THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE 7 NOTRE DAME .. 7 N'WESTERN ... 14 PURDUE .......13! OHIO STATE MINNESOTA .... 6 WISCONSIN ... 6 IOWA........ .0..CHICAGO ... .. 39 1 NEBRASKA.... . 7 MICH. STATE .. 16 PENNSYLVANIA. 14 PITTSBURGH .. 25 0 KANSAS ...... .0 NAVY.........7 CARNEGIE TECH 14 0 11 INDIANA a 1 Wolverines Tarnish Zuppke's Silver Jubilee, 7-6 (V -_________ Trosko's Kick Gives Varsity Winning Point Nicholson Catches Pass For Touchdown; Many Fumbles Mark Play (Continued from Page 1) spent most of the second period. Starting from their 31 yard line, in the third quarter, the Illini, with Zimmerman,Berner and Bennett al- ternating with the ball, moved to a first down on Michigan's 23. Two bolts through right guard netted little, then Zimmerman passed to Bennis on the five yard marker. Here, Michigan's line buckled for two plays. Then Zimmerman cut around his right end, and fumbled the ball when tackled on his three- yard line. The ball bounded across the twin stripe and Cramer reached it first to give Illinois a touchdown that loomed large in view of its dominant offensive strength. + Michigan Opens Up But the Wolverines came to life with a suddenness that left Illinois on its heels. Illinois' kickoff, low and hard, bounced off Ralph Heikkinen's shoulder and was caught on the re- bound by Wehrli. Zimmerman taunt- ed center, then threw a pass which Bill Barclay intercepted on his own 44. Trosko then shot a pass to Dan Smick, who was dropped on Illinois' 47. Trosko pounded over his right tackle for seven more yards, followed by a Barclay reverse which added four. A plunge into the line yielded naught, whereupon the sophomore spark faded back and shot a perfect pass to Nicholson who was lonely when he caught it. The touchdown was a matter of a light jog. With the same coolness under fire hitherto shown when the chips are down, Trosko converted the point without even the dramatic effect of removing his headgear. Wardley Fades Jay Wardley, whose passing and running game, had provided nothing more than a threat all afternoon, was ushered into the game late in the fourth quarter, obviously to pass. But the big Michigan line was charging viciously and trespassing every time he faded to throw. Bob Wehrli tried a desperate, last- minute pass, but Louis Levine inter- cepted and the ball game was Mich- igan's. Kipke used substitutions freely. It was Louis Levine who marshalled the Wolverine's touchdown march. And John Nicholson, who fought fiercely for 55 minutes, rates mention. Nich- olson dropped a pass that might have meant another Michigan score, but he caught the one that paid off. And he was outstanding on defense. Illinois pos. Michigan Klemp . ........LE .......Nicholson Reeder .......LT..........Siegel Hodges.......LG......Brennan McDonald..... C ......... Rinaldi Fay ........... RG .....Heikkenen Lundberg .....RT ...... ....Smith Castelo .... . ...RE . ..........Smick Berner .......QB ...........Farmer Heimmerman .LH . . o.......Trosk. Wehrli .......RH ......... Barclay Carson.......FB........Stanton Substitutions: Illinois: Wardley for Zimmerman, Brewer for Hodges, Bennis for Castelo, Cramer for Lund- berg, Bennett for Carson, Knox for Fay, Bell for Klemp, Skarda for Reeder, Brown for Berner. Michigan: Kodros for Rinaldi, Janke for Siegel, Hook for Trosko, Pederson for Heikinen, Vandwater for Brennan, Gedeon for Nicholson, Rogers for Smick, Marzonie for Heikkenen, Luby for Smith, Levine for Farmer, Gedeon for Smick, Floersch for Nicholson, Luby for Smith, Ritchie for Trosko. Sig Ten Standings II W. L. Ohio State........3 0 Minnesota ........2 0 Northwestern......3 1 Wisconsin........2 1 Michigan.........2 2 Indiana..........1 1 Purdue...........1 2 Illinois...........0 2 Chicago ..........0 2 Iowa . .............0 3 T. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pet.! 1.000 1.000 .750 .667 .500 .500 .333 .000 .000 .000 Fighting Iris Trim Gophers By 7-6 Score Sweeny Blocks Faust's Kick For Extra Point; Pupils, King Score Spartans Down Kansas In Last Quarter, 16-0 EAST LANSING, Oct. 30.-( )-A MMichigan State College second team succeeded where the first team could not today and started the Spartans to a 16 to 0 victory over the Univer- sity of Kansas before 8,000 spectators here.I The Kansas Jayhawkers, more powerful than in the past three years when they have been whipped suc- cessively by Michigan State, held the Spartans scoreless for three periods but an inspired State second string squad turned on the heat in the last quarter. Gene Ciolek, husky halfback from Michigan City, Ind., was the spark- plug of the rally. He started with a 37-yard sprint late in the third period but was robbed of a score when his own interference blocked him off from a clear path to the goal. After an exchange of punts, Ciolek shot a 28-yard pass to Jack Coolidge, and another to Mike Kinek, of Whiting, Ind., for 11 yards. Three line plays took the ball to the two yard line and Ciolek carried it over himself. Les Bruckner, substi- tute quarterback, kicked the extra point. Fired by the example, the first string came back and Ole Nelson, the big Chicago end who never played be- fore he entered college, broke through and blocked Cadwalader's kick. The ball bounced over the goal from the 10 yard line and State gained al safety. On the first play after the subse- quent kick-off, Dave Diehl dashed 27 yards on an end around to Kansas' 16. There Pingel, State's triple- threat man, passed to Nelson stand- ,ing unguarded in the end zone. Bruckner again converted. MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 30.-()- Fighting back a supposedly mighty Minnesota team which figured to sweep it right off the gridiron Notre Dame's Fighting Irish rose to the' heights to defeat the Golden Gophers{ in one of the major surprises of thej season by the narrow margin of 7 to ,6. The results stunned a record crowd of 64,1000 which sat under a brilliant sunlight canopy in Memorial Stadium expecting Minnesota to tri- umph and thus blot out the bitter memories of two previous defeats and one tie at the hands of Notre Dame. Gophers Stopped Cold Notre Dame's Irish battled the Gophers to a standstill early in the first period, after scoring a touch- down, and then protecttd their slim lead like football masters. Minnesota displayed no flash of class that won it national recognition in previousI years until the closing minutes of the game when the Gophers opened up with a forward pass attack which advanced the ball from their own 12 yard line to the Notre Dame 35 be- fore it ended with a pass intercep- tion. In desperation Harold Van! Every, Minnesota's brilliant forward pass artist, hurled the ball through the air eight times in an attempt to score and turn defeat into victory. .Just as he did a week ago, Chuck Sweeney, the smiling Irish lad of Bloomington, Ill., saved the game for! Notre Dame. After Minnesota had scored a touchdown in the second period, Sweeney blocked George Faust's try for extra point, allowing the Fighting Irish to retain their one point lead. There was a swirl of bodies crashing into the ball after Faust's toe hit it, but it was Sweeney who did the work. Puplis Scores# EAST Army 20, Virginia Milita N. Carolina St. 12, Boston. Brown 19, Tufts 7 Manhattan 20, Georgeto Holy Cross 0, Temple 0 Ohio U. 13, Marshall 13 New York U. 14, Colgate Harvard 34, Princeton 6 Rutgers 34, Lehigh 0 W. Virginia 64. W. Mary Williams 6, Union 0 Syracuse 19, Fenn State Yale 9, Dartmouth 9 SOUTH Fordham 14, North Caro Georgia Tech 14, Vand Albama 41, Kentucky 0 Tennessee 32, Georgia 0 Tulane 14 ,Mississippi 7 Maryland 13, Florida 7 Duke 43, Washington an Mississippi State 0, Cen MIDWEST Santa Clara 30, Marquet Villanova 7, Detroit 0 Missouri 12, Iowa StateC Oklahoma 19, Kansas St Butler 12, Depauw 0 Albion 13 ,Olivet 0 SOUTHWEST Baylor 6, Texas Christian Arkansas 26, Texas A.& So. Methodist 13, Texas Rice 13, Auburn 7 Texas Tech 14, Oklahom ROCKY MOUNTAI Utah State 7, Colorado t Colorado U. 54, Colorado Montana U. 19, Montana FAR WEST California 27, U.C.L.A. 14 Oregon State 0, Stanford Southern Calif. 0, Washi State 0. Washington 21, Idaho 7. St. Mary's 0, College of P FORMER STUDENT K John M. Czuchna, 23, dotte, a former Universit3 died yesterday in an Albio following injury in ana accident south of Albion. member of the Graduate the first semester last year, drew during the second se BIG TEN T I OHIO STATE DOWNS CHICAGO CHICAGO, Oct. 30.-(A')-Ohio State'shigh-powered gridiron ma- chine coughed and sputtered for onef period today, but found the proper ry 7 carburetor adjustment and rolled toE i College 7 a 39 to 0 triumph over Chicago's game little band of Maroons. )wn 12 Ohio State had two scoring chances n in the first period, but the first onel was pulled apart when Louis Letts in- tercepted a pass from Mike Kabealo,1 7 and the second one was halted by plain, old-fashioned defensive foot- ball. A pair of fumbles by Johnny Rabb deep in Chicago territory earlyk land 0 in the second period delayed the in- evitable a while longer, but onceX 13 under way, the Bucks strong-armed through for two touchdowns in each of the last three periods. WILDCATS HIT WINNING STRIDE! lina 0 MADISON, Wis., Oct. 30.-()P)-1 erbilt 0 Northwestern pushed Wisconsin from1 the ranks of the undefeated in Big, Ten football competition today with a 14 to 6 victory before a crowd of 30,000 in a game that dragged re- d Lee 0 peatedly because of warm weather. tenary 0 Captain Don Heap, left halfback, put Northwestern in the lead mid- tte 0 way in the first period, plunging to a touchdown from the five-yard line after he led a drive from his own 33. 0 Nick Conteas, quarterback, kicked tate 0 the extra point from placement. The Wisconsin pass attack, spar- kling briefly near the close of the second quarter, produced the Bad- .1 0 gers' lone toucl~down. Ed Hart- zM. 13 man, reserve quarterback, threw a 2 long pass to Bill Schmitz, halfback, in the end zone to climax a march a A.&M. 6 from midfield. Fullback Howard [N Weiss missed the kick for extra point. state 0. ball over the goal line and Conteas Mines 0. again kicked the extra point. States0. CORNHUSKERS STALL HOOSIERS LINCOLN, Neb., Oct. 30.-(P)- Biff Jones' hitless wonders still are 0. at it. ington In a dizzy, daffy football game ngoncrammed with contradictions, his ;Nebraska Cornhuskers slashed out a 'acific 0. lone touchdown on the first scrim-' mage play of the game to defeat the potent Hoosiers of Indiana, 7 to 0, ILLED and continue in the list of the na- of Wyan- tibn's unbeaten elevens. y student, Today, almost before the 37,000 n hospital fans, second largest home crowd In automobile Cornhusker history, had settled He was a themselves comfortably to enjoy School in what loomed as a ding-dong battle but with- -on an Indian summer afternoon, they mester. were on their feet roaring. Little ROUNDUP Jack Dodd took a short shovel pass from Johnny Howell behind theNe- braska 35 yard line, where the husk- ers had put the ball in play after an out-of-bounds kickoff, and started eating up the yards around his left end. His teammates came to his aid with superb downfield blocking. Twice he stumbled in the clutches of Hoo-' sier blackshirts, but finally daylight loomed ahead and he crossed the goal' standing up. Meanwhile the sturdy Hoosiers surged up and down the field like a! big black wavedregistering 14 first downs. They gained a net 136 yards by land and 132 yards by air. PURDUE THUMPS HAWKEYES LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 30.-(P)- Purdue's Boilermakers displayed a running attack for the first time this season and vanquished Iowa, 13 to 0, today to score its initial Big Ten victory before a Dad's Day crowd of 20,000. The Boilermakers put over touch- downs in the first and third periodsl and narrowly missed a third tally just before the final gun. It was their first Conference victory of the current campaign; Iowa has yet to win a Big Ten contest. Purdue's bone-crushers marched to a touchdown without the aid of a single forward pass. Cecil Isbell went over from the 16-yard line for the first score. DETROIT, Oct. 30.-(P)-Villan- ova blasted the University of Detroit from the ranks of the nation's unde- feated and untied football teams by sweeping to a 7-to-0 triumph over the Titans in a fierce give-and-take battle today. The hard-charging Villanova line checked "Anvil Andy" Farkas, Detroit halfback who topped the nation's college scorers last week, forcing De- troit to take to the air for most of its gains. A blocked punt recovered on the Detroit 19 in the first period placed iVillanova in scoring position. With Andy Stopper the spearhead, Villan- ova carried to the eight. On fourth down Ray Stoviak passed to Art Raimo for seven precious yards and a touchdown. John Wysocki place- kicked the extra point. Villanova Halts Titans' Victory Streak, 7 ToO Keg or Bottled Beer All Brands - Free Delivery Ty's Service Market 420 Miller Avenue Phone 3205 19 BLUE STAR BRAND SALT For All Types of Water Softeners - WE DELIVER - HERTLER BROS. 210 South Ashley Street Phone 2-1713 1 i From the very beginning Notre Dame was an alert, smart, scrappy eleven. The first time the Irish got the ball on a punt, action began. Andy Puplis, Notre Dame's little quarterback, ran the ball back 35 yntl a± nnr 4-1n.uiig I I ;---esgoin to I . yards along the side lines, going to Minnesota's 34 before Larry Buhler, Elis Rally To Tie Minnesota fullback, smacked him out of bound. On the third down Mc- Dartmouth 9 To 9 Carthy passed to McCormick who was stopped on Minnesota's 19 and then McCarthy struck the end of the NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 30.-UP) nine yard stripe. Thesing, Notre -Yale hauled itself back from the Dame fullback, plowed three yards brink of the Blue's first defeat of and McCarthy banged around right the football season today by tying end to the four. From there Pupils Dartmouth, 9 to 9 with only three on a quarterback sneak, dived across seconds to go in an electrifying fin- the line and then kicked goal. ish witnessed by a capacity crowd of Women's /1; pn Alive! goQ OF COURSE the lobster is Alive, and should be right up to the time it is dashed into the hot water and served as a delicious dish on the table a few seconds later. FRESH, that is the key word to fine eating, that is the word that rules the kitchen of the- ALLEN EL HO'TEL 126 East Huron Dial 4241 72,000 spectators. The Elis snatched a touchdown from the air, with a last-ditch flour- ish, after Dartmouth's rugged con- valescents, getting better as the game progressed, appeared to have clinched a third straight conquest over Yale with a 90-yard touchdown dash by Bob McLeod and a field goal from the 30-yard line by Phil Dostal. Al Hessberg took two long passes from Captain Clint Frank, Yale's All- America back, to gain 63 of the 651 yards reeled off in the closing Eli scoring thrust. TABLE DECORATI ONS at CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP 203 East Liberty Telephone 2-2973 SUEDE RIDING VESTS BLUE - GREEN. - TAN - ORANGE Special at $4.95 GEO. J. MOE SPORT, SHOPS 711 North University 902 South State FISHOW'S WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIR 347 Maynard Cor. William Watch Crystals 35c U U U '"THE LEADERS AND BEST" FOR SIX COLLEGIATE GENERATIONS (27 Years)