PAGE SUE T-HE= MI-CH-IGAN-- DAILY SUNDAY,- NOV. 22, 1942 Great Lakes .. 6 Yale... ....7 Notre Dame .. 27 Auburn ......27 Wisconsin ... 20 Fordham .... 20 Stanford .... 26 Dartmouth .. 26 Illinois .0..... 0 Harvard .... 3 Northwestern . 20 Georgia ......13 Minnesota ... 6 Missouri .... 12 California ... 7 Columbia ... 13 Rice .........26 TCU....... ... Badgers Sailors Whitewash Illinois Team, 6-0 CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Nowv. 21.- (.,)- Great Lakes scored its fifth straight shutout victory today downing Illi- nois, 6 to 0, before a crowd of 10,856. It was the first time this year the Illini have failed to cross their oppo- nents' goal line. .he gSailors made their lone touch- down in the third period when Bob Sweiger, former Minnesota fullback; plunged over from the one-yard line after his former Gopher teammate, halfback Bruce Smith, had set up the play with a brilliant 41-yard sprint through the Illini secondary. Whip Gophers, 20-6; Irish Nip Wildcats, 27-20 . Wisconsin Leads All the Way as Pat Harder Spearheads Drives MADISON, Wis., Nov. 21.-(YP)-An alert, efficient Wisconsin football that smashed 61 yards to score in the first three minutes, checked Minne- sota's power drives the rest of the way today to gain a 20 to 6 victory before 46,000 fans. The Gophers fought back gamely but Wisconsin had the stuff to pull through and turn Gopher mistakes to its own advantage. Wisconsin, scored first on a line smash, added a touchdown late in the second quarter on a pass after re- To dress +."...vf . your TABLE. These colorful CORK BACK PLACE MATS are just the thing to dress up your table. They come in many color schemes and interesting patterns-fam- ous Currier and Ives prints, game season, flowered, children, Mexican and sampler patterns. Ideal gifts for your friends and they'll appre- ciate the saving on their laundry bill. GAGE LINEN SHOP 8 NICKELS ARCADE Always Reasonably Priced {:::}..... ...$.. :":":"""tG:?3 {"h'i":"i3Y"}}3}:5....{........ .......... . . Y^':" J. .+: " "v..,... .v :..v.p.n; r}:": ..$..";r".:4v}::...:. x....?'p{"}4{: covering a Minnesota fumble on the Gopher 32, and counted with a line plunge at the start of the final peri- od after taking the ball on downs on the Minnesota 19. Minnesota, repulsed by alert Bad- ger defensive play on five occasions, scored late in the game on a line plunge by Bill Daley after getting position on a pass. The victory gave Wisconsin second place in the Big Ten race and one of the best records of recent years with eight wins, one defeat, and a tie. Badgers Start Drive Wisconsin took the opening kickoff back to its 31 and promptly started a touchdown march. Elroy Hirsch, fleet sophomore halfback, passed to Dave Schreiner, the Badger All- American end, on the 50. Schreiner was forced out of bounds on the Gopher 40. Pat Harder, plunging fullback, then took a lateral from quarterback Ash- ley Anderson and raced around right end to the 18. He went around left end to the 12 on the next shot and on a third try went over tackle to the four. Another smash through the line by Harder gave the Badgers a touchdown. Harder kicked the point and Wisconsin led, 7 to 0. Gopher Comeback The Gophers smashed back to the Wisconsin 28 on quick opening smash- es by Vic Kulbitski and Bill Daley, but lost the ball on downs on the 21 early in the second period. Late in the second period Herman Frickey, Gopher safety man, fumbled a punt on his 32 and Fred Negus, Wisconsin center, recovered. Hirsch passed to Schreiner, who caught it on the 17, and raced for a touchdown. Harder converted. A fumble by Hirsch on his own 41, recovered by Dick Wildung, Minne- sota's captain, put the Badgers in the hole in the third period and play was mostly in their territory the rest of the quarter. ThetGophers crashed to the Wisconsin 10 but lost the ball on downs, and moved to the seven later on a series of smashes by Daley and Frickey, but Frickey's fumble stopped the drive. Minnesota Gamble Fails Bob Baumann got off a great punt to push Minnesota to its 11 in the final period. The Gophers tried four plays, and a fourth down gamble gave Wisconsin the ball on the invaders' 19. Harder passed to Schreiner on the four-yard line and then cracked cen- ter to the two. Anderson went over for a touchdown on a quarterback sneak. Late in the period Daley, Gopher halfback, broke loose for a 44-yard right end run to Wisconsin's 15. Daley passed sto Bill Garnaas on the one yard line and then hit right tackle for a score. Garnaas' try for the extra point by a placement failed.' Auburn Upsets Georgia, 27-13 Amazing Tigers Gain 355 Yards on Ground COLUMBUS, Ga., Nov. 21.-(?)- You may bow in silent meditation to- night for a gridiron empire that was. Georgia lost today to a brilliant and under-rated Auburn, 27-13, and the crash of America's No. 1 football team probably resounded all the way to Pasadena, Calif. While 20,000 hysterical fans looked on-a goodly majority cheering for Auburn-the Tigers of mild Jack Meagher snatched a rumored Rose Bowl invitation out of Georgia's hip pocket and kicked it all around Memorial Stadium in a decisive 56- minute rout. Georgia Takes Lead Georgia won the toss, and scored the first touchdown within four min- utes of rthe opening kickoff. Then Auburn took the initiative and ham- mered Georgia until the boys from Athens hollered*"uncle." Six min- utes and 13 plays were all it took for big Jim Reynolds and will-o'-the- wisp Monk Gafford to whipsaw Geor- gia for a 7-6 lead, and from there on it was all Auburn. At half-time Auburn was leading 14-6. At the third quarter it was still 14-6, with Georgia fighting for a break to turn the tide. Then Auburn punched over another touchdown, watched Georgia match it, and fin- ally lashed out with the coup de grace, a fourth touchdown scored when Frankie Sinkwich was knocked down behind his own goal in an at- tempt to pass, and Fagan Canzoneri fell on the fumbled ball. Statistics Favor Tigers Auburn rolled up the astounding total of 355 yards by rushing while holding Sinkwich and Co. ("dream backfield" and all) to a net of 37 on the ground. Georgia threw 34 passes and com- pleted just 12-a gauge of the ter- rific pressure Auburn was putting on. Yardage by air was 190 for Georgia, of which 177 was credited to Sink- wich. With 31 yards additional by rushing, he pushed his total for the season to 2,023 yards, breaking the previous national record for total offense established last year by Bud Schwenk of Washington University (St. Louis) of 1,928 yards. Hunter Wins NCAA Meet EAST LANSING, Mich., Nov. 21.- (P)- Oliver Hunter, Notre Dame's durable distance runner, whipped a field of 64 in the National Collegiate Athletic Association's fifth annual cross-country run here today and sliced 14.1 seconds off the meet rec- ord even though he strayed from the course at one point. Indiana and Penn State shared the team title. SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. 21.-()- Otto Graham's brilliant passing failed to match the effects of Notre Dame's pulverizing ground attack led by sophomore fullback Corwin Clatt to- day and the Irish snatched a 27 to 20 victory from Northwestern before a crowd of 30,000. The Irish had to fight from behind twice in the first half to match North- score with Ed Hirsch ramming over the 2. Clatt capped a 60 yard Irish push with a five yard buck before the opening quarter closed. A 70 yard march by Northwestern in the second quarter blossomed into a score when Graham passed 17 yards to Dud Kean. The Irish came back 61 yards with Clatt wriggling over from the 1. Sub Al Pick kicked one North- western extra point while Angelo Bertelli added one for the Irish to clamp the count 13 to 13 at the half. Irish Go Ahead Notre Dame tucked away the vic- tory in the third, going ahead for the first time on a 79-yard jaunt- spear- headed by Clatt's 47 yards of turf ripping in three plays. Sophomore Bob Livingstone topped it off with a 14 yard bolt into the end zone and Bertelli's toe fired the conversion. With three minutes left in the peri- od, Clatt filched Don Buffmire's pass and raced 15 yards to the North- western 44. From there, Bertelli whipped a pass to Joe Limont, then connected for a 31 yard touchdown flip to Creighton Miller. John Creevey booted the point to send the Irish ahead 27 to 13. More Graham Passes Graham uncoiled his arm for the Wildcats' fourth quarter score, hit- ting Clarence Hasse, Dud Kean, and Bob Motl for a gain of 46 yards to set the props for Hirsch's second touchdown from the 3. Pick's kick clicked for the point. Graham's brilliance in the air com- pletely overshadowed the attempts of Notre Dame's passing pride, Bertelli. The willow-armed Wildcat completed 13 of 23 pitches for 175 pards; Angelo made 4 in 7 for 72. Graham even out- gained the running yardage of leg-, pumping Clatt who clattered 149 yards on 23 trips. SMU Ties Baylor, 6-6 WACO, Tex., Nov. 21.-(AP)-South- ern Methodist tied Baylor, 6 to 6, to- day on a long, fourth period touch- down pass from Frito Gonzales to Hardy Miller that definitely put SMU out of the running for the Southwest Conference football championship, but left Baylor still with a mathe- matic chance. Clatt Sparks Notre Dame Attack; Graham Stars for Northwestern Indiana Backs Romp Against Purdue, 20-0 LAFAYETTE, Ind., Nov. 21.- (P)- Indiana University's powerful back- field turned out to be just that today and for the first time the Hoosiers won the Old Oaken Bucket three years in a row, by defeating Purdue, 20 to 0, before a chilled crowd of 20,000 fans. Only once were they threatened and that was in the third period when southpaw Tony Berto helped pitch the Boilermakers to the Indiana 16. A missed signal which cost 16 yards and a bad pass ended the threat, however. Stanford Wallops Bears BERKELEY, Calif., Nov. 21.- (IP)- Stanford's Indians climaxed their Coast Conference football season in brilliant fashion today with a stun- ning 26 to 7 victory over University of California's hapless Bears. The red-shirted boys who fumbled and stumbled their way to three de- feats to start the 1942 gridiron sched- ule, finished like champions as they passed and raced to touchdowns in every period. Some 45,000 fans, the smallest "Big Gaime" crowd in recent years, saw Stanford's famed T formation func- tion as it did two years ago when the Indians charged to the League title and the Rose Bowl-nomination. * ** Rice Clips Owls, 26-0 HOUSTON, Tex., Nov. 21.- (IP)- Rice's battering Owls, paced by a 190- pound end who also plays in the back- field, crushed Texas Christian, 26-0, today to remain in the Southwest Conference football race and virtually eliminate the Horned Frogs from championship consideration. It was Wendell Williams who led the boys in blue to one of the most one-sided defeats of a TCU team in a decade as 14,000 looked on. Williams caught passes, made tackles all over the field and when shifted to the backfield rolled up 45 yards running with the ball. It was Dick Dwelle, smashing full- back, who cashed in on the Rice op- portunities, scoring two touchdowns with line smashes LIGHT UP I Iy ® 4. ' RELAX I OTTO GRAHAM ... his brilliant passing, 13 com- pletions out of 23 attempts, nearly caused Notre Dame's downfall. western touchdowns and stalemate the score at 13 to 13 at intermission, but in the third period, Notre Dame pushed across two markers to hole the Wildcats so badly they could not emerge despite a 48-yard drive to a score in the last period. It was the 22nd game in the school's bitter rivalry and left the Irish with 17 wins in the series. The Purple have lost eight out of nine starts this sea- son, including today. All the game's touchdown output was hooked on the end of long drives. Northwestern marched 39 for the first WITH A PIPE FROM SWIFT'S For real smoking pleasure be sure to select one of our fine pipes which are now on display, and light up with your favorite brand of tobacco from our store. 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