E TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY -" W 1 11, 1 1111141111 111 11, 111111 1 11.1 -Ili ll Ili Wildcat Attack Clicks In Last Period March Young Wolverine Eleven Checks Vaunted Offense For Three Quarters (Continued from Page 1) the score came late in the fourth quarter. With the line opening big holes and the interference leading the way effectivtly, Stark Ritchie, dragging his "charley-horse" behind him, dominated a sustained drive that took the ball to Northwestern's 30 from the Wolverine 16. A successful pass from Smithers to. Quarterback Bill Barclay resulted in a fourth consecutive first down on the 20, and two plays later a pass by the same combination just missed connecting for a score. At this point Coach Kipke rushed Marzonie, junior guard from Flint, into the game, and the latter's attempt for a field goal fell short, with the Purple following it up with a touchdown drive. Ritchie returned the next North- western punt to the Michigan 45, but the Varsity lost the ball on its own 37 on a fumble by Smithers. Smith- ers was knocked out on the play and had to leave the game. He was not injured seriously. On the first Northwestern play John 'Kovatch advanced the ball to within six yards of a touchdown on an end-around play. Marzonie and Rinaldi stopped Toth on the four, Garber nailed Toth on a spinner at the two-yard line, and combined with Rinaldi' to hold the same Wildcat back to a half-yard gain on the third down. SCORES EAST Holy Cross 32, Boston 0. Columbia 17, Syracuse 0. Dartmouth 20, Cornell 6. Duquesne 13, Carnegie Tech 0. Navy 20, Harvard 13. Manhattan 13, Georgetown U. 0. New York U. 46, Rutgers 0.k Pennsylvania 19, Penn State 12. Yale 26, Princeton 23. Temple 6, Villanova 0. Notre Dame 20, -Army 6. SOUTH Tennessee 26, Vanderbilt 13. Georgia 12, Tulane 6. Florida 18, Sewanee 7. Louisarna State 19, Auburn 6. Alabama 20, Georgia Tech 16. Kentucky 7, Clemson 6. Duke 27, North Carolina 7. MIDWEST Missouri 21, Oklahoma 14. Kansas State 47, Iowa State 7. Detroit 16, Xavier (Cincinnati) 0. Wayne U. 14, Buffalo 6. Butler 13 ,Western (Mich.) State Teachers 7. Michigan State Normal 19, Indi- ana State Normal 13. SOUTHWEST Arkansas 17, Southern Methodist 0. Texas Christian 26, Centenary 0. Baylor 13, Oklahoma A & M 0. FAR WEST Washington 12, Southern Califor- nia 0. Purple Backs Moved Over Large Area, Statistics Show Northwestern Kovatch Gibson Devry Wegner RD r id' C) (9) LE LT C Michigan (0) Toth (sub for Geyer); field goal, Toth (Cornell); umpire, E. C. ] Patanelli (C) (place kicks. (Ohio U.); field judge, R. W. F Siegel Northwestern subs: Ends. Diehl,wad (Oi U.-Srcs) Garber wald, (Ohio U. - Syracuse:, Garber Kiamm. Tackles, Voigts, Wray, Sprin- linesman, J. J. Lipp, (Chicagc RinaldiIl. uardsCaJ.Lippd(Chicag- RC,,!ger. Guards. Calvano, Reid, Schrei- ,, , Krieger ,Lateral passes attempted 0 Finster- Punting average (from scrimmage).......... 36 head Total yards, kicks o) .returned .........77 Mich. Opponents fumbles recov- 0 36 74 3 f Z 1 I t Mississippi Is Easy For Marquette, 330 MILWAUKEE, Wis., Nov. 14.-(i') -Playing brilliant offensive football, Marquette's undefeated and untied eleven swept to a 33 to 0 victory over Mississippi in the final home game today before 17,000. Art Guepe and Ray Buivid led the Marquette at- tack. Burnett RT Lincoln ber. Halfbacks, Adelman, Boger, Zitko RE Smick Kaufman. Fullbacks, Toth, Mesec. Vanzo Q3 Barclay Michigan subs: Ends, Valpey, Ged- Jefferson LH Hook eon. Tackles, Pacquette. Guards, Heap RH Smithers Brennan, Vandewater, Marzonie. Geyer F; Sweet Center, John Jordan. Quarterbacks, Score by periods: Levine. Halfbacks, Cooper, Piotrow- Northwestern......0 3 0 6-9 ski, Phillips, Ritchie. Fullbacks, Michigan.........0 0 0 0-0 Stanton. Northwestern scoring: Touchdown, Officials: Referee, Fred Gardner, N'west'n First downs ........... 12 Yards gained rushing . . 264 Forward passes attempt- ed...................5 Forward passes complet- ed .................. . 2 Forward Passes Intercepted by .................. . 0 Yards by forward passes ............... 53 3 ered.............. 3 4 58 Yards lost by pentlty .... 25 0 *Includes punts and kickoffs. 9 KALAMAZOO 20, OLIVET 0 2 KALAMAZOO, Mich., Nov. 14.-(P) -Kalamazoo College completed its 1 first undefeated football season since 1916 with a 20 to 0 triumph over Oli- 24 vet today. PRINTING LOW RATES - FINE WORK Dial 2-1013 . . 308 North Main Street Downtown North of Main Post Office The ATHENS PRESS SEE US FIRST ._ IrYI I Y YM f lr ni IYWYI I IYIY/ I nIA IISMi,.IF1 GREN E'S Are Scoring BIG 4 1 Stanford 20, Oregon State 14. California 28, Oregon 0. Washington State 32, U.C.L.A. Montana 16, Idaho 0. 7. Toth Scores But the hero of the Minnesota vic- tory took the ball for the fourth con- secutive time and plunged over cen- ter for a touchdown,i failing to con- vert for the extra point, however. Two previous Northwestern touch- down threats fell short. Once when Ritchie carried an intercepted pass from his own five to the 32 behind splendid blocking, and again later when fullback Ced Sweet recovered Heap's fumble over the Michigan goal for a touchback. Captain Matt Patanelli again showed why he is deserving of All- American ranking. In action for the first time since the Pennsylvania game last Saturday and running with a decided limp, he was by far the best end on the field, smashing the touted Northwestern interference with a vengeance and following the ball like a hawk. Left-tackle Siegel again played a beautiful game, fol- lowing up Patanelli's smashing tackle with tackle after tackle. Bissell Starts Rinaldi and Sweet, moved in close with Smithers in Coach Kipke's "nine-man line," were thorns in the side of the Purple's offense all after- noon. Frank Bissell started his first game of the year after playing reg- ularly all last season and proved a, bulwark, stopping Heap from behind on the five-yard line on one occa- sion when a Wildcat touchdown was in the offing. John Brennan proved himself a comer at guard with the manner in which he moved out of the line to take out the Northwestern ends on offense, and Garber again was his defensive self at guard. The play of Danny Smick and Jim Lincoln yes- terday augers well for the right side of the Michigan line next season. Barclay called signals all after- noon and performed capably on of- fense as well as playing his usual steady defensive game. Ritchie eas- ily was Michigan's best running back. In the statistics column, North- western outrushed Michigan 264 yards to 58, and 12 first downs to eight; and outpassed the Wolverines, 53 yards to 24. Sweet held the re- putedly outstanding Toth even in punting, both averaging 36 yards from the line of scrimmage. 1h Minnesota Bulldogs Texas U., 49 To 19 MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 14.-(A)- Minnesota bulldogged the Texas Longhorns in typical Bierman fa- shion today and when the sun had set on Memorial Stadium 45,000 spec- tators saw the brand of a 47-19 de- feat on the invaders from the South- west. Stampeded for most of the game while the Golden Gophers were scor- ing seven touchdowns, the Longhorns fought back gamely to score two of their three counters in the last five minutes, one of them the result of bad judgment by Minnesota, when the lineup was spotted with reserves. To the invaders went the distinction of scoring the most points against a Gopher defense in four years. Hugh Wolfe, Texas , fullback, thrilled the Dad's Day crowd with a 93-yard runback of the kickoff in the third period for the first Long- horn score. d" NW. t ToX\. S.S z " eason :.. : / w . 41 t.- ' i FOR THE Dark Days AHEAD l) I r ( a - 1 Ultra Violet Infra Red LAMP'S Sold and Rented on Prescription from your physician. i A fy 4 .' I 1 , , wok. S ,[f ; ' . 1v t . y ; "'F 'C':A' . ::s 4{ :}#. a . \ . i ,y'.< # ,:Z 7,, r J .; P ;'t +. , ' '=.:.' " \ 1wti ' ..--... 4 A_ Ii . - - -: "( yQuar y Incorporated 317 South State Dial 2.3109 with The MICHIGAN UNION TAPROOM 120to 3 P.M. 5 to 7:30 P.M. SIXTY CENTS T-Bone Steak or Roast Ch iken and Dressing Choice of Vegetable Potatoes Rolls and Butter n t1r Cr i itrY n7trr- l MICROCLEAN SERVICE toSUITS dTOPCTS MICHIGAN MEN who are particular about their appearance are up on skull work when it comes to Dry Cleaning. They have learned that there IS a difference-that their clothes stay clean longer; that they come back with their natural finish when Microcleaned. MICROCLEAN does not remove the natural animal oils from woolens and furs the oils so necessary in preserving the body and sheen of the garment. F- and FELT HATS GREENE'S \CLEANERS S'DYERS Am d0 . s _ We use the same machine in{ ELa L d cleaning and re-blocking hats I I1 I1 1 I1 I1