0 I S AT's NOVEMBER 17, 1940 THE -MICHIGAN DAILY , PAGE TABS TflEMTCT4A Y I yYJ PA~B Iowa. .... Notre Dame .. . 7 Ohio State .. ....., Illinois .... .. . .14 Wisconsin ..... 6 Indiana,. ......27 ...10 Penn . Army . 48 Cornell ... 0 Dartmouth . . . . . 73 Boston College . Georgetown .. . 19 Minnesota .,.. .33 Princeton ...4. . . 18 Purdue ....... 6 Yale........ 10 . f Wolverines Stave Off Last Period Rally V To Tame Wildcats Inspired Iowa Eleven Upsets Fighting Irish Last Period Touchdown Gives Hawkeyes 7-0 Win Before 50,000 Fans SOUTH BEND, IND., Nov. 16.-(R) -Mighty Notre Dame fell from the ranks of the nation's undefeated and untied teams today, bowing to the amazing Iowa Hawkeyes, who per- formed brilliantly when'the breaks came their way to score a 7 to 0 vic- tory before 50,000 shivering specta- tors. The hopes of the Fighting Irish for their first perfect season in a decade foundered on their own mistakes and the inspired play of the Iowans, who had lost four games in a row. Hawkeyes Repulse Irish Iowa, using only 15 men in the entire game, staved off every Irish thrust until the final period when their opportunity came. Notre Dame, early in the fourth, drove to the Hawks' one yard line but the much- defeated underdogs held and took the ball on downs. Jim Youell punted out and the Irish roared back to the 10 yard line. At this point Captain Milt Piepul fumbled and Iowa's captain, Mike Enich, snatched the ball in mid-air and ran 36 yards to the Iowa 46. The aroused Irish stopped the at- tack and Youell punted to the Irish 25. Al Couppee intercepted Bob Sag- gau's pass on the first play and re- turned eight yards to the 23. The Hawks drove to the 17 and Bill Gal- lagher tried a field goal from the 25 but his boot was wide of the up- rights. Bagarus' Fumble Costly The' luckless Irish started from their own 20, but again on the first play little Steve Bagarus fumbled and Ken Pettit recovered on the Notre Dame 24. Big Bill Green roared through the Irish for 22 yards in two plays, Gallagher added one at center and then Green smashed over right guard for the touchdown. Gal- lagher place-kicked the point. The Hawks, previous to their scor- ing outburst, had not advanced be- yond the Notre Dame 35, apparently having little semblance of either a running or passing attack. The Irish, likewise, were not too impressive ex- cept in spurts. The victory was Iowa's third over Notre Dame in as many games be- tween the two teams and on each occasion the Irish approached the game undefeated. Nationwide Gridiron Scores EAST: Boston College 19, Georgetown 18 Pennsylvania 48, Army 0 Navy 0, Columbia 0 (tie) Cornell 7, Dartmouth 3 Harvard 14, Brown 0 Princeton 10, Yale 7 Penn State 25, NYU 0 Nebraska 9, Pittsburgh 7 Colgate 7, Syracuse 6 Temple 6, Holy Cross 6 (tie) * * * SOUTH: Alabama 14, Georgia Tech 13 Louisiana State 21, Auburn 13 Tulane 21, Georgia 13 Tennessee 41, Virginia 14 MIDWEST: Marquette 7, Michigan State 6 Iowa State 12, Kansas State 0 Oklahoma 7, Missouri 0 SOUTHWEST: Southern Methodist 28, Arkansas 0 Baylor 20, Tulsa 6 Texas A & M 25, Rice 0 Texas 21, Texas Chri~tian 14 Texas Tech 12, Wake Forest 7 FAR WEST: Washington 14, Southern Cal 0 Stanford 28, Oregon 14 California 14, Oregon 6 UCLA 34, Washington State 26 Gonzaga 13, Detroit 7 Senior Flanker Stars In Last Homc e Game Crowd Of 77, 000 Sees. Tallies For Purple Westfall Score Twice Northwestern Stopped On Michigan Six Yard Line After Hahnenstein Runs 80 Yards For Touchdown (Continued from Page 1) Harold "Tippy" Lockhard, playing in the right half spot for the Wol- verines, set up the second scoring play four minutes later when he returned one of Hahnenstein's punts 30 yards to the Wildcat five. Two plunges by Harmon carried the ball to the one-foot line from where Westfall bolted over into the end zone. Once again, Harmon place- kicked the ball squarely between the posts. Purple Tallies On Pass Northwestern's first tally, like its second, came with aelightning-like thrust. Four plays after receiving thenext Michigan kickoff and on the first play of the secon~d quarter, the heralded Bill deCorrevont faded back and shot a well-placed aerial bomb from Michigan's 48 yard line to the Wildcat substitute end, Bob Motl, on the 25. Motl tucked the ball under his arm and romped away from West- fall to the goal-line. Clawson's try for the extra point went to the right of the posts. The third Michigan touchdown also resulted from a poor punt, this time from the usually reliable toe of de- Correvont. He sliced one out on his own 26-yard line and six plays later, Westfall smashed over center from Ed Frutig, playing his last game in the Michigan Stadium, was a shining light in the Wolverine victory over Northwestern yesterday. In the first few minutes of play he blocked a kick to set the stage for Michigan's first score and went on to snare two Harmon-thrown passes and turn in a stellar defensive role.I the three to end the Wolverine scor- ing. But the Wildcats weren't through yet. For the next period and a half they engaged in a punting duel with Harmon, and with 11 minutes left in the final period, the Purple started a determined drive. After Harmon had punted over the Northwestern goal, Hahnenstein took the ball from center on his own 20, sped for his right end, cut sharply between Frutig and tackle Al Wistert and was on his way. Harmon alone remained in his path, but a host of Purple blockers swept the drifting halfback aside and Hahn- enstein continued on his merry 80- yard gallop. Dick Erditz, a reserve quarterback, came into the lineup and kicked the extra point. That changed the complexion of the ball game. The Wildcats needed only one touchdown to deadlock the battle, and they went about getting it with all their versatile might. Northwestern Threatens Hahnenstein, Clawson and Ike Kep- ford alternated in driving the pig- skin toward the Michigan goal. The tired Wolverines, most of whom had played the entire battle, fell before the Purple blockers. N'orthwestern pushed closer and ploser. Finally Kepford on a false reverse. play romped around his left end to the Wolverine 15 for a first down. Hahnenstein was tackled on the 14 by Bill Melzow, who took over Bob Kolesar's guard berth when the soph- omore was kicked in the head in the second quarter. But on the second down the redhead cut back sharply over his right tackle to the seven. Once again, Hahnen- stein took the ball from center and plowed into the right side of the Wolverine line for a yard. Then came the fourth down play and Westfall. The valiant Michigan defense had held. The Wildcats final threat with less than a minute left to play was halted when Paul Kromer intercepted deCorrevont's long pass on the Michigan 30. The Wolverines had made their comeback. Walloping The Wildcats To Capture Conference Grid Crown MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 16. -(AP)- Minnesota's powerhouse won the Wes- tern Conference championship here today by unleashing a high voltage attack that shocked Purdue's Boiler- makers into defeat, 33 to 6. It was Minnesota's seventh straight victory of the season, including five Conference contests, and left it in position to bring a brilliant unde- feated season to a close in the final game with Wisconsin at Madison next week. Michigan helped the Gophers to the title by eliminating Northwestern at Ann Arbor today. Minnesota power was at its best \as its ground game rolled rough shod over the Boliermakers, but it still showed a weakness against passes, Purdue taking to the air to set up its touchdown. Purdue, held to a net of 23 yards by rushing, fired 33 passes of which 13 were completed for 126 yards. Meantime, Minnesota relied almost entirely on power plays that pro- duced more than 300 yards. There was little doubt about the eventual outcome from the opening kickoff when Bobby Paffrath took the ball on his own 15 and fumbled. George Franck, Gopher speedster, was there to pick it up on the 20 yard line and he returned 80 yards for a touchdown after skirting the entire Purdue team, bunched in front of him. Gordon Paschka placekicked the ex- tra point and Minnesota led, 7 to 0, with only 16 seconds of playing time elapsed. The second Gopher touchdown in the first period came after Franck had returned a punt 31 yards to the Purdue 31 yard line. Bruce Smith and Franck in turn made it a first down on the 19 yard line, and after Paffrath lost three yards, Smith cut through right tackle to score. Joe Mernik placekicked the extra point. Purdue's touchdown early in the fourth quarter came on a . series of passes, keystone of which was one from Galvin to Smerke for 25 yards to the Gopher 12 and another by the same combination to the three yard line. From there fullback John Petty needed four line plays to carry it over. Don Scott Leads OSU To Win Over Illini CHAMPAIGN, ILL., Nov. 16.-(iP)- Ohio State's Don Scott, striving for 1940 All-America quarterback hon- ors, scored two touchdowns today to enable the Buckeyes to hand Illi- nois its sixth straight defeat. The 14 to 6 result gave 15,571 shiv- ering fans, among them 4,000 visit- ing Dads, a Champaign headache. The Illini are winding up a disas- trous season, having beaten only Bradley in the first game of the year. Ohio State scored in the first and third periods, with Scott throwing his 215 pounds across the line each time and then kicking the extra points. The Buckeyes started a 72-yard touchdown drive as soon as they took the ball after the opening kickoff. Starting on their own 28, they drove across in nine plays, with Jim Lang- hurst once ripping off 25 yards and Jim Strausbaugh 18 to carry to the Illinois 22. Here the Buckeyes drew a five yard penalty for offside, but Kinkade reeled off 12 yards to the Illini 15. Langhurst made a first down on the seven and then plunged to the one-yard stripe, with Scott smashing over. Badgers Top Favored Indiana Eleven Madison Wis., Nov. 16 -(R)-Wis- consin moved into the first division of the Western Conference football standings today by defeating a fav- ored Indiana eleven, 27 to 10, before a Dad's Day crowd of 16,000. Indiana started impressively by scoring a field goal shortly after the game started, but the Badgers retal-' iated with a touchdown a few minutes later. Wisconsin added three more in the second period capitalizing on Hoosier fumbles. Indiana scored again late in the game on a pass, Hal Hursh to Archie Harris. Detroit Red Wings Tie World Champion Rangers NEW YORK, Nov. 16. -(A)- The rejuvenated Red Wings of Detroit, out-lasting the world champions in a hard-fought National Hockey League contest, got their second straight tie with the New York Ran- gers tonight before a crowd of 13,048. After being presented with the Stanley Cup in a pre-game cere- mony and then toying with the young Red Wings foir two periods, the Rangers faded and had to fight dan- gerously in a 10-minute overtime period to gain a 3-3 draw. Red-headed Ollie Hahnenstein provided Michigan supporters with many an anxious moment yester- day when he spearheaded a Wild- cat drive that fell just short of bringing the Purple up on even terms with the Varsity. Cornell Team Has Close Call Texas A&M Tops Rice; Georgetown Loses (By The Associated Press) A wave of upsets shocked the foot- ball world yesterday and missed Cor- nell's Big Red squad by exactly six seconds.f Dartmouth had Cornell 3-0 on a fourth quarter field goal by Bob Krueger until Walter Scholl passed the Big Red down the field and fin- ally contacted Bill Murphy in the end zone for the winning touchdown with six seconds to go. There was considerable argument that Cornell had been given an extra down at this critical stage of the proceedings but the 7-3 final score stood and Cornell stretched its unbeaten streak through 19 games. John Kimbrough picked up 108 yards in 18 tries as Texas A. and M. routed Rice, 25-0, and now faces only one hurdle-Texas-in a drive for a second successive Southwest title and a possible bid to the Rose Bowl. Boston College, paced by the great triple threat back, Charley O'Rourke and a great line, spotted Georgetown 10 points in the first five minutes and then handed the Hoyas their first de- feat in 24 games, 19-18. A crowd of 40,000 turned out at Boston for this duel of two of the biggest teams in intercollegiate football. * DISTINCTIVE 0 0 0 * PERSONAL and 1 * CHAPTER CARDS * * 0 0 for CHRISTMAS! 19 0 0 * See * 0 e Ruth Ann hakes * 0 at . * BURR PATTERSON & AULD * * 1209 South "U." 0 * 0 Frosh Gridimen ToPtayAnnual Intrasquad Tilt Coach Wally Weber wil send his yearling grid charges before the re- viewing stand on Ferry Field at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the grand finale of the current freshman football season. The occasion is the annual intra- squad tilt that marks the close of the frosh season. All of the numeral win- ners will participate in an attempt to display their gridiron ability before Coach Fritz Crisler and his staff of assistants who will be among the on- lookers searching for new Michigan talent. Squads Evenly Divided Tomorrow's game promises to be an even, well-balanced affair. Weber has divided the squad into two even- ly-matched teams, the Reds and the Blues, and it should be a tight con- test replete with action. On paper the Reds appear to have the strongest line, with center Herv Pregulman, end John Richter, guard Julius Franks, and tackle Vince Sec- ontine heading the list. All of these men are hard-charging, fast-start- ing blockers as well as deadly tack- lers, and will undoubtedly provide the Blues with stiff oppostion. In the backfield the edge has to be conceded to the Blue team. Featur- ing speedy Walt Derby, elusive Zion. Boor, plunging Tom Kuzma and jolt- ing Joe Joseph, the Blues promise to display a dazzling, well-executed at- tack. Derby May Not Play There is a possibility, however, that Derby will be unable to play because of a leg injury sustained in practice two weeks ago. In this case his posi- tion will be capably filled by Robert Stenberg, transfer from the nowi gridless University of Chicago. The punting chores will be handled by Paul White for the Reds and Kuz- ma for the Blues. Don Robinson and White will attend to the passing for the Red team, while Derby and Boor will flip the pigskin for the blue- shirted gridders. THE LINEUPS Reds Richter Zebrauskas Iranks Pregulman Moe Secontine Bryan Roth Robinson White Vallade LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB Blues Caswell Exner Amstutz Pritula Mitchell Miller Friehofer Joseph Derby, Stenberg Boar K~uzma MICHIGAN Rogers Wistert Kolesar Ingalls Fritz Kelto Frutig Evashevski Harmon Lockard Westfall NORTHWESTERN LE Smith LT Bauman LG Lokanc C Hiemenz RG Zorich RT Aarts RE Butherus QB Richards LH Hahnenstein RH Chambers FB Benson ------ ....... Score by Periods: MICHIGAN........14 6 NORTHWESTERN 0 6 0~ 0--20 0 7--13 Northwestern scoring: Touch- downs, Motl, Hahnenstein. Point af- ter touchdown: Erdlitz (place kick). Michigan scoring: Touchdowns: Harmon, Westfall 2. Points after touchdown:" Harmon 2. Michigan-End, Fraumann; Tac- kles, Butler, Flora; Guard, Melzow; Center, Kennedy; Quarterback, Ceit- haml; Halfback, Kromer. Ii Statistics Of Michigan-Northwestern Football Game SUNDAY SUPPER November 17, 1940 Pecan Waffle, Maple Syrup Grilled Star Bacon Baked Apple or Ice Cream Beverage 50e American Cheese Omelette French Fried Potatoes Fresh Peas Cherry Pie or Fudge-Royale Ice Cream Beverage 50e Hot Turkey Sandwich with Gravy Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes Angel Food or Plum Pudding Beverage 60~e Cream of Mushroom Soup Baked Ham Orange Honey Sauce Candied Sweet Potatoes Glaced Baby Carrots Pineaple Sundae or Cocoanut Meringue Pie Beverage 75e GOOD FOOD Excellent Service 6 to 7:30 o'clock MAIN Northwestern First Downs ....................................... 8 Yards gained rushing (net) ........................ 228 Forward Passes Attempted.........................10 Forward passes completed:........................4 Yards by forward passing .. . .......................,57 Yards lost, attempting forward passes .................0 Forward passes intercepted by ....................... 0 Yards gained, run-back of intercepted passes .........0 Punting average, (from scrimmage) .................28 Total yards all kicks returned..... ........ ......50 Opponents' fumbles recovered .......................2 Yards lost by penalties ............................. 25 Michigan 9 186 7 2 25 0 2 4 36 105 0 30 THE ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION presents DOROTHY THOMPSON Keen Analyst of World Affairs Speaking on 11 1 11111