THE MICHIGAN DAILY .- t Dartmouth Princeton . . .2 Duke . . . . . . Colgate .. . ......7 Cornell . ......... . Harvard 20 Michigan State .. 18 Northwestern . . 0 Illinois Wesleyan 0. Drake...... .. 3 ... 0 Santa Clara Texas A&M ..... 7 Stanford.........8 UC.L.A.. .... 13, ...0. Washington State . 0 Washington .. . . . 0 - o .. .. Wolverines Trample Chicago, 45 To 7, In Big Ten Opner . - _ _ Speedy Backs Run Rampant Over Maroons, Started It Southern Cal's Trojans Upset 0.S.U., 14-7 Christy And Kiski Boys Flash Power Against Maroons Seven Players Carry Across Chicago's Behind ASturdy Ball Goa Line Siegel's Play Shines (Continued from Page 1) tackles and was the keyman at all times. T h r e e backfield combinations scored touchdowns for Michigan in the first half. The first-Jack Meyer, Harmon, Purucker, and Ed Phillips- mar hed 56 yards in two plays for the first score. Chicago received the kickoff, failed to gain, and Davenport punted out of bounds on the Michigan 44. After Marmon cracked left tackle for 12 yards on the first play Puruck- er came through with the initial coup d'etat. Purucker took the ball, moved past the line of scrimmage when Harmon neatly dumped Willis Littleford, Ma- roon end, and veered into the secon- dary. His blockers moved to the right, and he cut straight down the middle to elude Sollie Sherman, the safety man, and complete his 44 yard touch- down dash. 'Norm Purucker, senior halfback, carried the ball on Michigan's see- .ond play of the game and ran 44 yards for his team's first score in the 45-7 victory over Chicago. Now For Minnesota I 1 7 CHICAGO Littleford Weideman Fink Wheeler Maurovich Rendelman Davenport Sherman Hamity (c); Valorz Goodstein Pos. LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB MICHIGAN Smick Siegel Brennan Kodros Heikkinen Savilla Nicholson Meyer Purucker Harmon Phillips Kraemer Scores Forest Evashevski, Paul Kromer Fred Trosko, and Ed Christy took f over in the second quarter with the ball on the Chicago 25 yard line,. and Kromer made it another score on the] first play by circling right end and cutting back to the left for a touch- down. Blockers Valek, Evashevski, and Jordan cleared the way. Valek's] place kick for the point was low. f A third backfield of Lou Levine, ] Strong, Mehaffey, and Herc Renda provided the impetus for the next score. With a minute and 45 seconds of the half remaining, Strong faded and threw a pass to Ed Czak who was standing on the goal line with Levine. He almost lost the ball as the, two men leaped simultaneously. After Chicago had punted early in the second half to the Michigan 41, Hamon pounded over right tackle, shot in the clear and escaped five tacklers, all of whon had their hands on him, for a 59 yard jaunt. Three More Michigan scored three times in the final period. After a typically poor Maroon punt from the end zone hacf given Michigan the ball on the Chica- go 30, Trosko, Kromer, and Christy pounded away to the Maroon five, and Trosko circled left end, escaping the clutches of a diving Valorz for the score. Still Michigan marched-down the field this time to the Chicago 31. Me- haffey took the ball, slammed through a tremendous hole in the center of the line and drove straight down the middle of the field for the 39th point. Chicago's entire secondary was cut down on this play. "More, more, more," yelled the vic- tory-starved crowd, and the break came. With a minute and 20 seconds remaining, Ralph Fritz recovered a Chicago fumble on their 19 yard line. Line plays moved the ball to the 14, Score by periods: Chicago,.'............0 7 Michigan............6 12 0 0- 7 7 20-45 Chicago scoring: Touchdown: Da- venport. Point after touchdown Va'- lorz (placekick).. Michigan scoring: Touchdowns: Purucker, Kromer (sub for Purucker), Czak (sub for Nicholson), Harmon, Trosko (sub for Harmon), Mehaf- fey (sub for Phillips); Strong (sub for Purucker). Point after touchdowns ; Smick (place kick); Brennan (place kick). Jack Meyer (place kick). Chicago substitutions: Ends, How- ard, Harlan. Tackles, Stearns, Flack, Bex. Guards; Howe, Sass, Wichman. Centers; Plunkett, Cassels. Backs, Bob Meyer, Ottomeyer, Crawford, MacNamee. Michigan substitutions: Ends, Va- lek, Czak, Gedeon, Nielson, Zielinski. Tackles, Jordan, Kuhn. Guards: Fritz, Sukup, Olds. Center, Tinker. Backs: Trosko, Evashevski, Christy, Kromer, Mehaffey, Levine, Strong, Renda, Laskey, Luther, Kitti. Referee: Lyle Clarno (Bradley? Tech); Umpire: H. E. Hedges, (Dart- mouth); Field Judge; Fred Young (Illinois Wesleyan); Head Linesman: Perry Graves (Illinois). and with 18 seconds of play left, Strong cut inside of left end and dove across the last line. Chicago had the ball at the end, but all the Maroons had strength to do was to go through the motions. Fatigued and sore, Bob Meyer threw one last desperate pass, but it sailed askew into the stands as the gun barked. It aptly typified Chicago's fu- tility. Lansdell, U.S.C. Quarter, Returns Punt 83 Yards For Score At Ohio COLUMBUS, O. Oct. 8-(P)-Tradi- tion and an alert Southern California team wrecked Ohio State's hopes of football glory here today before a crowd of 62,578, the Trojans winning 14 to 7 although outgained in every departmentof play. Fumbles and intercepted passes spelled Ohio's doom. The- alert Tro- jans snagged three Buckeye bobbles and added six pass interceptions. Ohio gobbled up but one Trojan fumble and did not get a hand on any of 14 aerials tossed by the westerners. Score At Outset. Grenville Lansdell, Trojan quarter- back opened the scoring in the first minute of play. He snagged a punt from Co-Captain Mike Kabealo of Ohio and threaded 83 yards through a broken field for a touchdown. Phil' Gaspar donned his magic kicking toe to boot the extra point. Ohio counted in the second period when end Keith Bliss blocked Lans- dell's punt on the 18 and recovered on the one-yard line. Fullback Jimmy Langhurst plunged over for the touch- down a minute later and center Charles Maag kicked the point that tied the count. Day To Krueger The Trojans made the thrust that won the game in the third period. Oliver Day, who replaced Lansdell at quarter, passed 18 yards to Stone- braker, sophomore end, then fired a touchdown pass from the 25-yard line to Alvin Krueger in the end zone. Ohio had marched 79 yards in the second period, but a place kick failed with 16 seconds to play. In the last period, the Trojans moved to the Buck two-inch line after a pass intercep- tion, but were checked by a stonewall line. Statistics, outside of the all-im- portant score, were all in favor of the Bucks. Ohio made 14 first downs to the Trojans' five and in all depart- ments of play outgained the visitors, 318 yards to 234, but was impotent in scoring range. Wisconsin Routs Hawkeyes 31-13 IOWA CITY, Oct. 8.-(P)-Wiscon- sin's swashbuckling Badgers today' issued a sharp ultimatum to future Western Conferences foes that they definitely must be counted in on the championship race. The Badgers crushed Iowa, 31 to 13, before 35,000 homecoming specta- tors under a hot October sun. Iowa rooters haven't seen an Iowa team win a Big Ten game at home since 1933. The Badgers scored first in the opening quarter, added another in the second and turned the game into a rout with three sparkling touchdowns before five minutes had elapsed in the third period. Paul Kromer, Ed Christy, and Howard 'Jeep' Mehaffey, were instrumental in Michigan's overwhelming 45-7 victory over Chicago. Kromer and Mehaffey, both Kiski boys scored touchdowns, Kromer accounting for two. Ed Christy failed to do any scoring, but paved the way for several touchdown plays, with his gains through the line. Wolverines Of 40 Years Ago See A New Edition Of Victory March ByDICK SIERK The famous Wolverine football team of 1898, which won Michigan's first Big Ten title by beating Chicago to the tune of 12-11 in a hard-fought battle, returner: yesterday and saw' Michigan, 1938 edition, romp to a 45-7 decision over the Maroons. The former Wolverine heroes had nothing but praise for Fritz Crisler's team which simply had too much power for the beleaguered Chicago team. Bennett Is Thrilled J. W. F. Bennett, who captained the team of '98, was all smiles as the last Wolverine touchdown went up on the scoreboard just before the final gun sounded. Mr. Bennett, who now lives in New York, makes an annual trip to Ann Arbor every fall but for him the combination of the. great Michigan victory and "1898 Day" made this year'strip the "best ever". "My greatest thrill today came when the band played The Victors for our team," said Mr. Bennett. "It reminded me of the day Chicago gave us such a battle back in 1898. The game was so much different then. No passes, a minimum of long spectacular runs, with mostly a lot of bruising line play, that was the way we played the game. But this game is much more interesting to watch." Substitutes Impress "Crisler really has a fine team," Mr. Bennett continued," and especially interesting to me was theularge num- ber of substitutes he could and did send into the game. In our day we were in worse shape when it came to substitutes than Chicago wasctoday. KROMER CHRISTY MEHAFFEY Then, however, we didn't have any more injuries than they do today. Asked who in his opinion showed best for Michigan today Mr. Bennett observed that "the all look good to me" but added that Paul Kromer, Tom Harmon, and Norm Purucker were especially impressive. Mr. Bennett refused to state whether he would rather play the game as it was played in his time or. in the modern manner on the grounds' that he doesn't know how it feels to, be playing the game of today. He would, however, like to try the modern game because of its more, wide-open type of play. Kansas City Routs Newark For TitleI KANSAS CITY, Saturday, Oct. 8.1 -(P)-The Kansas City Blues, today, took the deciding game of the Little World Series from Newark, 8-4, when they overcame a four-run deficit to depose the 1937 minor league champs from their throne. Kansas City took the series, four games to three, after being down three games tb two in the series between two clubs which are both the property of Col. Jacob Ruppert, owner of the New York Yankees. In their series with Indianapolis, and St. Paul the Blues were also forced to come from behind to win their playoff berth. Sixteen hits were collected by Kan- sas off three Newark pitchers, while the Blues also used three pitchers who yielded ten hits. Michigan State Hard Pressed To Win, 18-0. Defeat Illinois Wesleyan When Reserves Click During Second Half Gophers Beat Purdue, 7-0; Moore St ar s Minnesota Gets Seventeen First Downs And Checks Boilermakers' Attack MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 8.- (A) - Minnesota opened its 1938 Big Ten title bid by defeating Purdue, 7 to 0, before 52,000 persons today, but the gallant Boilermakers fought so stub- bornly that the Golden Gophers' famed power attack needed almost three complete periods to produce the winning score. So unyielding were Purdue's stal- warts that Minnesota got 17 first downs and vast stretches of yardage before Fullback Christiansen blasted over from the one-yard line with sec- onds to play in the third quarter. Purdue Folds After that the Boilermakers with- ered and the Western Conference champions smashed to a first down on the Purdue five. But Coach Mal Elwards' squad braced and took the ball on its own one-yard line. The Indiana huskies asserted their defensive strength in the opening pe- riod, turning back a Minnesota drive on the Purdue 15 from where Quarter- back George Faust missed a field goal. It was another big day for Minne- sota's brilliant halfback, Wilbur Moore, and it was no fault of Moore that the Golden ,Gophers didn't get some toudhdowns earlier in the game. The rugged Minnesota senior was just as hard to stop as he was in the Wash- ington and Nebraska contests. Gophers Stop Attack Purdue's attack was thoroughly checked both by land and by air. The Boilermakers made only one first down-in the last period-and got no closer to Minnesota's goal than the 45 yard line where they quickly yield- ed the ball. Purdue's fast backs were stopped cold. They were in position to pass so seldom that only two for- wards were attempted, both unsuc- cessful. Halfback Louis Brock's great punt- ing was a major factor in nullifying Minnesota's tremendous yardage. He kicked one 75 yards over the safety man's head to the Minnesota two yard line. 4 EAST LANSING, Oct. 8.-(0)-The Spartans of Michigan State College stumbled back onto the victory trail here today, grasping an unimpressive 18 to 0 win over an under-rated Il- linois Wesleyan team. State's line failed to -show much improvement over its performance in the Michigan game while the Titan line checked the Spartan running at- tack and held the favorites scoreless in the first half. Coach Charley Bachman's second string starters were stalled completely in the first period and it was not until the varsity took over in the second period that the State attack began to click. The varsity hung up no tallies but paved the way for what followed: By 'wearying the eleven from Bloomington, Ind. The Spartan second team went intc the fray in the third :quarter anc opened a passing attack. Forwards from Ciolek to Diebold and to Pearce, together with off-tackles slashes by the same Ciolek and Peace, brought the ball to the Titan nine, from which point Ciolek rounded his own right end for the first touchdown. Pearce', attempted place kick was low. Later a short Wesleyan punt gavE the Spartans the ball on the Titan 40 Jerry Drake, third string substitute passed to Dave Diehl for 13 yards f I. left wall to the 22. On the next play Drake went over. Pearce again failed to convert. The final marker came in the last quarter. Budinski, another third- stringer, took the ball after a series of passes and line plunges had ad- vanced State to the Wesleyan 22, and knifed off tackle for 12 yards to the Titan 10. The old State end-around play enabled third stringer Black- burn, an end, to score. Drake's kick was blocked by Hoswell. The spectators got only a glimpse of State's ace, halfback Johnny Pin- gel. After he and Steve Szasz picked up 26 yards on three plays, Pingel broke away and raced 50 yards before he was downed. The Mt. Clemens veteran was yanked with the rest of the regulars and saw little action. then sneaked through a hole in his ... the shortest thing in the world is not a r1 "SC E4 4 J, b t. thi tile )igest14,6 I11): i1 1he word is th leglit. of tini your stI t will hokdits press when pressed by Goldman's "press-Only" a -WC.. ttil tS only 1/ tile price of claning and pressing, 0 Phone ~ 21 for FeePDly rr ''U~ ervic e. r = ®l® - -