100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 12, 1941 - Image 7

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

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


T'HE M I C H I GA N D A I LY PAGE SEVEN

Minnesota . ..w. 34 Northwestern .. .
Illinois ..... ...6 Wisconsin .... .

41 Michigan State . . 13 Notre Dame .. .. 20 Oregon State . .. 10 Texas Christian . 20
14 Marquette .......7 Georgia Tech .... 0 Stanford.........0 Indiana.........14

Colgate ..

Michigan

Trounces Pittsburgh,

40-0, Before 34,403

Minnesota Crushes Game Illini
In First Conference Tegt, 34-6

Wo lverines PlayBrilliantlyIn Second Wildcats Display More Power
.t . .~ lIn Routing Wisconsin, 4144

MTINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 11-()-Min-
nesota warmed up for its Big Ten
title defense today by swamping Ill-
inois 34 to 6, emphasizing its super-
iority by springing fullback Bill Daley
loose for a 73-yard touchdown gallop
on the game's first play from scrim-
mage.
The Golden Gopher's huge for-
wards toyed with the lighter Illini
linemen while Captain Bruce Smith
and Daley and an assortment of sub-
stitutes ran wild. Smith and Daley
each got two touchdowns. Midget
Bud Higgins got the other.
The Illini, hopelessly outclassed,
never quit trying and gallantly rallied
for a single touchdown with three
minutes to go, in the forth period.
The score at the half was 27 to 0.
Daley's dash took the heat off and

permitted Coach Bernie Bierman to
pour on the substitutes, using forty:
men in the first half alone.
The Daley solo came right after
Captain Smith ran the kickoff out to
the 27., Fullback Bill edged through
a huge hole at Illinois' left tackle.
He cut to his right. Iy the time he
reached midfield, he had only one
man to beat and a three-man escort
ready to help clear that obstacle.
Minnesota concealed its vaunted
passing attack but Captain Smith
snapped one 33-yard forward to Judd
'Ringer, veteran end, to help get the
final touchdown. The Golden Goph-
ers simply gave them the old power-
house with a blasting line sweeping
away the obstacles for hard driving
backs.

Iffir"Gi l1L lLG lidLul t/t l' Guv l (/ ult(lC/GUIIe!

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

Nelson, Kuzma, Robinson C punt, Kuzma gathered in a lofty
Romp Behind Forward kick on the invaders' 48, sidesteppedI
RompBehid Frwarl ,a charging Panther, swung in be-
Wal's Precise Blocking hind a mass of interference, and
behind perfect blocking raced down
(Continued from Page 1) the east sidelines 48 yards to his fifth
_ - -Michigan touchodwn. Not a hand
to its second touchdown after only was laid on him, as Panther after
two minutes and 10 seconds. Pitt's Panther was cut down by the deadly
Bill Dutton fumbled the kickoff and Wolverine blocking. Once again In-
big senior Bob Ingalls, who played galls split the uprights.
a magnificent defensive game all the But the Wolverines poured it on{
way through, recovered on the Pan- and on. After the kickoff Pitt was
ther 29. ' again thrown back by the surging
After a pair of smashes, Kuzmao Thiverime 15-poundDavieNto kick.
drove through left tackle again for istb 1kDih s elsok
a few yards, pivoted and lateraled was back in the safety slot. He took
once re to ockard, who was in the punt on his own 49 and darted
motion to the left. Beautifully exe- and weaved his way all the way to
cuted, the play was good for 17 yards the end zone, again aided by marvel-:
-marvel- ous blocking, only to have the run
nullified by a clipping penalty.
Boor Scores
This didn't stop the Wolverines,
however, but merely d.elayed them.
Nelson passed from the 22 to Cei-
:''thaml who drove his tay for a first
down on the 10. After A. couple ofr
line smashes and an intermission at
the quarter, Boor went over right
guard. This time guard Bill Melzow
added the point to boost the total
to 27.
Then, with but slight variation,
the process was repeated. Pitt re-
ceived, failed to gain, and punted.!
Nelson again dazzled the crowd with
a 49-yard puint runback from the
Michigan 45 to the Pitt 6, and then
::: handed over tailback duties to sopho-
more Robinson.
Triple-threat Robinson, his knees
pumping high, took the ball over
from the five on his first running at-
tempt in collegiate competition, shak-
ing ' off two tacklers while marking
up 'the fifth Wolverine touchdown.
; Melzow made it 34-0.
I After a pass interception and an

exchange of fumbles, the Wolverines
gained possession on the Pitt 25. Nel-
son lost threehthen danced his way
all the way through the entire de-
fense for 28 yards to score standing.
Once again heady running and sharp
blocking featured the execution of
the play. This time Melzow missed
the placement, and the score stood at
40-0. And as little Davie trotted
from the field the crowd rose to its
feet and gave him a great ovation.
His 78 yards from scrimmage in five
tries made him the game's leading

ground gainer.
THE LINEUP
Pittsburgf
Gervelis LE
Kindelberger LT
Mitchell LG
Heister C
Fife RG
Benghouser RT
Hinte RE
West QB
Stetler LHI
Dutton RH
Ross FB

Michigan
Fraumann
Wistert
Kolesar
Ingalls
Pregulman
Kelto
Rogers
Ceithaml
Kuzma
Lockard
Westfall

EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 11. -(,")-
The Northwestern powerhouse rolled
to a resounding 41 to 14 triumph over
Wisconsin today, taking advantage
of all the breaks in their Western
Conference debut before 40.000 spec-
tators.
After a wild first period which
ended in a 14-14 tie, the Wildcats
outclassed the Badgers, pushing
across one touchdown in the second
period and three more in the third
before turning the game over to
third stringers.
Wisconsin startled the confident
Wildcats in the first three minutes
of the game with a 43-yard touch-
down drive. Pat Harder, brilliant
sophomore fullback, slashed through
tackle for 19 yards and two plays
later Tom Farris passed over the
goal 'line to Dave Schreiner. Harder
placekicked the point.
This edge, however, was short-

L

I

LOST and FOUND

LOST-Key ring, Mrs. J. O. Bedient,
Albion. Also glasses, Dr. Charles
Hardy, Jackson, Mich..
TYPING
TYPING taken in home. Reasonable
rates. Call 2-1592. Iatherine. 56c
WILLING to do typing in the home.
Reasonable rates. Phone 2-1592.
Ask for Katherine.
VIOLA STEIN-Experienced legal
typist; also mimeographing. Notary
public. Phone 6327. 706 Oakland.
WANTED TO BUY
CASH for used clothing; men and
ladies. Claude H. Brown, 512 S.
Main St. Phone 2-2736. 5c
WANTED: Phonograph or radio
combination. Automatic preferred.
Must have good speaker. 6695. G.
Burns; leave name. 57c
FOR RENT
SINGLE on 1st floor across from,
Engineering Bldg. on Church St.
Phone 8935. , 53c
MISCELLANEOUS
MIMEOGRAPHING - Thesis bind-
ing. .Bruinfield and Britmfield, 308
S. State.c
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL-
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Killins Gravel Company, phone
7112. .7c
PUBLIC EVENING SCHOOL begins
Oct. 13, Monday evening. Enroll-
ment at Ann Arbor High School.
,Recreation, business, language,
English, speech, defense training,
woodworking, art, metalcraft, sew-
ing, cooking and other courses will
be offered. For further informa-
tion call 5797.

TAILORING & SEWING
TAILORED suits and coats, custom
made.- Day time, evening gowns
made and remodeled. Phone 3468.

i

4c
STOCKWELL and Mosher-Jordan
residents-Alterations on women's
garments promptly done. Opposite
Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. 3c

HELP WANTED

Michigan .... 6 0 14 20-40
Michigan Scoring: Touchdowns,
Kuzma 2, Lockard, Boor, Robinson,
Nelson. Points after touchdown: In-
galls 2, Melzow 2.
Substitution: Pitt, ends, Stahl,
Gestner. Rosepink; tackles, Dur-
ishan, Salvucci, Crissman;. guards,
Antonelli, Broudy, Dillon; centers,
Sinclair, Clowes; quarterbacks, Ham-
mond, Allshouse, Scatton; halfbacks,
Jones, Connell, Saksa; fullbacks,
Kerr, Gebel.
Michigan: ends, Karwales, Sharpe,
Shemky, Smeja; tackles, Flora. Cun-
ningham, Laine, Hildebrandt; guards,
Franks, Melzow. Amstutz; center, T.
Kennedy; quarterback, Madar; half-
backs, Nelson, C. Kennedy, Robin-
son; fullbacks, Boor, Stenberg.

COLLEGE GIRL-Room and board
exchanged for small service. No
children. Attractive room. Call
3836. 54c
ROOM and BOARD
ATUDENTS!
Is your board bill worrying you?
Come on over to 608 'Monroe and
try Mrs. Jeffry's famous home-
cooked meals. Lunches and din-
ners every day but Sunday.
$4.29
LAUNDERING
LAUNDRY - 2-1044, Sox darned.
Careful work at low price. 2c

322 SouthStateStreet
V-
That bewitching allure which you have
envied in others can now be yours!
It's a simple trick, really! Let our ex-
pert stylists show you today.
{o
STAEULEly
13 BEAUTY SHOP'
"Above the Parrot" 1133 E. Huron
338 S. State Ph. 8878 Ph. 3414
~4
;;;;;;;> c;;;;yo ;;;;;yo ;;;;i~U

Too Much Power For The Panther!

DAVE NELSON

PITT
First Downs......................................3
Yards Gained Rushing (net).............27
Forward Passes Attembted..........................10
Forward Passes Completed........................ 3

INDIVIDUALIZED LAUNDRY
SERVICE
Each bundle done separately,
by hand
No AMrkings
Silks, Wools,; and Coeds' Laundry
Our Specialty
All our work is guaranteed/
Free pick-ups and deliveries
SILVER LAUNDRY
607 E. HOOVER 5594

to the Pitt seven. It took only one
try for the hard-driving Kuzma to
bull his way over right tackle and
score standing up. This time In-
galls converted and the count stood,
13-0.
That was the beginning of the
end for the Panthers. Just four
minutes later, afbr 'Pitt twice failed
to move the ball and was forced to

Yards by Forward Passing.........................
Yards Lost, Attempted Forward Passes ............... .
Forward Passes Intercepted By.....................
Yards Gained, Run-Back of Intercepted Passes ........ .
Punting Average (from scrimmage) ...... ............ .
Total Yards, All Kicks Returned ......................
Opponents' Fumbles Recovered .......................
Yards Lost by Penalties ... . . ...... ............... .

18
9
2
22
23
48
1
36

MICHIGAN
11
274
12
5
37
0
2
0
41
237
4
45

I

I

=NOMA

1.y
New excitement for your format,
new flattery for your feetl In f
ititr i white Sntin n ntin e

,I

Parachute peplums, apron treatments,
tiers and tiers of flattering drapery on
the slimmest of gowns. Paillettes, se-
quins or embroidery for emphasis.
Sizes 9-17, 12-20. Also, beautiful dra-
matic evening coats.
from4d OS
ACCESSORIES
Gloves, sparkling jewelry and the
sheerest of hosiery for formal wear.
about$1.95
7he
r4I "

I

sirovs w ie a rn, gen n
silver kid. or gold kid.

i,-),4

rl &JL:

i

I

I

I

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan