smaOr,CTOBER , 194 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan Downs Northwestern, 14-7, In Hard-Fougi PAGE it Til Varsity Takes To Air To Score Touchdowns Fraumnan, Rogers Score On Kuzma' s Passes; Line Halts Purple Threats (Continue'i from Page 1) Westfall took the pass from center, drove forward, slipped the ball to Cei- thaml who lateraled out to Kuz a, going wide to his right. Tommy faded back, took cIreful aim and rifled a perfect pass into the eager arms of Fraumann who was standing all alone in the east corner of the north end zone. Melzow converted to make it 7-0. Neither team was able to penetrate deeply into scoring territory the rest of the period. Then in the middle of the second quartfr Wildcat sophomore Otto Graham, who lived up to all advance notices which touted him as the best soph back in collegiate competitiop, lofted a beautiful punt out on the Michigan four yard line. Kuzma matched it withea long spiral good for 37 yards fror his end zone, but the Wildcat Sophomore Shines In Defeat Wildcats were now moving in Wol- verine territory. Graham skirted left end for 11 yards, then tossed a long aerial which end Bob Motle snagged on the Mich- igan seven. It was first and goal to go. Graham drove off right tackle to the two, ai~d the Wolverine for- ward wall dug. in for keeps. Fullback George Benson smashed over right guard for one yard, then over left guard for two feet. That made it fourth and a scant 12 inches to go. But Michigan's fighting line couldn't quite stop Graham as he dove over right guard for the score. Dick Erd- litz converted to tie it up at 7-7, with two minutes left before the half. The third period was alf North- western. Time and again the Wild- cats raged down towards the Michi- gan goal. But the ,Wolverines, scrap- ping furiously, refused to give up. Shortly after the second half kickoff the Cats drove down to Michigan's 5-yard line with the aid of an inter- ference ruling on a long de Correvont to D4otle pass play. But on fourth down, Kuzma, who played 'a bang-up defensive game all day, knocked down derCorrevont's pass intended for Kepi ford in the end zone. Breaks For Wolverines Thrice more in this hectic third period Northwestern threatened seri- ously, but each time Michigan 4ran- aged to stall the Purple offense, once, by pass interception, once by recov- ery of a fumble and once by holding for downs. Then came the final period and the vital breaks the heads-up Michi- gan team was looking for. With fourth down and eight to go on Mich- igan's 43-yard line,'Kuzma dropped back in punt formation and with ter- rific leg power sent the ball out of bounds on Northwestern's four. In a crucial series of line plays Michi- gan held and forced de Correvont to kick. Safety man Kuzma was tackled on the Wildcat 47. Without warning, on the first play, the big Gary sophomore faked a lat- eral to wingback White, who was run- ning wide to his left on a man in mo- tio play, then faded back and looped a 23-yard forward to Joe Rogers who gathered it in on the 24 and raced the rest of the way to the goal line protected by two blocking teammates. Melzow split the uprights, and the count was 14-7. And thus it remained all through the furious ten minutes of action re- L ilcatsTmId THE Michigan Fraumann Wistert Kolesar Ingalls Pregulman K-elto Rogers Ceithaml Kuzma Lockard Westfall Michigan .. Northwestern Michigan Sc Fraumann, R( LINEUPS No LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH de RH PB ...7 0 . 0 7 C rthwestern ColberA Bauman Burke Johnson Kiefer Samarzia Wallis Kruger Correvont Kepford Benson 0 0 7-14 0- 7 coring: Touchdowns, ogers. Points after Otto Graham, sensational Northwestern sophomore star, lived up to his press notices yesterday as he sparked the Purple on their only touchdown drive of the game,; carrying the ball over in the fading min- utes of the first half. toichdown, Melzow (for Kelto) 2 placements. Northwestern Scoring: Touchdown, Graham (for de Correvont). Point after touchdown, Erdlitz (for Krug- er) placement. Substitutions: Michigan, Tackles, Flora. Guards, Me ow, Franks. Cen- ters, Kennedy. Halfbacks, Nelson, JWhite, kobinson. Fullbacks, Boor. maining. This second Maize and Blue score touched off the, Wildcat aerial fireworks in earnest. Follow- ing some more brilliant punting by~ Kuzma which backed he ,Wildcats up to their own goal, the Purple roared back up the field in the closing min- utes. On a kick return de Correvont, from his own 10, weaved through Wolverine tacklers for a few yards, then lateraled to Benson who came all the way up to Michigan's 33. Halt Last Wildcat Threat De Correvont shot a pass to Erd- litz on the 25 and he went to the 19 before he was knocked down. Two successful pass plays. good for short: gains were mixed with two penalties against NQrthwestern for too many time outs, and it became fourth down with just 20 seconds left to play. De Correvont faded back far his last ef- fort tQ tie up the game but a host of Wolverines, led by Fraumann, smothered him back on the 23, and Michigan took possession. Westfall wasted the remaining sec- onds by taking the ball from center and laying down. The gun sounded, the Wolverines', joyously weary grid- men, trudged off the field and Michi- gan's great band proudly marched on. Other Grid Secores EAST Army 20, Yale 7 Navy 14, Cornell 0 Brown 28, Tufts 6 Bucknell 6, Boston University 0 Notre gDame 16, Carnegie Tech 0 Georgia 7, Columbia 3 Fordham 27, West Virginia 0 Harvard 7, Dartmouth 0 Boston College 26, Manhattan 13 Mississippi 21, Holy Cross 0 Syracuse 31, NYU 0 Pennsylvania 23, Princeton 0 Temple 14, Penn State 0 W&J 14, Buffalo 61 Maine 14, Connecticut 13 Delaware 28, Dickinson 0 Hamilton 34, Oberlin 0 Williams 13, Bowdoin 0 Rand.-Macon 13, Wash. Col. 0 SOUTH Alabama 9, Tennessee 2 So. Methodist 20, Auburn 7 Maryland 13, Florida 12 Tulane 52, N. Carolina 6 The Citadel 13, Furman 13 Virginia Tech 16, Davidson 0 Duke 27, Colgate 14 Virginia 27, V, M. I. 7 Wm. & Mary 28, Hamp.-Syd. 0 * * * MIDWEST Illinois 40, Drake 0 Indiana 21, Nebtaska 13 Wisconsin 23, Iowa 0 N. Dakota U. 33, S. D. State 15 Missouri 39, Iowa State 13 Oklahoma 16, Kansas State 0 Wabash 0, Lake Forest 0 Case 40, Wooster 0 Toledo 20, John Carroll 0 W. Reserve 19, Bald.-Wal. 0 Ohio U. 0, Akron 0, Kentucky 21, Xavier 6 W. Liberty 0, Kent State 0 Cincinnati 18, Centre 0 Thiel 34, Hiram 0 , 0. Wesleyan 21, Wayne 0 FAR WEST Oregon 19, California 7 Washington 14, UCLA 7 Santa Clara 7, Michigan State 0 S. California 7, Wash. State 6 Stanford 42, San Francisco 26 Fresco State 6, Nevada 3 Montana Mines 73, Whitworth 0 Board Sustains 1A Status Of Harmon Tom Harmon, last year's Wolverine star of the gridiron and considered by many to be the greatest football player toever pull on a pair of cleats, must go to President Roosevelt in or- der to unattach himself from the U. S. Army. For the Lake County Selective Ser- vice Board of Hammond, Ind., late yesterday sustained the decision of the Hoosier Hammer's local board in placing the Gary Ace in Class 1-A. Unless Harmon, now a sports an- nouncegi handling all the Michigan games for a Detroit radio station, ap- peals the ruling to the President he will be subject to immediate call for service in the Army. The kormer Maize land Blue All- American halfback sought deferment on the grounds that he was the sole support of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Harmon of Gary. This announcement concerning the Michigan star and his status with the Army follows closely on the heels of yesterday's bulletin dealing with Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis being listed in 1-A. So it seems very likely that the U. S. armed forces will be enforced by two men who have been considered the best of all timre in their respective fields. Ex-Michigan Star Dies- At Northwestern Game (Special to The Daily) EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 18.-One of Michigan's football stars of days gone by, Harry S. Durant, who played on the Wolverine eleven of 1902, lived to see his alma mater beat the North- western Wildcats in Dyche Stadium today. But when the final gun went off, Durant, instead of cheering with the other Maize and Blue supporters, slumped in his seat, apparently dead from a heart attack. The old Michigan gridder was 60 years old and a retired executive of the American Steel arnd Wire Com- pany. Surviving his death are two children; Dr. Thomas Durant of Tem- ple University Hospital, Philadelphia, and Mrs. Catherine Heap of Wash- ington. Gophers Whip Pitt;gOhio State EdgesPurdue Broncos Beat Spartans; Wisconsin Takes Easy Grid Battle From Iowa Smith Injured , MINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 18.-(P)- Minnesota mauled Pitt's punchless Panthers, 39 to 0, today but the Golden Gophers' crack captaih, Bruce Smith, was knocked out of the ball game. He joined an ominous casualty list, including the squad's best tackle, Urban Odson, and its top backfield blocker, Bob Sweiger, as the team got set for its tremendous test ne week against Michigan. OSU Unimpressive COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 18.-()-By the narrow margin of a first period safety, Ohio State defeated an up- and-coming Purdue team 16-14 to- day before 66,074 fans in the opening Western Conference contest for each squad. Ohio started like wildfire, rolling up nine first downs in the opening period, while holding Purdue to a net loss of eight yards, but from then on the statistics were all in favor of the shifty Boilermakers. Spartans Lose SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 18.-(P)- Santa Clara's Broncos, snatching at a break mid-way of the first period, rushed over a touchdown today to squeeze out a "7 to 0 victory over a fighting Michigan State team in the West Coast's top intersectional foot- ball game of the day. Badgers Surprise MADISON, Oct. 18.-(IP)-Wiscon- sin, led by two fleet and rugged soph- omore backs, slapped a surprise 23 to 0 licking on a favored Iowa eleven in a Western Conference football game before 20,000 here today, The Badgers scored all their points in the first 20 minutes and then operated cautiously. Illinois Comes Back CHAMPAIGN, 11., Oct. 18.-)- An injury-riddled Illinois football team, repulsed by Minnesota con- ference champions last Saturday, bounded back through the air and on the ground today for six touch- downs and an easy 40 to 0 victory over Drake before 12,193 spectators in Memorial Stadium. Indiana Wins LINCOLN, Nebr.; Oct. 18.-()- Indiana of the Big Ten did every- thing better than Nebraska, football champion of the Big Six, before 33,- 000 homecoming day fans here today and went away with a 21 to 13 vic- tory, the first time the Hoosiers have beaten the Huskers in six starts. It was Nebraska's first defeat in three games and Indiana's first win in four trips out. Anchor' Aweigh! BALTIMORE, Oct. 18-MP)-Pushed all over the lot for 'the first 30 min- utes of play, Navy's powerful football squad finally gathered itself in the second half to capitalize on two scor- ing opportunities and hand Cornell its first defeat of the season, 14 to 0, before a crowd of 45,000 in Municipal Stadium today. Irish Take Scotch PITTSBURGH, ° Oct. 18. -- (/P) - Notre Dame slipped and slid today to a 16-0 victory over underdog Carnegie Tech before a rainsoaked crowd of 27,719 who came expecting to see an Irish field day but left cheering the Tartans amazing goal line stands. r I NO / / / F' / rFace MOE in her ANN ARBOR DEBUT r v A ? ;...:. ./..... __. . .+... ..'' r WEDNESDAY, 8:30 P.M. This star of opera, concert, r-Aio, and the movits, has just returned from a brilliant "good will" '/ / / !f /f ,/%r / / 1 / // / / / w/ %/ / 7 A ___- Y G9REENJE'S will Re -Finish your Suede Jackets 11