THE MICHIGAN DAILY '"='" ,;, _ :. Pittsburgh Wisconsin .....26 . . .. 6 Notre D Illinois lame 14 Ohio State .......0 Indiana . 6 Northwestern .... oj Nebraska ..... . . Purdue . ....0. . Fordham .... 6 Yale....... .6 Navy........ I I _______________________-________________ O.S.U.-N.U., Indiana-Nebraska Tie; Illinois, Wisconsin And Chicago Lose' A Sixty-Minute Man Youof M By Sec Terry EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 15.-UP)-~ Northwestern, braked down by for- ward pass interceptions, was held to a scoreless tie by a dogged Ohio State eleven before 38,000 s9ectators at Dyche Stadium 'today. The result settled nothing at all about the aspirations of both teams for Western Conference champion- ship consideration. The outcome was decided on the first play of the second period. Jack Ryan, Northwestern's brilliant half- back, failed to dent the Buckeye line from the five yard mark with the re- sult that the Wildcats lost the ball on downs. It was almost a duplicate of the situation at Columbus a year ago when the Buckeyes stopped Don Heap on the four yard line.' Northwestern had the decided edge in the offensive for most of the game, but the Wildcats escaped defeat onlya by the narrow margin that kept cen- ter Charley Maag's attempted field goal from whizzing over the cross- bars in the final two minutes of play. Hoosiers Break Spell LINCOLN, Neb., Oct. 15.-(JP)-Op- portunity knocked repeatedly for Ne- braska's Cornhuskers, but their in- terconference football game with In- xdiana here today ended in a scoreless deadlock. The result left each team still gun- ning for its first victory of the sea- son. Indiana broke the spell Ne- b .askA L1hCna dJ V h H. 11 i f previous contests between the two schools. Sophomore halfback Herman Roh- rig made four attempts to score for the Huskers by way of field goals, but each effort was wide or short. Ne- braska's most serious bid for victory came late in the third quarter. Pitt Still Tops MADISON, Wis., Oct. 15.-(P)- Pittsburgh's Panthers gobbled up Wisconsin's Badgers today, 26 to 6, with a swift and sure attack to ex- tend their wins to four this season. Playing on a dry, firm field, Pitt ran, passed and intercepted its way to touchdowns in the last three quar- ters. Wisconsin's six points were scored in the last 10 seconds of the game by second string reserves against Pitt's third team. One of a barrage of passes, with halfback John Tennant throwing to Gordon Gile, an end, put the Badgers in the scoring column. Marshall Goldberg, fast stepping fullback, started the Pittadrive mid- way in the second quarter after Coach John Sutherland had held his veterans on the bench for rest and instructions. Halfback Richard Cassiano sparked the drive with a 22- yard run to the one yard stripe, from w h e r e Goldberg easily stepped M.S.C. Defeats West Va,. 26-0 Huskersa over n booset Huskers having won both of t a' w This poor fellow can't cide where to eat-beca he hasn't been to Flautz's Visit Flautz's today you'll make it a habit! s, Wte . - he two - Intercepted Passes, Diehl Lead In State Victory MORGANTOWN, W. Va., Oct. 15.-- (P)-A smart Michigan State eleven scored on a break early in the first quarter and rolled up the count on intercepted passes today to down West Virginia University, 26-0. Dave Diehl, the Spartan's great left end, recovered a blocked punt for the first marker, and halfback John Uingel scored the second on a one-yard thrust in the third period after a pass carried the ball to scor- ing position. Diehl and Pearce, sub- stitute back, added the other touch- de- downs on intercepted passes, the lat- ter racing 66 yards to score. iuse Griffith, Michigan State guard, g1 paved the way for the first score by rushing through to block Carliss'f kick and Diehl fell on it over the goal and line for a touchdown. Clarke's fumble in the third period led to the second touchdown. Pingel recovered for Michigan State on West Virginia's 30 and after a couple line plays, Pingel flipped a pass to 1Telson who was downed on the 1-yard line. 4 Pingel went through center for the touchdown. In the fourth quarter Diehl inter- NE cepted Audia's pass on the West Vir- ginia 30 and ran for the-third touch- down. *1 e The fourth was another gift from the harrassed Mountaineers. Pearce, one of the horde of substitutes thatr Michigan State sent on the field, pulled in White's pass and ran 66 ght yards to score. With only seconds left to play, Michigan State appeared 4-8 to be headed for another touchdown but the Mountaineers finally stopped the attack through a big hole in the line. Wil- liam Daddio, end, kicked the extra point. Irish Down Illini SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 15.--(P) -Two spectacular maneuvers, one al sudden bid through the air and the other a breath-taking thrust on the ground, carried Notre Dame's foot- ball legions to a 14 to 6 victory over Illinois today. Before the 45,000 spectators hardly had settled into their seats, Notre, Dame scored a first period touchdown on a long pass from Harry Stevenson to Earl Brown. In the third period, fleet Ben Sheridan brilliantly re- turned a punt 68 yards to score. Illinois got its touchdown shortly afterward by recovering a blocked Irish punt a yard from the Notre Dame goal line-but didn't have quite enough left for a serious threat to the Playing at Notre Dame for the first! time, Illinois depended on a line which had whipped Indiana a week ago. To- day the Illini forwards were out- played from start to finish. Illinois, stopped on the ground, took to the air only to encounter an alert Irish secondary which permitted only three completions in 12 aerial at- tempts. Iowa's Big Ten Win CHICAGO, Oct. 15.-(P)-Iowa's Hawkeyes broke their co-lease with Chicago on the Big Ten cellar today by outpointing the Maroons, 27 to 14, before a crowd of 8,000 at Stagg Field. The victory was the first Western Conference triumph for the Hawkeyes since they walloped Illinois, 19 to 0, in 1935. The Maroons haven't won a Big Ten game since nipping Wis- consin, 7 to 6, in 1936. Fordham Hammers Purdue To 6-6 Game NEW YORK, Oct. 14-()-Ford- ham's Rams took Purdue's Boilermak- ers for a ride for life at the Polo Gruonds today but all they got was a tie 6-6 score that amounted to a stunning upset viewed by 31,000 fran- tic, sweltering spectators. Fordham, victimized by three gal- lant goal line stands in the first half during which the Rams backs, led by sophomore Leonard Eshmont of At- las, Pa., piled up 251 yards from rush- ing, scored on a 49-yard sprint by Eshmont in the third period only to have Purdue come back to tie the score. The hero of the Boilermaker return drive was Lou Brock, who capped a great day of running and kicking with a 17-yard touchdown rush early in the final period. Both teams, badly rushed by lines that reared to superb heights in the crisis, missed chances for victories with placement kicks that were car- bon copies. Pete Holovak's try for Fordham was wide and high and so was the desperate try made by I rock. I' t MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Oct. 15.- These limp, clammy, hands refuse to function as Michigan's gallant eleven strives vainly, with bare seconds to play, to vindicate the gamest display of football these weary eyes ever saw. Fifty seven thousand homecomers, whose enthusiasm had been unre- strained throughout the afternoon of queen coronations; parades and thrilling football stand in silent ap- preciation of a team which had ex- hausted its very fiber to win. But when the traditional autumn shadows lengthen over Memorial Sta- dium, Michigan's warriors walk off' the field bowed in defeat, some cry- ing others too utterly exhausted even realize that in the gridiron valhalla there are places for men of their calibre. T HEY SAY up here that Bernie Bierman, the Minnesota coach, makes an annual trip through thef state in quest of football talent. He asks each likely looking farm boy the direction of the next town, and if the' lad points with his hand, Bierman1 ignores him and proceeds to the next place. But if the lad picks his plow up and points with it, then the Gopher mentor is interested. How- ever apocryphal the story may be, these Norsemen grow big and strong -and play football for Minnesota. g FEW universities include among its l synthetic alumni so rabid and ri-1 bald a group as Minnesota's. Mar-l shall farmers and Hibbing miners alike refer possessively to the Gophers1 as "our boys," and they affectionately' regard reticent Bernard Bierman, that paragon of coaching efficiency,; as just plain "Bernie." And onE homecoming days-which is today- the chores and ore can wait as thou-1 sands of suppressed souls invade the Twin Cities, tip the lid for a few ecstatic hours and then repair again to their drab, eventless narrow corn- ers. While such a safety valve is recom-l mended for inhibited rustics, it plays, ned with the rural sons and daugh-1 ters. For they come to Minneapolis1 when the sordid, devitalizing aspects1 of metropolitan life are gaudily camouflaged by the splash of gaiety and color and by people who are will- ing for "the nonce to reject the grim- mer realities. The Big City takes on a glamor and fascination, which- contrasted with the simple, unadorned acre of wheat-seduce their restless spirits. The alarming exodus of youth from the farm may be traceable to such powerful lures as a home- coming occasion. But as Sigurd, the bartender at The Schooner over on Archie Kodros, Michigan's hard- working center, deserves a better fate than seeing his team suffer a heart-breaking defeat at the hands of Minnesota, for he did more than his part in an effort to upset the Gophers by playing the entire game -sixty minutes of fighting football! Nicollet, says, nothing so enriches the existence of a lonely farmhand as urban disillusionments. And with a dab of imagination and an audience, he can become a ready favorite in town on Wednesday and Faturday nights. BUT BACK to football. This press- box high atop Memorial Stadium is strongly remindful of Ann Arbor, for scattered about these terraced premises are Wily Will Reed, Free Press ace, and his cynical informer, Ferdinand (Tod) Rockwell; grizzled Mill Marsh, madly pounding out his yarn for the Booth syndicate; Clinton B. Conger, United Press scribe; De- troit Times Robert Murphy and his AP stooge, David Zeitlin; Henry Sal- singer, venerable Detroit News sports editor; Daily representatives, Burton Benjamin, the sports ed, and Her- bert Lev, his aide de camp; Leo Beebe, who gave us a few unsolicited thrills with his mad driving through Wis- consin, spotting for radio station MTNC; and the faTniilar faces of Harry (Himself) Wismer, WJR's am- bitious sportscaster who has become a veritable tumble weed in covering both Michigan and Detroit Lions' games (he left by plane shortly after the final gun), and Harry Kipke, a commentator who picked Minnesota. Different ..' try a WEGENER'S olted . INOriginal M ilk ROCK & RYE 07I v I', "K W, 71 Closed Every Monday Bottled B E E R Draught&w I FLAUTZ's Caf4 122 West Washington Corner Ashley Hours: 11 A.M. to Midnig , U4 Sunday Special! Chicken Plate Afl Desert & Beverage THE GERMAN INN 117 W. 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