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October 12, 1941 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1941-10-12

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T'

MIChIGAN DAILY

Grid Scores Throughout The Nation... Dorm Teams
C) en Seal

EAST a
Army 27, VMI 20
Cornell 7, Harvard 0
Texas A&M 49, NYU 7
Columbia 21, Princeton 0
Syracuse 6, Holy Cross 0
Penn 28, Yale 13
Brown 14, Rhode Island State 7
Boston University 17, Upsala 0
Navy 41, Lafayette 2
Drexel 19, Buffalo 6
West Virginia 20, W. Va. Wes. 0
Wesleyan 7, Connecticut 0
Tufts 15, Bates 13
Colby, 13, Vermont 0
Rochester 13, Kenyon 0
Coast Guard 34, Rensselaer Poly. 0
Rutgers 16, Lehigh 6
Penn State 27, Bucknell 13
Haverford 27, Susquehanna 0
Maine 7, New Hampshire 7
Delaware 24, Ursinus 0
Williams 38, Northeastern 0
Muhlenberg 26, Carnegie Tech 6
Clemson 26, Boston College 13
St. Lawrence 19, Springfield 0
Middlebury 6, Unlgn 0
Amherst 33, Bowdoin 6
F&M 19, Hampden-Sydney 6
Marshall 33, Toledo 7
Hamilton 27, Hobart 12
Wash. Coll. 6, Johns Hopkins 0
Western Md. 24, Mt. St. Mary's 21.
W&J 7, Dickinson 6,

i Vanderbilt 39, Kentucky 15, P
Tennessee 26, Dayton 0
Virginia 4 i h dTinh mnn

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Sewanee 7, Davidson 0
Wake Forest 6, So. Carolina 6
Fordham 27, North Carolina 14
William and Mary 16, Va. Tech 7
Duke 50, Maryland 0
MIDWEST
Cincinnati 37, Wayne University 0'
Wooster 10, Denison 2
Otterbein 14, Oberlin 12
Bowling Green 9, Miami (O) 0
Ohio U. 20, Western Ky. Tehrs. 7
Nebraska 32, Kansas 0
Missouri 35, Kansas State 0
Okla. A & M 41, Wash. (Mo.) 12
N. Dakota St. 25, S. Dakota St. 0
Indiana State 6, Franklin 0
Depauw 14, Hanover 0
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 20, Arkansas 7
Rice 10, Tulane 9
SMU;34, College of Pacific 0
"Texas 40, Oklahoma 7'
FAR WEST
Oregon U. 26, Southern Cal. 0
VARSITY BASKETBALL
All eligible men report for
varsity basketball practice at
7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Sports
Building.
Bennie Oosterbaan,
Basketball Coach

W i mafns, Frescott score
Easy Wins In Inaugural
The Residence Hall Intramural
season opened officially Friday after-
noon when 10 teams paired off on
South Ferry Field.
Last year's all-sports dorm champs,
Williams House, took up where they
left off last year as they routed Wen-
ley House 31-0. Morrie Bikoff teamed
up with Howard Fisher in the back-
field for the winners and together
they accounted for most of Williams
House's scoring.
Prescott House, *with a brilliant
passer in Augustus Altese, defeated
Greene House 20-6. All three of
Prescott's touchdowns were the direct
result of Altese. who starred through-
out the game. Two touchdown passes
by Mel Wallace in the first quarter
enabled Winchell House to defeat
Lloyd House 12-0.
Chicago House defeated a weak
Adams House team 14-0. Fletcher
Hall won its game with Tyler House
on Thursday by forfeit. Three other
teams have yet to see action. Michi-
gan House will meet Allen Rumsey
House today and Hinsdale House has
its first game on Tuesday.

I-iG rl A IN D t'NI0
By ART HILL
It's Tough To Lo'se! .. .
THE HARDEST JOB we ever had to do was interviewing Pittsburgh's
coach, Charley Bowser, right after the humiliating 40-0 defeat his boys
took at the hands of Fritz Crisler's power-packed Wolverines yesterday
afternoon.
We stepped into the Panther locker room behind a burly gold-clad
tackle. Only a few of the players had come in from the field. There was
a little fellow standing near the door almost fully dressed. We guessed
(from the crumpled panther skin lying near him) that he was the famous
Pitt Panther who did his best to work up a little enthusiasm among the list-
less Pittsburgh fans.
There was no sign of Bowser in the room. "Where's the coach?"
we asked the little guy. He pointed to the far end of the dressing
room. We walked back to the little room with the rubbing tables in it
and stepped in.
Bowser was there all right. He was sitting alone, his head in his hands.
We stood there silently, our journalistic calm ruffled by the sight of this man
who had just watched his team take the worst beating in the history of
the school.
Charley didn't move until someone came in with some telegrams. He
ripped them open silently while we tried to imagine what might be in them.
Then he stuffed them in his pocket and looked up in inquiringly.
"How about a comment on the game, coach?" we asked.
"You saw it as well as I did," he answered in a voice hardly audible.
"They're great but they shoudn't have beaten us that badly. Once they
get you with your back to the wall, though, there isn't much you can do.
Especially against those Michigan backs."
We thanked the likeable Pitt coach, who obviously had no desire to talk
about the game, and stepped out.
Football coaches get a lot of glory when they win and many people
envy them. But not us. They get too much hell when they lose.

Oregon State Upsets Stamford, 10-0
CORVALLIS. Ore. Oct. 11.-UP)- The points that actually won the
Stanford's football dynasty, its Rose game were scored on a field goal
Bowl hopes and a great victory string seven minutes after the opening kick-
came to an end today on the rain-
soaked field of Oregon State College. off. The Beavers had charged 58
The score was 10 to 0 and the fight- yards to Stanford's 8-yard line. Then
ing Beavers won all the way. Warren Simas, stepped into the 'lead
This was the day the football world role. Hess a sophomore and substi-
had been waiting for. The T-for- tute quarterback. He came in, took
mation was stopped at last. It melted aim and toed the ball through from
in a down pour. 16 yards out.
The razzle-dazzle that had carried Some 22.000 fans. crowding the
the Indians through 12 wins, unbeat- stadium to capacity, made the welkin
en last year in a Coast Conference ring with their thunderous ovation
Championship drive climaxed by a to the Oregon State team and the,
Rose Bowl victory, bogged down on coach, Loi Stiner. former Nebraska
a mushy field. player.
1 -

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SOUTH
Alabama 61, Howard 0
Auburn 34, Louisiana Tech 0

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ALLAYS
Lo K
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Up-#o-the Minute
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ilere are clothes that are right for every hour of yoni-
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Nationall y
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aturday Evening Post
Good Housekeeping

Id,

A glance at Mademoiselle or Vogue will show you how
much this year's clothes depend on fit and hang for
their chic. Our finishers are experts at the little touches
that recreate the "effect." Here are their standards:

Sleeves smooth at shoulder
Buttons and ornaments securely
fastened in their proper places
Folds soft-not creased

No "press sline"
Pleats crisp and smooth
Hem line even

Sleeves
Buttons
Folds
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Pleats
Hem Lines even

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Dresses 10.95 to 35.00.

For day time and play time-the
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10.95 to 25.00

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For your starlit hours-one of our
distinctive formals in net, marqui-
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9

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