PAGE SIX THE vICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOV. 15, 1942 Minnesota . . 27 Mich. State . .19 Georgia Tech . 7 Georgia . . . .40 Indiana . . . . 54 Boston Col.. .56 Penn State . . 13 Colgate .....14 Iowa .........7 Purdue.......6 Alabama . . .. 0 Chattanooga . .0 Kansas State . . 0 Fordliam . . . .6 Pennsylvania . 7 Syracuse . . . .0 Navy.......13 Columbia . . . . 9 Badgers Northwestern Bested by Last Minute Thrust Top Wildcats, 20-19; OSU Smothers Illini, 44-20 t ti I SIDELIGHTS (Continued from Page 1) .0 . . By Mike Dann I1 Winning Pass Comes With 18 Seconds Left EVANSTON, Ill., Nov. 14.-(R')- Trailing 19 to 14 in the last 18 sec- onds of the game, Wisconsin kept its Big Ten championship hopes alive with a dramatic thrust for a touchdown which defeated North- western 20 to 19 today before 35,000 fuming spectators. Northwestern's Wildcats, beaten six times in a row, bounded from the depths of football despair to play their best game of the season with their brilliant forward passer, Otto Graham, tossing two thrilling touch- down aerials. Wisconsin, beaten only by Iowa in one of its strongest title bids in 30 years, was experiencing a terrific scare until Len Seelinger, a substi- tute halfback, in the game for only three minutes, fired the winning touchdown pass. After the Badgers had blasted their way to Northwestern's four-yard line only to lose a touchdown on a fum- ble, they came right back to launch a scoring surge with Seelinger play- ing the hero's role. The Wildcats were-forced to punt to their own.36. Seeinger, dropping back on a pass- faking maneuver, suddenly turned and sprinted 21 yards to the 15. Then fullback Pat Harder plowed to the 6 in two attempts. Seelinger, with the clock ticking off the final precious seconds, fired a pass while standing on the 6-yard stripe. The ball sailed into the out- stretched arms of Mark Hoskins standing in the end zone. As Hoskins grabbed the ball, he fell to the ground less than a yard inside the field, but he finally held on to come up with the all-important slim mar- vin. The Wildcats, who for the first time since 1923 completed their Con- ference season without a victory, played a superb game, chalking up 14 first downs to 11 for Wisconsin and nearly matched the Badgers in rushing, gaining 165 yards to 173. Graham, the pass-master, completed 10 of 21 aerials for 94 yards. r:::. 5 4? " . '"0: ' "0 . ' , 4'" jX6( a. *-' park within 20 yards of the stad- ium .. the Navy is now using the massive parking lots for drill fields. Louis Elbel was the happiest man in the stadium during half-time. Forty-four years ago he composed "Hail to the Victors" and he had to wait until toddy to lead the U. of M. band at his home town. Elbel runs a music store here. Three bands performed at half- time-Michigan, Notre Dame and the Navy band which is stationed at the V-7 school here. The boys in the press box said that the Michigan band put on the finest show they had ever seen here. Professor Revelli's boys had to stand all the way from Ann Arbor to Niles . . . and they got here just in time for the game. Most of the Over a thousand loyal Michigan fans waited three-quarters of an hour in the cold November evening to cheer the victorious Wolverines as they arrived home at 10:30 p.m. last night. The Michigan Central depot was jammed with students and other followers of the Maize and Blue long before the train pulled into the station, and cheers arose as each member of the varsity stepped off the car. In the absence of organized cheering, the crowd kept itself in high spirits singing school songs during the time between the sched- uled and actual arrival of the train. spectators stayed in the stadium at the end of the game to watch, the Michigan band parade up and down the field with their, hats on back- wards. Ensign Gordon Hardy, former Michigan League bandmaster, who was in from Chicago's Naval Pier for the game, offered condolences to Jim "Extra Point" Brieske who missed three conversions today, one more than he had missed all sea- son. Brieske told Hardy that he doesn't care how many he misses if it means Michigan will keep winning. Notre Dame must have been afraid of the fleet-footed Michigan backs ... they kept dropping the ball out of bounds on the kick-offs. But this backfired because their kicks were bad. The Irish were gunning for Kuzma .. fast and rough tackling knocked his helmet off four times in the first quarter alone. Irish Couch Frank Leahy played a hard game . . . he followed his team up and down the sidelines ... he couldn't keep still. Michigan's second touchdown came on the same fake placement play that beat Ohio State three. years ago ... eagle-eyed Wolverine fans should have known that Brieske wasn't going to kick.. . the Harbor Beach sophomore went through all sorts of leg-limbering exercises just before the ball was snapped . . . ordinarily he doesn't move a muscle until he's set to kick. Eleven radio stations, one major! network and 215 working newspaper- men filled the press box to overflow- ing . . . Irish publicity director Joe Petritz said it was the largest crowd the box ever had. The football was auctioned off for $44.725 in pre-game bidding... high' bidder was a local children's hospital ... the players and coaches autographed the pigskin. Trackman Bob Ufer, down to spot for NBC Sportscaster Bill Stern, couldn't get a hotel room and slept in a Notre Dame dormitory. Accord- ing to tradition, a gang of Irish pull- ed him out of bed at 6 a.m. and dragged him off to mass to pray for an Irish victory. Bob fooled them and prayed for Michigan. Tom Brock, Notre Dame's third- string center, who saw quite a bit ,of action, centers the ball with just one hand ... both of Notre Dame's goal line stands were on the one, yard line . . . the Wolverines were fooled four times by the old Statue- of-Liberty play . . . Iand once it meant a touchdown. End Phil Sharpe was out on his feet for a few seconds in the third' quarter . . . he didn't know it, but it was Julie Franks' knee that hit him ... Captain Ceithaml almost knocked hi mself out . .. he fell, his foot hit his clenched fist and ,he caught it in the jaw. Defeated Coach Leahy had this to say after the game: "After wait- ing such a long time, perhaps it would have been wiser to have waited just a little longer . . . for a weaker Michigan team to come along. It looks as if Michigan had spent the last 33 years collecting those boys they threw against us today." According to Dr. A. W. Coxen, none of the Michigan boys were hurt afd all should be in good shape for OSU next Saturday. The winners usually never get hurt, Coxen explained, but the losers always seem to receive the larger share of injuries. Creighton Miller, the Irish half back who did most of the running Iwild that Notre Dame did, is the son of Harry Miller, the great Notre Dame back who starred against Michigan in 1909. A brother, Tom Miller, is also on the squad. After the contest, about a hundred stadium guards protected the goal posts against enthusiastic fans who wanted to carry home a little me- mento for the "little woman' . . . Notre Dame's stadium housed the players in dug-outs during the game . . . the same type they have in base- ball parks. Wild Tilt Ends Illinois"Hopes of Championship Best Illini Team in Years Can't Beat Bucks CLEVELAND. Nov. 14.-(IP)-Ohio State, attacking with devastating fury, trounced its old rival, Illinois, 44 to 20stoday to take over undis- puted first place in the Western Conference football race before 68,656 chilly fans. The loss eliminated Illinois, with one of itssstrongest teams since the boom gridiron days of the '20s, from the title chase. Iowa, which had been in a three-way tie for the lead with Ohio and the Illini, was top- pled by Minnesota, 27 to 7. From the time little Leslie Hor- vath, Ohio halfback, sprinted 36 yards for a touchdown in the first Con'ference game ever staged here, the Bucks held the edge.. Horvath,f hard-driving Paul Sar- ringhaus, the other halfback, and Sarringhaus' alternate, red-haired Tommy James, held the spotlight in the high-scoring game at Cleve-f land's lake front stadium. Horvath's first run came after seven minutes of play. He scored again in the third period by slipping around end for six yards. But it was Sarringhaus, who uses contact lens because of poor vision, who was largely responsible for the Bucks' success. Besides scoring touchdowns on a one-Yard plunge and a 47-yard pass from Horvath, the hard-driving Sarringhaus turned in sensational punting. Georgia Scores Victory CHATTANOOGA, Tenn., Nov. 14.-1 (A')- Fleet-footed Frankie Sinkwich led the undefeated, untied Georgia football team to a 40 to 0 victory over the University of Chattanooga today in a -game which wasn't as one-sided as the score might indicate. MIDDLE WEST Michigan 32, Notre Dame 20 Minnesota 27, Iowa 7 r Wisconsin 20, Northwestern 19 Ohio State 44, Illinois 20 Michigan State 19, Purdue 6 Iowa State 20, Kansas 13 St. Joseph's (Ind.) 6, Butler 0 DePauw 6, Wabash 3 Ohio Northern 15, Heidelberg 0 Cincinnati 20, Dayton 0 Denison 2. Washington-Jefferson 0. Ohio U 20, Xavier 14 Indiana 54, Kansas State 0 Carroll 13, Ripon 0 Creighton 13, Texas Tech 6 Missouri 6, Oklahoma 6 Oklahoma A & M 54, St. Louis 7 Tulsa 24, Baylor 0 Washington (St. L.) 14, Drake 7 EAST Army 19, Virginia Tech 7 Delaware 45, Western Maryland 0 Amherst 12, Williams 6 Boston College 56, Fordham 6 Cornell 21, Dartmouth 19 Connecticut 16, Coast Guard 0 N. C. Naval 1', Manhattan 0 Muhlenberg 7, Franklin-Marshall 6 Georgetown 28, N. C. State 20 Holy Cross 13, Temple 0 Harvard 7, Brown 0 Swarthmore 28, Johns Hopkins 7 Lehigh 7, Dickinson 0 Lakehurst Naval 14, Lafayette 0 Navy 13, Columbia 9 Pittsburgh 6, Nebraska 0 Penn State 13, Penn 7 Yale 13, Princeton 6 Colgate 14, Syracuse 0 SOUTH Georgia 'Tech 7, Alabama 0 Auburn 25, Louisiana State U. 7 Georgia 40, Chattanooga 0 Kentucky 7, West Virginia 0 Tennessee 14., Mississippi 0 Georgia Pre-Flight 7, Tulane 0 Davidson 21, Washington & Lee 13 Duke 13, North Carolina 13 (Tie) Furman 6, South Carolina 0 Maryland 27, Virginia 12 William & Mary 27, V.M.I. 6 Vanderbilt 27, Union (Tenn.) 0 Miami 12, Florida 0 West Virginia 7, Kentucky 0 Mississippi State 28, Duquesne 6 Jacksonville Naval 24, Clemson 6 FOOTBALL SCORES ..0 I SOUTHWEST Texas Christian 13, Texas 7 Texas A. & M. 0, Rice 0 (Tie) Southern Methodist 14, Arkansas 6 ROCKY MOUNTAIN Utah 34, Wyoming 7 Colorado 48, Brigham Young 0 Utah State 13, Denver 13 (Tie) Colorado State 14, Greeley 6 Colorado Mines 21, Regis 20 Georgia Tech Wins ATLANTA, Nov. 14.- (P)- A pixi- lated freshman halfback left over from Friday, the 13th-slender, 150- pound Clint Castleberry-put a two- minute hex on Alabama's great foot- ball team today, and Georgia Tech won a,7-0 decision before 34,000 fans to remain one of the nation's un- beaten, untied football powers. The victory sustained Tech's rank- ing as the nation's No. 2 team, and paved the way for a possib1e national championship game when Tech meets unbeaten, untied Georgia Nov. 28. Michigan Sharpe Wistert Kolesar Pregulinan Franks Pritula Madar Ceithaml Kuzma White Wiese LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LIi RH FB OSU, Here We Come Notre Dame Dave Rymkus McBride Ziemba' Wright Neff Murphy Bertelli Livir gstone C. Miller Clatt 6 19 0--32 7 0 6-20 MICHIGAN....... NOTRE DAME .... . 7 7 Michigan Scoring: Touchdowns- Ceithaml, Robinson (sub for Kuzma), White, Kuzma 2. Points after touch- down-Brieske (sub for Pregulman) 2. (Placements). Notre Dame Scoring: Touchdowns -Dove, C. Miller 2. Points after touchdown-Bertelli 2, (Placements). Michigan Substitutes: Tackle, Dar- leth. Guard, Freihofer. Center, Brieske. Back, Robinson. Notre Dame Substitutes: Ends, Yonakor, Limont. Tackles, White, Czarobski. Guards, Filley, Tobin. Centers, Coleman, Brock. Backs, J. Creevey, R. Creevy, T. Miller, Earley, Cowhig. it Can the Experts Slight Us Now? MICH. N D First D ow ns .......................................... Yards Gained Rushing (net) ........................ Forward Passes Attempted ............................ Forward Passes Completed ............................ Yards by Forward Passing ............................ Forward Passes Intercepted by. .......... Yards Gained Runback of Intercepted Passes .......... Punting Average from Scrimmage ....... ........... . Total Yards All Kicks Returned ...................... Opponents Fumbles Recovered ........................ 19 319 9 3 43 3 13 31 81 2 15 170 14 6 78 1 27 32 106 1 12 t' I 'hIl Yards Lost by Penalties ............... 3 I * ALWAYS THE PERFECT GIFT *: i LADIES- I'--- ,. with SCM FIGURE SKATES Ladies' matched shoe and skate sets for figure skating. We have a complete stock in all sizes. * *. Oak *v w AI* Bill *i -/ '7 EELA (MRA VELVA CREAM MASK It's been one of those days. But there's an evening ahead. 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