THE MICHIGAN DAILY New York Giants Win Professional Football Title, 23 To I? V4- Packers Bow In Sensational -Gridiron Battle Crowd Of 48,000 Sees Final Green Bay Drive Pail In Dying Minutes NEW YORK, Dec. 11-4P)-In a game that surpassed the wildest dreams of a fiction writer, the New York Giants vanquished the Green Bay Packers, 23 to 17, today and won the National Professional Football League championship. A Polo Grounds crowd of 48,120, was treated with a battle that in- cluded 40 points, two field goals, a 49-yard pass and a final desperate drive by the Packers that brought them 40 yards in the last,11 seconds of play.. But then it was too late. The New Yorkers, who had taken the lead in the first period on a field goal and a touchdown and held it for all but three minutes of the game, were too strong. As time ran out they smashed through to hurry Arnold Herber and his last pass' fell to the soggy turf with no receiver near it. Capitalizing on breaks, the Giants had a nine-point' lead before the game was ten minutes old. They lost the lead by one point in the third period when Paul Engebretsen place- kicked a field goal and put the Pack- ers ahead 17-16, and then stormed down the field after the next kick- off for 61 yards and the touchdown that won the game. In this final drive Hank Soar brought the kick-off back 19 yards to his own 39. Then he plunged at the line, drove through the tackles, and finally reached the Packer 38. Ed Danowski, the league's leading passer, took charge at this point. He sent a ten-yard heave to Soar. The same operative smashed through the short side guard for a four-yard gain and the ball was on the Packer 24, when Danowski spun back and passed. Soar took the ball off Clark Hinkle's finger-tips on the seven and dragged the Green Bay full-back over the line for the touchdown. Cuff kicked goal. The lights were on as the Packers' gathered themselves for one last try. Herber on a fake pass ran 15 yards. Then he thew a long- flat one to Mul- leneaux that put the leather on the Giants' 40. With five seconds to play, the Polo Grounds shaking with cheers, shouts and groans, Herber went back, was rushed and passed hard but in- accurately. The ball hit the turf and the game was over. Wins Midwest Title PRESS PASSES By BUD BENJAMIN Came With Irish To Inaugurate Michigan Cagers' Vacation Trip .Q= Z=- q In Retrospect... THE ONLY FIRM conviction that this chronicler derived from -Sat- urday night's basketball game was that the Michigan basketball edition will have a surplus of aggressiveness. They will scrap and they will plug, they will provide a truly interesting brand of basketball; but their success is something that will have to await time and an appraisal of their Con- ference competition. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan has in- numerable rough edges to smooth out. There were mistakes aplenty Satur- day night-poor passing, sloppy ball handling, and mental laxities that must be corrected. But it was the first game and for that reason alone the performance must be rated as highly creditable.' Michigan was keyed Saturday night. Psychologically they were at the zenith. Oosterbaan will un- doubtedly ease up this week, let the boys play the Notre Dame game and enter the East in a normal frame of mind, and then seek to regain the peak as the Conference "season opens. I thought Michigan's most glaring oversights Saturday night were a failure to get the rebounds and a mental sluggishness. The backboard shortcoming was rectified in the second half when Dan Smick and Jim Rae began using their six-four frames to advantage. The lack of alertness came' in the Wolverines' failure to play the loose ball and to take advantage of those split-second opportunities that have made Pur- due's brand of fast break renowned. Both of these weaknesses, I believe, will be corrected in time. From a personnel point of view, Michigan has the raw material to produce an acceptable club. Capt.' Leo Beebe continues to play an ex- cellent brand of ball in the backcourt. He is the playmaker, the steadying influence, the most dexterous of the ball handlers. Leo has scrapped vig- orously in basketball and baseball for two years, and you can be assured that his aggressiveness will quicken in tempo this winter. Jim Rae is probably the most improved ball player on the team. His handling of the lball was at all'times expert, and his passing was sure. He still is a trifle gun shy about shooting, as was John .Townsend during his early days, but his tendency to feed rather than take a gander at the. basket from a close position will be remedied in time. urday night and with the inner works clogged a good deal of the time, it is fortunate for the Wolverines that Edward is so gifted. Charley Pink is the most dog- ged of competitors and perhaps the inspirational force behind the team. He lacks confidence in himself, but he is well endowed and should improve considerably, He is quick, unusually aggressive, and plays a fine defensive game. Pink has a left handed push shot, which he likes to use after drib- bling from side court into the interior of the foul circle, and he should employ it more often. Only two reserves saw action Sat- urday night. Russ Dobson relieved Smick, who had three personals against him, but had little opportuni- ty to show anything except a defen- sive alertness on one blocked Spar- tan attempt at a dogshot. Herb Brogan, a clean cut sopho- more, appeared as Pink's relief and indicated that he is a player of no mean ability. He entered his' first collegiate game before over 6,000 yelling fans, and proceeded to play with a poise, the like of which I have never seen exhibited by a sophomore. He is very fast, active, spirited, and he has a rare eye. Brogan is per- haps the best sophomore prospect since Townsend, and I think it in- evitable that he will be heard from this season. Defensively the team played good ball. While State employed , a modified zone, Michigan stuck to the old man-to-man, and I really mean stuck. I believe this team is superior defensively, and that attribute will support its somewhat unpredictable offensive power. Michigan will lose games this year as will every other team in the Con- ference. That is tradition. How many they drop depends upon (1) improved mastery of the new offense; (2) continued development of the veteran talent; (3) the strength of the Conference; and (4) the ability of the new sophomores to find them- selves in a very tough basketball so- ciety. I-M Cage League Draws 128 Entries By TOM PHARES Stimulated by their victory over a favored Michigan State team Satur- ;.. day; Michigan's basketball squad will embark Thursday morning to tackle one of the toughest quintets in the country at Notre Dame, after which }', ": "" hesquad will ha eastfo their V ~annual vacation series. k4The Wolverines have not met Notre Dame in basketball since 1924 when they dropped a 29-25 decision, but the Irish have since established them- selves as a national standout aggre- gation. Irish Have Good Record In the past 15 seasons Coach George Forrest 'Butch' Jordan, heavy- Keogan's teams have won 252 games weight mainstay' on Coach Cliff and lost 71 which gives him a per- Keen's Big-Ten title-holding wrest- centage of .780--a record surpassed ling team, won his team's only first only by Coach Ward Lambert of Pur- place in the Midwest meet won by due. Last year the Irish won 20 Indiana last Saturday night at games while losing only three, a du- Chicago. plication of their previous year's record. Although they lost their three lead- Varsity Matm en ing scorers from last year, Notre Dame has found replacements and is evidently off on another tear. They SF i nishIi Sec d opened the season by walloping Kala- mazoo 64-13. Michigan State won In M idwest M eet over the same team 36 to 26 a week later. Sadowski Is Spearhead By MASE GOULD Forward Eddie Sadowski is the The powerful Indiana Hoosiers spearhead of the Irish attack having scored 136 points last season. Earl proved the only stumbling block in Brown, a Benton Harbor boy, is cap- the way of Michigan's Varsity wrest- tain of the squad and plays guard. ling team at Chicago last Saturday Following Thursday's contest" at night when they managed to head off South Bend, the first stop on the the Wolverines to win the All-Mid- Wolverines trek east will be at Roch- ester, N.Y., where they will clash with west championships. the University of Rochester on Sat- Indiana had twenty-two points at urday. Last fall, Michigan whipped the end of the two-day competition; Rochester 50 to 29. Stunned by that Michigan, Big Ten title-holder, was beating, the Yellowjackets dropped second with thirteen; Wheaton Col- their next game to Hamilton but then hsnapped out of it to win their last 10 lege had five; Cornell College, three, straight. Wisconsin, two; and Northwestern, Coach Lou Alexander has three Illinois and Purdue brought up the veterans from last year's quintet as a rear with a point apiece nucleous around which this season's Forrest 'Butch' Jordan, heavy- weight, after pinning two men in earlier matches, came through in the finals to give Chuck Mutter, former Illinois star, a decisive beating to walk off with an Elgin wrist watch for Michigan's only first place. Don Nichols, 175-pounder, came close to repeating Jordan's perfor- mance when he tied Chris Traicoff of Indiana in the finals. The officials decided to re-stage the match when the Hoosiers invade the Field House on Jan. 13. Harold Nichols met up with team- mate Bill Combs, ineligible this sem- ester and an unattached entry, in the quarter-finals. The two boys put on a great match with Harold com- ing out on top, 6 to 5. Nick later lost to Bill Lederman in the semi-finals. Dick Tasch advanced to the semi- finals, where he bowed to Traicoff of Indiana, who later fought a dead heat with Don Nichols, while Frank Morgan also went to the next-to-last round before losing to Chauncey Mc- Daniels of Indiana in a nip and tuck overtime match. aggregation is built. His two for- wards and a guard are returning but SPORT SHOPS, gone is Captain Buddie Spies, lead- ing scorer for the past three years 711 North University 902 South State and one of the best basketball players ever developed in Rochester. " That Are Distinctively Diffei VAN BOVEN GIFTS reflect the true Christqas Spirit. They ark appreciated by the person accustomed to fine things. A Co-ed Can't . Drink Beer PIPE Smoke a CIGAR CIGARETTE Pay her way Own a brain Be beautiful DOWN WITH CO-EDS See the DECEMBER GARGOYLE ON CAMPSI