DAY, NOV. 8, 1936 1 IH MIt"AHIG N AILY IPAGE TEMVIR rrllF MICIII(:AN DAIlY I'AGE Tm~J~t Purdue Loses To Rams As Hoosiers, Buckeyes, Wildcats And Gophers Win Penthouse AC, Lawyers Fight To 12-12 Tie! NEW YORK, Nov. 7.-(4P)-Ford-' ham's rugged Rams removed appar- three points which turned out to bek ently the last serious obstacle to an the margin of victory. unbeaten football campaign today by! giving Purdue a decisive licking, 151 OHIO STATE 44, CHICAGO 0 k to 0, today before 35,000 spectators i COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 7.-(P)- who sat through a cold November Ohio State soared into the first di-k mist at the Polo Grounds. vision of the Big Ten standing today Cashing in quickly on Purdue's by smothering a weak Chicago team, loose handling of the slippery pigskin, 144 to 0 as the Buckeye "razzle-dazzle"1 Fordham produced a touchdown offense clicked on all cylinders. punch in the first period with a drive! Two touchdown passes, each trav- led by Joe Dulkie from the opposing eling more than 50 yards, set off the 17-yard line, increased its margin on Quarterback "Tippy" Dye tossed both Andy Palau's 24-yard placement field aerials to Frank Antenucci, substitute goal in the second quarter, and topped halfback who was shoved into thel off a superb performance by escorting fray because of the ineligibility of Al Gurske on an 80-yard touchdown Johnny Bettridge. romp in the third period. Coach Francis A. Schmidt used 43 The Rams gave their best offen- men in the game, 19 of them soph- sive exhibition of the season in re- omores. The shining light of the buttal to critics who rated them contest was Johnny Rabb, 175-pound strictly a stone-wall defensive outfit. fullback from Akron, O., who tore the Chicago line to shreds and scored INDIANA 9, SYRACUSE 6 two of the six touchdowns. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Nov. 7.-(P)- -Indiana's first team spotted Syra- MINNESOTA 52, IOWA 0 cuse a seven-point lead today, scored MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 7. -(P) - against the starting Hoosier team, Minnesota's gridiron machine, dis- then came charging along to win abled by Northwestern a week ago, their intersectional football battle, 9- knocked Iowa out of its comeback 6. path by a 52-0 score. It looked for a time as though Three spare parts-Larry Buhler, Coach Bo McMillin had under-esti- fullback, and Robert Johnson and mated the visitors as Syracuse hung Charles Schultz, linemen-replaced grimly to the lead big Vannie Al- three cogs of the original assembly banese, its full-back, had given it on to throw the Golden Gophers back a sparkling 43 yard touchdown run into high gear before a homecoming in the first period against the re- throng of 63,000, a record attendance. serves. ( Spadaccini's 70-yard run after in- The first team relieved the second tercepting an Iowa pass as the game stringers immediately after Albanese ended was the final score and the had scored and kicked the extra point, longest jaunt of the game, played and proceeded to rush the ball over in a slight, driving snow. for a touchdown midway through the star, passed to Bud Wilkinson for 23 second period. yards and a touchdown. Minutes later Later in the period Miller dropped Buhler exploded three yards through back to the 20 to boot the ball square- the line for another counter. ly between the posts and count the A trickle of substitutes . that soon How Many Dollars Does Michigan Pay its Athletes? became a stream of 42 Gophers, changed Minnesota's lineup, but the Using words, phrases, tears, pleas, Gophers couldn't be stopped as they! and anything else that came to their hammered guards for big gains. mind to get the sympathy of the ref- NORTHWESTERN 26, BADGERS 181l erees, the players and managers of I - EVANSTON, Ill., Nov. 7.-(P)-t Northwestern's Wildcats crashed on toward their first undisputed football1 title in Western Conference historyt with a 26-18 triumph today-but leftI Dyche Stadium shell-shocked andt reeling from a withering aerial bar-t rage laid down by Wisconsin's gal- land Badgers. Northwestern, conqueror of mighty Minnesota a week ago, and showing more than faint signs of a "letdown,"! proved its greatness by proceeding to land for four touchdowns, a little1 more than offsetting three Badger scores fashioned by as spectacular1 and deadly a passing attack as has been turned loose on a western grid- iron in years. This Badger forward-passing as-, sault connected 19 times out of 301 shots for gains totalling 185 yards. A Sad Story 1 IV P S F Z L E F c p L Ik c F S STARTING LINEUPS Michigan (7) Pas. Penn. (27) Patanelli L" Fielden Siegel LT Shinn Garber L 3 McNamara Rinaldi C Hauze' Ziem R' Fielderl Lincoln RT Ober Smick RE Schuenemann Barclay QB Elverson, Ritchie RH Murray Smithers LH Miller Sweet FB Kurlish Referee, R. E. Kinney, Trinity; Um- pire, A. H. Sharpe, Yale; Linesman, L. Conover, Penn State; Field Judge, F. R. Wallace, Washington College. Score by periods: Michigan........0 0 7 0- 7' Pennsylvania ....7 7 6 7-27 Michigan scoring: Touchdown, Sweet. Point after touchdown, Mar- zonie, (placement). Pennsylvania scoring: Touchdowns,' Elverson 2; Murray 2. Points after touchdown, Murray 3, (placements). Michigan substitutions: ends, Flo- erisch, Valpey, Gedeon; tackles, Kra- mer, Luby; guards, Marzonie; center, Jordan; backs, Campbell, Stanton, Phillips, Levine, Farmer. Pennsylvania substitutions: ends, Sutter, Nye, Mischo, Woods, Ste- phens; tackles, Gunnis, Gisburne, Po- lilli; guards, Chesley, Vance, Delone; center, O'Neil, Levy; backs, Crosson, Maksik, Coulter, Stauffer, Bartholo- the Law Club and Penthouse A. C. could have easily made a shyster blush in their touchfootball game yes- terday afternoon. The final score was 12-12, though the Lawyers claim a victory by dint of making more yardage in four downs, after the tie game, than the Pents. The game is being held up pending a decision of the higher court, the I-M directors. Eight regulation quarters were played although in actual action time probably not more than two, the other six being taken up with arguing. In the third quarter Harry Orris took a pass to score for the A.C. but the Laws came back when Sam Tracy also scored on a long pass. In the third overtime quarter Sam Sheimman took another areial for a touchdown but Bill Hooper fell on a blocked punt behind the goal line to even the total. With two games already played the referees gave each team four downs, the one making the most yards win- ning the game. The Law Club gained about three more yards than the Pents thus emerging victorious. Due to a question of illegal block- ing, which indirectly opened the way for a Law score, the game was pro- tested. Michigan State Gains 7-7 Tie In Temple Tilt By ST'EWART FITCH Michigan State's Spartans staged a 74-yard march, led by Art Brand- statter, to gain a tie with "Pop" War- ner's Temple eleven in a game yester- day that was filled with breaks, fumbles, and all-aroundmpoor play on the part of both teams. Time and time again the Owls and the Spartans swept brilliantly up the field only to lose the ball through costly fumbles. I After skidding around on the slip- pery field for three quarters, the Owls finally broke into the scoring column after recovering a State fumble made by Al Agett deep in State territory. From the Spartan 30-yard stripe, three smashes by Smith. Davidson and Papas through the liie netted a touchdown. Do- herty converted,' making the score 7-0. . Art Brandstatter then entered. the game at fullback and virtually took complete charge of things from that point on. He gained 14 around end but then the Owls intercepted Pingle's pass and Spartan hopes seemed lost.. The Owls took the ball to State's 15, but Brandstatter recovered a fumble and practically single-handed ran the ball to the Owl's 14. On the next! play he galloped over with tacklers' seemingly hanging all over him. 01- man converted tieing the score. Des- perate passing attacks by both teams failed and the game ended, 7-7. SCORES (By The Associated Press) STATE Western State 33. Central State 0. Baldwin-Wallace 66, Wayne 20. Alma 10, Albion 0. Hope 13, Olivet 0. Grand Rapids Junior College 18 Ferris Institute 0. Kalamazoo 20, Hillsdale 6. Adrian 19, St. Mary's 0. Detroit Tech 37, Assumption 0. Michigan Tech 6, Lawrence Tech 0 Michigan Normal 19, Illinois Nor- mal 13. EAST Boston College 7, N. C. State 3. Bowdoin 14, Maine 7. Hobart 52, Buffalo 2. West Virginia Wesleyan 24, Cath olic U. 19. City College of New York 34, Gal laudet 0. Clarkson 0, St. Lawrence 0. Connecticut State 33, Rhode Island 0. d Dartmouth 20, Columbia 13. George Washington 20, Davis El- kins 6. Harvard 65, Virginia 0. Holy Cross 20, Colgate 13. Washington & Jefferson 31, La- fayette 6. Manhattan 13, Kentucky 7. Carnegie Tech 14, New York U. 6. Pittsburgh 34, Penn State 7. Princeton 41, Cornell 13. Boston U. 7, Rutgers 0. Navy 3, Notre Dame 0. Swarthmore 40, Johns Hopkins 19. Tufts 0, New Hampshire 0. Army 54, Muhlenberg 7. Amherst 48, Vermont 0. Georgetown U. 28, West Virginia 0. Williams 32, Wesleyan 7. Yale 14, Brown 6. SOUTH Alabama 34, Tulane 7. Auburn 13, Georgia Tech 12. Georgia 26, Florida 8. Tennessee 34, Maryville 0. Vanderbilt 14, Sewanee 0. Duke 20, Wake Forest 0. Villanova 14, South Carolina 0. Maryland 12, Richmond 0. North Carolina 26, Davidson 6. $5Q OUR CASH AWARD $ 5 Is Now.... at the- SQUARE GUN CLUB 611 EAST WILLIAM STREET Lmim i'i Sale Of Browns Awaits Approval ST. LOUIS, Nov. 7.-(AP)-Formal approval of the sale of the Browns Ultra Violet!' to a group of St. Louisans awaits a meeting of American League club Infra Red owners next Thursday in Chicago. William Harridge, American League President, said today negotiations LAM PS were virtually complete for the trans- fer of the baseball franchise from Sold and Rented , the Phil Ball estate to Donald L. Barnes and associates and details would be ironed out at the Chicago Prescription meeting. from your Harridge said that under a league physician rule the seven other owners must ap- prove transfer of a franchise. THE The plans of the new owners were not known but it was thought that State at No. Univ. they would retain as manager Rogersjphone 7611-7616 Hornsby, whose contract has two more years to run. S h Complete Outfits for BADMI NTON BIRDS RAC KETS I * Learn To Play This Popular Indoor Sport The Groaning Grads have had an opportunity via this column to relieve their pains of remote management of the football team. We are pleased to continue this promotion if for no other reason than to let the Sages of '11, '12, '13, etc., send their comments here and let the coaches proceed conscience free with their desks cleared of complaints to plan some real football strategy. Comments with sincere constructive thought behind them are appreciated by everyone associated with the University. Michigan can be proud of the fact that we have a non-subsi- dized team. In fact, every mem- ber of the coaching staff will name a dozen good recruits that have been lost to Michigan be- cause we could not even find a Job for them to work at while playing football. This difficulty augmented by the handicap of our outstandingly high scholastic requirements has seint many a potential All-American scurry- ing to more comfortable quarters. Not that we claim any of the larger schools make concessions to athletes - we are merely stat- ing that we know Michigan DOES NOT. *" * * * In the stands at the Homecoming Game a lot of comment was on the new Michigan system. The contrast was highly encouraging. Whereas the old system depended on stamina and the perseverance of a superior team for victory, the new football method- ology emphasizes superior ability and iniative in offense. This new system demonstrates one thing clearly- Harry Kipke and his coaches know tha tour team has material and abil- ity, and these forces are being pushed forward vigorously to discount any statements that we are "afraid." * * * * A grad of '32 in New York writes that the Eastern Alumny groups have more spirit than the student body. Several trains were chartered for the trip to the Penn game and the Philadelphia hotel reservations read like the Mimhi-. gan Alumni rostrum. The press of the country has been highlighting the U. of M. Band - and they certainly deserve notice. They seem to have instituted a new system too, and forgotten that a band is merely a collection of horn tooting' fellows. They deserve the apprecia- tion of the University for showing the Saturday visitors that Michigan hasE some brilliant enthusiasm.t * * * *th Did it ever occur to you thate Michigan is building a great n team for the years to come? i Count the number of outstand- F ing names you have seen men- tioned i'n the Sports columns -- then classify them by years and you will find an outstandingf number from the Sophomore c class. That means that when allP the present "threats" are finished r with their only support of a sen- ior class, the season of 1937 will . e Michigan bick as the chief conference title co'ntender. The heyday is about over for some of F the Big Teners, and Michigan has 1 started back into the position she rightly deserves. After all, it was generous of us to relin- 1 quish that National Champion- T ship title after holding it for four years. You, know our com- petitors were becoming consider- ably discouraged. It is such a distinct honor for a man to say that he has been a mem- ber of Michigan's football team that he will gladly sacrifice the easier privileges of a less ethical school. The only compensation that a Michigan player gets is the esteem of his fellow students and of the public. The pub- lic, is doing its part - it is time the student body issued the only pay- check they can to its team-a great amount of support. The fact that the Grads have confidence in Michigan's chances for the rest of the season and for Conference prestige next year is illustrated by the pledges made by them in the form of ticket reservations for next year. Fielding Yost and Harry Kipke can promise you that if the student body will give the support of the Alumni, the Conference Championship for '37 s in the bag. * * * * Goldman Bros. Cleaners are glad to provide this column for articles pertaining to sporting events at the University of Mich- igan. Goldman Cleaners wel- come comments and articles from the Alumni. -Advertisement lb mew, Dougherty, Dresher. Penn. First downs.............8 Yards gained rushing .. 212 Forward passes attempted 11 Forward passes completed 4 Forward passes intercepted by ..................6 Yards by forward passing 54 Lateral passes attempted 3 Lateral passes completed 2 Yards by lateral passes 15 Punting average (from scrimmage) ...........40 *Total yards, kicks re- turned ..............122 Opponents fumbles re- covered ....... .. .. . 1 Yards lost by penafty ... 50 *Includes punts and kickoffs. Mich. 4 98 13 0 1 0 0 0 0 35 14 2 10 Louisiana State 12, Mississippi State 0. Centre 18, Georgetown (Ky.) 0. MIDWEST Detroit 33, Bucknell 7. Missouri 13, St. Louis 7. DePaul 19, North Dakota 6. Miami (O.) 13, Toledo 0. Xavier (Cincinnati) 30, Witten- berg 0. Nebraska 26, Kansas 0. Kansas State 6, Oklahoma 6. Marquette 7, Creighton 6. DePauw 19, Earlham 6. Coe 6, Knox 0. SOUTHWEST ' Texas A. and M. 22, Southern, Methodist 6. Texas Christian 27, Texas 6. Baylor 48, Oklahoma City 6. Arkansas 20, Rice 14. Centenary 3, Tulsa 3. Hardin Simmons 26, Kansas Wes- leyan 0. ROCKY MOUNTAIN Utah State 13, Colorado State 0. Colorado 31, Utah 7. Wyoming 19, Montana Stat0 Q. Washburn 0, Colorado College 0 Brigham Young 26, Western State 12. FAR WEST California 13, Southern California l 7. Washington 14, Stanford 14. U.C.L.A. 7, Oregon 0. Oregon State 16, Washington State 6. St. Mary's (Cal.) 26, Idaho 7. Big Ten Standings We Also Carry a Complete Line of ALL ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT GEO. J. MOE SPORT SHOPS 711 North University 902 South State I I THE CAMPUS SALE of the IL, FULL DRESS DRAPE SUIT by Barth at $ 4500 Featuring English Dress Worsted and Gro-grain Facings. TUXEDOS at $35.00 Student- Faculty D irectory Tuesday, Nov. 10 This Directory contains the Names, Addresses, and Telephone Numbers of every student and faculty member W L Northwestern ......5 0 Minnesota .........3 1 Indiana...........2 1 Purdue .....2 1 Ohio State........2 1 Illinois ............1 1 Chicago ...........1 2 Michigan .........0 3 Iowa ..............0 3 Wisconsin... ....0 3 T 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Pct. 1.000 .750 .666 .666 .666 .500 .333 .000 .000 .000 N l. SUNDAY DINNER MENU 12 Noon to 8 P.M. ROAST TURKEY Dressing - Cranberry Sauce Seventy-five Cents FRIED CHICKEN Dressing - Cranberry Sauce Sixty Cents CHICKEN FRICASSEE GRILLED TENDERLOIN STEAK Fifty-five Cents SIRLOIN STEAK LAMB CHOPS - Jelly ROAST PORK - Apple Sauce Fifty Cents ROAST BEEF I Michigan Wolverine I Student Pa-feter* I I II i