,1 , 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Ohio State Scotes Twice In Third Period To Beat Illino is 13-0 Stubborn Iows Fails To Stop Strong Purdue Boilermakers Forced To Pass For 13 To 0 Win $efore A Small Crowd IOWA CITY, Nov. 14.-()-Pur- due's Boilermakers, master football) ciaftsmen, steamed over Iowa, 13 to! 0, today to add a final dismal touch to the Hawkeyes' dreary Big Ten season. Fifteen thousand dad's day spec- tators, filling only a third of the sta- dium, saw the Boilermakers, their ground attack halted, forced to aerial tricks to score two first period touch- downs. Hawkeyes Stage Battle The Iowa players, storm center of alumni criticism and treated earlier this:week to a one-man revolt by Oze Simmons, the ace Negro halfback, re- fused to crack under the Boilermak- er pounding. Their stubborn defense, generaled by Dick Anderson, substi- tute center, prevented Cecil Isbell and John Drake, Purdue's "Touchdown Twins," from scoring by the ground route. With Isbell and Fred Stalcup car- 'ying the brunt o; the attack, the Boilermakers drove to the Iowa nine yard line. After failing to gain on a plunge ,Isbell faded back and tossed a pass to Stalcup who eluded the Iowa ,secondary and was all alone in the end zone. Powell Tallies On Pass ,Later Isbell, behind vicious block- ing, cracked his way to the 24-yard line. Then the elusive Purdue speed- ster dropped far back to flip a pass to Don Powell, Purdue end who caught the ball on the six-yard line and fought off three Hawkeyes as he squirmed over. Iowa made only one real scoring threat. On the final play of the first half, Simmons, stopped coldon scrim-a mage plays, grabbed a pass from Bowlin and scampered to the 10-yard line as the gun sounded, The defeat closed Iowa's Big Ten season without'a victory. The team lost to Northwestern, Indiana, Minne- sota and Purdue and played a score- less tie with Illinois. Scored All Nine Points History Is Revised As Lincoln, Jefferson Meet Political scientists have been de- claiming the relative merits of Abra- ham Lincoln, the emancipator, and Thomas Jefferson, the liberal, but, a conclusive decision of whom was the bust was rendered yesterday after- noon.wFor Jim "Abe" Lincoln stop- ped Jefferson, high-stepping dusky Northwestern halfback. The size of the task could well be signified by the magnitude of Northwestern play- er No. 60, Park Wray. All of which gives vent to the feel- ings which were held in check by neither Don Geyer or Don Heap scor- ing and enabling the expression, "Came The Don." k lley'The +Gre at' Baffles Old Nassau A s Eli Wins, 26-23 wrr a3 PRINCETON, N. J., Nov. 14.-(I)- Larry Kelley, who recently said "there can't be an All-American team without me" led Yale to a spectacular 26-23 victory over Prince- ton today before a capacity crowd of 57,000 who saw the Blues, rallying sensationally around their inspira- tional leader, come from behind twice to overtake the Tigers. Kelley, who caught a pass on this same Palmer Stadium turf two years ago to plaster a 7-0 defeat on the Tig- ers and spoil an otherwise spotless season for them, was completely bot- tled up in the first half, but the Tig- ers relaxed their vigilance in the sec- ond half and that was all the Wil- liamsport, Pa., wizard needed. He made a seemingly impossible catch of a touchdown pass and broke up several Tiger scoring threats. With Kelley blocked out most of the time and Clint Frank, the Eli's flashy running and pass-throwing back, un- able to make an impression on the heavier and more powerful Prince- ton line, the Yales, despite a touch- down in the last minute, looked as though they were in for a revengeful beating as they trailed 7-16 at half time of the 60th game between the institutions. The Eli's came back to the game re- freshed by the half time intermission and in the 30 minutes of play that followed outsmarted Princeton. Rabb And Booth. Cross Illini GoalI To Gain Victory Indians Seldom Threaten; Lack Punch And Exhibit: Very Little Offense CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Nov. 14.--(,)--- Turning on the power in the third1 period, Ohio State, on two quick thrusts, smashed over two touch- downs to trample Illinois, 13 to 0, today before a dad's day crowd of 18,000. A 29-yard dash by Johnny Rabb' and a 6-yard sprint around end by Billy Booth gave the Buckeyes their two touchdowns after Illinois, unable to score itself, had almost proved that it wasn't going to allow the scarlet-- clad warriors to score either. Rabb Scores First Rabb drove off right guard on a quick opening play, successfully elud- ed the secondary, and scampered across the goal line standing up. Merle Wendt place-kicked for the extra point. The second touchdown came after Illinois had stopped two smashes at the line. Booth, coming into the game as a backfield player, grabbed the ball and raced to his right, break- ing through the tackles. He ducked two more Illini tacklers waiting to nab him and carried one of them on his back as he fell across the goal line. Booth failed to convert on the try for extra point from placekick. Illini Never Threaten Illinois, with only a shadow of an offense, had no punch and never threatened to score. The only time the Illini had the ball in scoring ter- ritory was on an Ohio fumble. That was in the second period when Cas- telo recovered Wasylik's fumble on the Buckeye 25 yard line. Wardley and Spurgeon failed to pierce the line and then the Illini went into the air only to see Spurgeno's pass in- tercepted. Illinois' made only three first downs to 12 for the Ohioans, and gained only 74 yards by rushing to 292 for the Buckeyes. Cincinnati U. Loses To Wisconsin, 27-6 MADISON, Wis., Nov. 14.-(A-)- Consistently outgaining its non-Con- ference opponent on both ground and aerial plays, the University of Wis- consin football team defeated Cin- cinnati University, 27 to 6, before a crowd of 9,485 today. The Badgers jumped into the lead in the first period and scored one touchdown in each of the succeeding1 periods.1 men ..iic1Iiia1 Iia~ac, wiiia LINCOLN, Neb., Nov. 14. - (T) - Pittsburgh's mighty power cracked Nebraska's football barriers today and generated the momentum for de- cisive victory over the Cornhuskers, 19 to 6, in a hard fought intersection- al battle on Memorial Field. A capacity crowd of 36,000 watched the Panthers come from behind in a spectacular second period, score twice within the last two minutes of the half as they capitalized on the{ "breaks" and thereafter maintain complete command of the game. Nebraska's great backfield combin- Great Forgotten Man Pittsburgh Rallies To Overcome Rugged Nebraska Defense, 19-6 ation, Sam Francis and Lloyd Card- well, collaborated on a scoring drive that culminated in a 21-yard touch- down pass, and put the Cornhuskers in front but Pitt's crashing comeback turned the tide completely. Panther backfield replacements, spurred by the sensational all around play of Bill Daddio, sophomore left end, tallied twice in a race with time before half time whistle blew'. The regulars, led by Marshall Goldberg and Bobby LaRue, put over a third touchdown in the final period to re- move any lingering doubt about the outcome. Arnold udGreene, 240-pound full- back understudy, scored two of the Panther touchdowns while John Ur- ban, another' substitute, tallied the ,_ I E For All Types of Sof/cizers * BLUE STAR * JEFFERSON ISLAND Although he shared his duties as the Wildcat fullback with Don Gey- er yesterday afternoon, Steve Toth accounted personally for North- western's nine points. In the sec- ond period he booted a 17-yard place-kick, and after three un- successful attempts, finally crossed the line for a touchdown in the fourth quarter. Irish Trample Armly Before Record Crowd. Cadets Unable To Handle Notre Dame's Fighting Eleven And Bow 20-6 NEW YORK, Nov. 14.-()-The old Army game still can't fool the Irish of Notre Dame. Before the largest throng in the history of Eastern football, 80,000 shouting spectators who jammed every crevice of vast Yankee Stadium on an ideal Indian summer afternoon, the Irish rode the Army mule to the very precipice of disaster today and then tamed him with a decisive 20 to 6 victory. Cadets Suffer Worst Defeat 210 S. Ashley How Conference Chapon reMd Way back last Spring when the phophets were picking the Big Ten Threats, there was unanimous de- cision on Ohio, Minnesota and North- western. The football experts at that time had analyzed the material of'e all schools and placed the best chances of success on these three. * * Where does football material come from? Naturally, any team is composed of refinements of the freshman squad; so the all- important nucleus is a large promising group of freshmen. For a imoment, glance at the first year football try-outs of the leading Big Ten schools: Ohio ........320 Freshmen Minnesota ... 352 freshmen Northwestern 300 Freshmen Michigan ....125 Freshmen You can- easily see why we have a tougher job to start with it. *I * * iow is it this year's leaders attract so many more men than Michigan? Just one reason - they can make it possible for an All-American aspirant to find a job to work his way through school. At Northwestern, the large busi- ness communities adjacent to the campus in Chicago and Evanston readily absorb any football candi- dates who wants work with pay. At Minnesota, Minneapolis and St. Paul afford many more business es- tablishments for employment than Ann Arbor. Ohio State, located in Columbus, the State Capital, likewise can offer attractions in the form of jobs possi- bilities for athletes who cannot afford college. Michigan located in a more de- lightful but less industrial city is handicapped. About the only posi- tions available are board and room jobs -and most of these are sewed up by the various fraternities' own members. The smaller number of business houses in Ann Arbor are cooperating whole-heartedly in the employment of students, but they cannot offer competition to larger cities. With these conditions in effect, it{ is remarkable that we get as good material as we do. Every man now on the football team is sacrificing more comfortable quarters elsewherel for the privilege of playing for Mich- igan under Michigan's coaches. DO YOU APPRECIATE THEM? * *.* Do you know that Michigan plays the same football as Min- nesota? There are 20 plays of Michigan that are identical with the Minnesota strategy. The dif- ference lies in the physical ex- ecution of these plays. On an ordinary off-tackle smash a fast ' 210-pound tackle will make: the play a dazzling success whereas a 165-pound man who is slow will make the play appear dull " and lifeless. A line gaining play ' relies not so much on the strat- egy of the play as it does on the execution of it., * * A very important factor that makes Michigan's team appear on the lower end of the spectrum of the football limelight is that we have played the' toughest schedule of the nation's best' teams. For a warm-up session we3 played Michigan State. The Farmers make this their most important game of the year - and rightly so for it draws a crowd of 20,000 more than any of their other games - and we use it for .a warm-up game. Many were surprised that we were defeated by Penn. Look whom Penn has won from. They took the Navy easily who beat Notre Dame who defeated Ohio State. When a good team plays the best teams they are bound to have some losses. But our comparison with the best teams of the nation is of a nature to warrant a victory over Ohio State. We have a green team we are not ashamed of, but we have ma- terial that means, Conference Championship inq 1937. Go to Ohio State to see the Buckeyes battered off their ped- I estal. and in your spare mom- Irish luck and alertness gave menGing, nared al4-ardipa m of Coach Elmer Layden their most Golding, snared a 45-yard pass from lop-sided victory over the Cadets Linus Haby in the second period to since 1932 when they corraled the' score his team's lone touchdown. Army mule, 21 to 0. Every break in a game jammed with breaks went to Spartans Trounce the Irish and they clashed in as calm- ly as a bond broker. . Kausas U. 41 To 0 The Cadets, who looked like easy masters of the situation at the start of the battle, smashed and passed to LAWRENCE, Kans., Nov. 14.-(IP)-- within scoring distance three times, Michigan State's forward passing only to have misfortune and a fight- Spartans overwhelmed a Kansas ing Irish line break their hearts. They football eleven here this afternoon drove to the five, six and ten-yard before a small crowd to win the in- enemy stripes but couldn't break their tersectional grid clash 41 to 0. jinx until half way in the final period The Jayhawks, playing before Gov. when their human package of foot- Alf M. Landon, who praised their ball TNT, baffling Monk Meyer, re- fighting spirit in a brief mid-game turned a punt 60 yards for the only address, never had a chance and Army touchdown. showed only one offensive spurt. Statistics Favor Army Even the one drive of the Kansans Fred Vanzo, 200-pound quarter- back, proved extremely effective on the defense as well as offense. He tackled with uncanny accuracy, and left his mark on whomever he hit. His presence in the secondary stopped more than one promising Wolverine drive towards North- western's goal line. Indiana Beats Chicago Eleven By 20-7 Score CHICAGO, Nov. 14. - (N) - The Hoosiers of Indiana University, with quarterback Vern Huffman giving one of the greatest individual perform- ances seen at Stagg Field this season, defeated a stubborn band of Chicago Maroons 20 to 7 before 20,000 spec- tators today. Chicago, from the start, was held on the defensive, but the Maroon line repeatedly made stubborn stands in the shadow of its own goal posts. The Hoosiers kept hammering away and with less than two minutes of play remaining in the second period, Ro- land Obenchain, on an end-around play, twisted his way 16 yards through the Maroon line to the Chi- cago two. Huffman slashed off tackle to score easily, Miller's try for point being wide. Huffman's passing to Beasley featured the Hoosier touchdown march. In the third period Huffman shot a 33-yard aerial to Beasley and then smashed eight yards to score, Miller making this kick good. On the first play of the final period ,with the ball on the Chicago five after a 27-yard run by Huffman, Filchock lateraled to Tanner, who scampered over the goal line, Fowler converting. Chicago scored in the final 15 sec- onds of play on a pass from Lou Ha- mity to Bob Meyer. ATE JIPE"T_ T & EWEL ER WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING A Success Stor r- Yes ! 32 Years Of Satisfactory Service To Our Customers. R_1 ON TH'E CAMPUS DEVELOPING - PRINTING - ENLARGING will be more satisfactory if it's lone by ! I OIL the Campus Since 1905 723 North University Two Stores 108 E iL ° Figures, except those on the big centerfield scoreboard, favored the outwitted Army. The Cadets out- gained the Irish, 199 to 186 yards through the air and over the ground and completed nine out of 16 passes for a total of 102 yards as against a gain of 39 yards through the ozone by the Irish. In first downs, Army picked up 10 to 9. But the Cadets couldn't outluck the lucky Irish and that told the story. was turned into a touchdown for the Spartans as Nelson blocked Divens' attempted punt on the State 45-yard line. Diehl recovered it and sprint- ed for tle score. PERSONAL STATIONERY 100 Sheets ....a ftI4 100 Envelopes . Printed with your Name and Address THE CRAFT PRESS j 305 Maynard Street I .: r __ ' k Have Your Next Suit Tailored I More men every day are realizing that to be well dressed is to have their clothes tailored for them. Despite increas- ing demands, our selections of fabrics are still very large. I i I I 11