touchdown- Cole, Henry. Ends. Nelson. Tackles, nsad IL Morris, Lasater. Guards, Heaphy. Michigan subs: Backs, Levine,BLOIG Nndct31 Hook, Farmer. End, Gedeon. Tackles, BLOOMINGTON, d., Oct. 31- Pacquette, Lincoln. Guards, Mar- ()-Oze Simmons, Iowa's brilliant zonie, Brennan, Ziem. Center, J. Jor- Negro fullback, three times led the dan. Hawkeyes up to football's payoff Referee-Lyle Clarno (Bradley);'window today before 20,000 persons umpire-W. D. Knight. (Dartmouth); field judge-N. E. Kearns (DePaul); in Memorial Stadium but they cashed head linesman-Jay Wyatt, Missouri. I only one of the tickets and bowed to SUMMARY I Indiana 13 to 6 in the ninth renewal Ie GO* SKI ING A LANDSLIDE IN COMFORT AND SMARTN ESS AL L-WOOL SK I SUITS Maybe you can't go to Switzerland but think of the hills in Ann Arbor that beckon to you folks on skiis. $6.95 to $14.95 Extra Ski Pants ... $2.95 - $4.45 G EO. J. MO E SPORT SHOPS 711 North University 902 South Stat Ill. Total yards gained .......66 First downs .............. 2 Yards gained rushing.....66 Forward passes attempted 2 Forward passes completed 0 Forward passes intercepted 1 Yards by forward passing 0 Lateral passes attempted 1 Lateral passes completed .. 1 Yards by lateral passes . ... 1 Mich. 237 13 S 99 3 17 8 0 I 138 3 3 0 Illinois subs: Backs, Spurgeon, Punting average (from scrim- Smage)... ..34 *Total yards, kicks returned..............77 Average return of punts .. 3 7Opponents' fumbles recov- O~e 'H ere , d 2 Over Bd gers Own fumbles recovered 3 Yards lost by penalty...... 5 MADISON, Oct. 31.-4)-The Uni- Number of penalties..... 1 versity of Chicago football team *Includes punts and kickoffs. 31 87 2 0 3 25 3 of their Big Ten gridiron rivalry. It was Indiana's second Conference victory against one defeat and the second defeat in three starts for the Hawkeyes, who tied Illinois in their other Big Ten game. Indiana scored on an intercepted pass in the second quarter, Roy Eads taking a wild toss from Frank Bal- azes and running 38 yards for the first touchdown and a pint-sized reserve back, Harry Cherry, was the spear- head of a 50-yard drive for the sec- ond touchdown in the third period, George Fowler bucking it over from the one yard line in two tries. Iowa's lone touchdown came late in the fourth period on a pass from Sim- mons to his Negro end, Homer Har- ris, from Indiana's 15-yard line cli- maxing a four play drive from Iowa's 29. Two previous drives had been halted two and four yards from the last white line in the first and fourth quarters. The Hoosiers gained 132 yards by rushing compared to 75 for the Hawk- eyes. I scored a 7 to 6 victory in a home- coming contest with Wisconsin today, holding the hapless Badgers in the cellar of Western Conference stand- ings. A crowd of 18,700 attended. William Gillerlain, an end, was responsible for the Maroons' slender margin of victory. He booted the ball between the goal posts in the first quarter after Warren Skoning, fullback, made the touchdown. The Maroons engineered the scoring plays within three minutes after the game started when Robert Fitzgerald, an' end, intercepted a pass thrown by Clarence Tommerson, Badger half- back. Both teams threatened several times in the second and third quar- ters. Early in the fourth period a 48 yard run by Tommerson to the Chicago 9-yard line paved the way for Wisconsin's score. Roy Bellin, halfback, broke through the left side of the Chicago line on second down, Gillerlain blocked Christianson's at- tempted place kick for the extra point, and the Maroons clung to a one point lead. 5=0 Christmas Folders and Envelopes ALL NEW DESIGNS With Your Name Imprinted $100 Special assortment of the new EDGAR A. GUEST CHRISTMAS GREETINGS Manero, Mate Beat Argentine Golfers BUENOS AIRES, Oct. 31.-{P- Tony Manero, U. S. open champion, and his golfing travelling mate, John- ny Revolta of Milwaukee, closed their South American tour today with a revenge 4 and 3 exhibition victory over the prose who beat them in the Argentine open. anero finished third and Revolta ith m the recent Argentine chai- 'pionship, which John Cruikshank won and in which Juan Martinez took second. Manero and Revolta leave for Mi- ami by plane tomorrow. POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT The Democratic Candidate FOR PRDGE I 5 Read and Use The Michigan Daily Classified Ads. The Judge Should Know the Law 1N THE EXCITEMENT of a national campaign, we should not forget that we are to elect county officials whose positions are as important in their own spheres as that of the President of the United States. To elect a judge without legal training is like choosing a health officer who never attended medical school. This is the principal reason why those conversant with court conditions - of both parties - are urging the election of Harold D. Golds as Judge of Probate over his opponent who has no legal training whatever. And there are other reasons. Mr. Golds by his unaided efforts has supported himself since he was eighteen years old; has obtained eight years of University training; and by study and experience has acquired an understanding of the human problems of the Court. HAROLD D. GOLDS, A.B., LL.B. Those of us who know him intimately (and, by the way this advertisement is being inserted by Republicans) know him to be fine and clean and of the highest personal character and character- istics - a man who can be trusted to act thoughtfully, honestly and capably in any circumstance. Mr. Golds is a World War veteran who was wounded three times while serving in France and an officer of the Marine Corps Reserve. He has been active in relief work for veterans, orphans and widows. He has been president of the Ann Arbor Lawyers Club and is a member of the Executive Council of the Washtenaw-Livingston Council of the Boy Scouts of America. IT IS YOUR CIVIC DUTY TO SEE THAT A MAN WITH LEGAL TRAINING IS ELECTED I