r six THE M ICHI.GAN fDALY SUNDAY, NOV. 7. 1943 Duke . .....75 Brown.......21 Villanova . . .45 Dartmouth . .47 Cornell......13 Holy Cross . .42 Nebraska .. 13 Ga. Tech . . .42 N. Car. Sate . 0 Yale .........20 Princeton .. .22 Columbia ... 13 Penn. State .. 0 Temple.. ...6 1Kansas State . 7 L.S.U. ..... 7 Texas A&M.. 22 S.M.U. . . . . . V Hoernschemeyer Bottled as Michigan Trips Indiana, 23-6 'PdeDeet Wolverine Attack Spotty Minus Daley, Pregulman (Continued from Page 1) Tallies for Michigan taling 85 yards, the Wolverine attack showed none of the power it had when Daley was plummeting through holes blasted by Pregulman, the gi- ant tackle. Time after time the Wol- verines bogged down in their power drive and were either forced to kick or give up the ball some other way. Forwards Are Aggressive As for Hoernschemeyer's poor per- formance, it can be credited to Mich- igan's aggressive forwards who har- assed the game Hoosier throughout the battle. Indiana's triple-threat star had no time to spot his receivers as he did in seven previous games when he completed 41 out of 110 passes for nearly 1,000 yards. Yesterday's game will be a blot on Hunchy's record. He picked up only 48 yards. And to add insult to in- jury, the Wolverines intercepted four of his flips, including Smeja's touch- down return. Michigan Penalized Often Something can be said for the type of football played by the two teams. The civilian-manned Hoosier eleven presented a clean brand of football, marred by only one 15-yard penalty. On the other hand, the Wolverines were set back repeatedly by penalties. in their roughest performance of the season. Coach Fritz Crisler will send his Wolverines against hapless Wiscon- sin here next Satu day, closing the season the following week against Ohio' State's frosh-civilian eleven. Another for Hirsch INDIANA MICHIGAN Hoppe LE Smeja Kempf LT Hanzlik Coffee LG Gallagher Tavener C Negus Ravensberg RG Kraeger McCune RT Derleth Pihos RE Rennebohm Cannady QB Wink Hoernscheaneyer LH Hirsch Mangold RH Dreyer Allerdice FB Wiese Indiana .........0 0 6 0- 6 Michigan . .....7 7 ? 7-«2,3 Indiana Scoring: Touchdown, Pi-. hos. Michigan Scoring: Touchdowns- Hirsch, Dreyer, Smeja. Points after Touchdown-Wells (for Kraeger) 3 (placekicks). Safety- Hoernsche- meyer (stepped out of end zone). Substitutions: Indiana- Tackles, Sowinski, Herron, Sidwell; Guards, Smith, Ciolli; Center, Simchick; Backs, Sanders, McDonnell. Michi- gan-- Ends, Olshanski, Johnson, Mroz; Tackle, Bauman; Guards, Wells; Backs, Lund, Nussbaumer, Wikel, Maves. WALLY DREYER Varsity Set's Pass Stealing Record at 18 AFTER Michigan had intercepted Hunchy Hoernschemeyer's fourth straight aerial, announcer Bob Kelley told Detroit radio fans that it was, a new record for the Wolverines. It seems that yesterday's four stolen passes, added to 14 others grabbed by Wolverines throughout the sea- son, make a total of 18 for a new all-time mark. It's too bad we had to do it at Hunchy's expense .. . ETITHER THE RAIN obscured our vision or our eyes are losing their touch, but we could have sworn that there was a young lady prancing up and down the sidelines with a camera. First, Marion Ford, Daily managing editor and United Press correspondent, invades the Stadium press box to break a tra- dition. Then, Katie Tripp joins the sideline parade of picture-takers. Well, if we have to look at anyone down there, it might as well be Katie . . . THERE was one case of attempted larceny (petty, we call it) that didn't escape our eyes. Ed Sidwell, Hoosier tackle, tried to steal the ball out of Don Lund's hands. Apparently, Sidwell doesn't know Don as well as we do. P.S. He didn't get it. W GLANCING around the sta- dium at the huge crowd that stayed away from yesterday's game, we noticed that there seemed to be more soldiers, sailors and Ma- rines in the stands than civilians. And we heard scattered cheers for the Hoosiers from these lads-- downright treason . . . BOB HANZLIK, the Wisconsin transfer who was acting game captain, was guilty of unnecessary roughness in the fourth quarter when he dumped Hunchy on a pass play after the Hoosier freshman had toss- ed the ball away and was minding his own business. The act didn't set very well with some of the fans who noticed it. Purdue Defeats Gophers, 14-7, On Late Pass Boilermakers Win in Last 40 Seconds To Remain Undefeated MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 6-(P)-Pur- due won its fifth straight game in the Big Ten today, scoring a touchdown in the last 40 seconds to beat Minne- sota, 14-7, before 43,000 home-com- ing fans. The Boilermakers' victory came with startling suddenness when it seemed as though the game would end in a 7-7 tie. A long punt carried the ball to the Minnesota 10. Three line plays took it to the 18, at which point Bill Pet- erson, Gopher quartreback, fumbled a low pass while trying to punt and Purdue took over at that point. One line play failed and then Sam Vacanti, Purdue' quarerback, shot a pass which Boris Dimancheff, right halfback, grabbed in the end zone for the winning touchdown. Snow fell during most of the game and pretty well nullified the aerial attacks of the teams. Purdue tried seven aerials, and the only one that worked was the touchdown heave. The Gophers didn't try any. The Boilermakers apparently miss- ed Lineman Alex Agase and John Ge- nis, and Fullback Tony Butkovich, lost by transfer, as the Gophers made most of their gains through the cen- ter of the line. Minnesota rolled up a net of 240 yards from rushing, whereas the4winners got only 162. First downs were even at nine. Illini Frosh Top Hawke yes IOWA CITY, Iowa, Nov. 6.-(IP)- The statistics showed that Iowa out- played Illinois in the Hawkeyes' homecoming football game today, but the scoreboard put the Illini out in front, 19-10. The scoring highlight was Eddie McGovern's 95-yard jaunt for a sec- ond period Illini touchdown, after intercepting Howie Larson's pass on his own five. The Illini scored in the first 11 plays of the game, Green- wood going over from the four to climax a 63-yard march after the kickoff. The Hawks worked their way to Illinois' 17, where the Illini braced, forcing Bill Barbour to boot a 34- yard placekick for a field goal. Illi- nois snapped back with its last two touchdowns, scored by Bray from the three after a 60-yard march, and by McGovern on his 95-yard jaunt. The third period was scoreless, but it saw Iowa set up its lone touch- down. A 39-yard pass from Roger Stephens to Henry Terrell was com- pleted on the one-yard line as the quarter ended. On the second play of the fourth period Bill Gallagher crashed over. Barbour kicked the extra point. Hamberg, Navy Beat Penn, 24=-7 PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 6. -(/P)- Picking themselves off the floor from last week's Notre Dame disaster, Navy's slashing Middies smeared Pennsylvania's unbeaten record all over Franklin Field, 24-7, today, led by "half-pint" Harold Hamberg. It was a magnificent comeback for a Navy eleven that suffered a bad scare in the first half when Bob Odell, Penn's Iowa ace, galloped 41 yards with an intercepted pass to score the lone Quaker tally and bring the vast sell-out crowd of 71,215 to its feet. That was the way it was as the third quarter opened. Before the shooting was over, Hamberg had set up one touchdown with a 43-yard punt return, had scored another and had passed for a third. Navy Outrushes Quakers Penn was able to put together only three first downs, against the Mid- dies 18, and were held to a net of 24 yards rushing, compared to Navy's 246. In addition to his second half spree, Hamberg had a big hand in the open- ing touchdown in the first quarter when he heaved a 22-yard pass to Al Channell on the Penn one. Finos ploughed through the middle for the tally. Midway of the third quarter Ham- berg skipped 43 yards to the 13 on a brilliant run during which eight Penn players missed tackles on him. Finos went over again. A 39-yard parade resulted in Navy's first tally in the final chapter. Ham- berg went over from the 2. Bill Shephard, a second-string guard, recovered a Quaker fumble a few minutes later on the Penn 23. This time, Hamberg heaved to Roe Johnston on the 14 and the right end lateralled to Hume who did the rest. San Diego Sailors Upset Tr a i, 107 SAN DIEGO, Calif., Nov. 6.-(A)- A San Diego Naval Training Station eleven sprung one of the season's big football upsets today by whip- ping the previously unbeaten, untied, unscored-on Trojans of the Univer- sity of Southern California, 10-7. The Bluejackets, coached by Bo Molenda, formerly of the University of Michigan, were keyed to a fighting pitch for this one game and they capitalized on frequeht Trojan fum- bles and errors in judgment. Bears Rout 'Frisco BERKELEY, CALIF., Nov. 6-(P)- California's Bears defeated the Uni- versity of San Fransisco, 32-0, in their football game today before 5,000 fans. California, heavier, bigger and en- joying superior experience, scored in every period, twice in the first. NEW YORK, Nov. 6-(P)-Most every time you looked up in the fourth period of today's Army-Notre Dame football game a guy wearing a green shirt was playing hide and seek behind the Cadet goal posts in full view of 76,000 spectators. So the Irish won, 26-0. In the first half Notre Dame built up a 6 to 0 advantage, but after the rest the South Benders marched with relative ease to their seventh straight win of the season. The Irish piled up 17 first downs and 233 yards by rush- ing. Irish Stretch Streak The defeat was the first of the year for the Cadets but extended Bucks Smash Panthers, 46-6 PITTSBURGH, Nov. 6.-OP)-Ohio State, operating with a host of fleet, talented freshman backs, finally ex- ploded its power today and the result was a crushing 46-6 triumph over the hapless Pitt Panthers. It was the highest score run up by the Ohioans this year. The Bucks, beaten five times in six previous contests, electrified a crowd of 30,000 by driving for touchdowns the first four times they got their hands on the ball and scoring almost at will until their regulars were yanked. They also poured over three more touchdowns in the second peri- od while being forced to punt but once. Only Coach Paul Brown's decision to play mostly his third string substi- tutes in the last half kept the Pan- thers from absorbing perhaps their worst beating in history. It was only then that Pitt could score. Joe Mocha engineered a pass and two tricky laterals in the third period to propel the Panthers 70 yards to the Buck one-foot line,. where Johnny Itzel rammed over. their losing streak in this series to 13 years without a victory and they now have been shut out in five of the last six games, It didn't take Johnny Lujack who inherited the Notre Dame quarter- backing job when Angelo Bertelli was transferred to the Parris Island Mar- ine camp, but a few minutes to dis- cover that the Cadets' pass defense was a one-man affair. Lujack Comes Through He rifled a 30-yarder to John Yo- nakor which that towering end caught along in the end zone for the first touchdown early in the opening period and completed a trio of tosses before the Cadets discovered it still was legal to bat them down. The next Irish marker also came through the air with Lujack demon- strating that Bertelli's passing won't be missed* greatly. This time he reached Yonakor again from the six- yard line after tackle Jim White had set up the play by stealing the ball from Army's Glenn Davis on the eight-yard line two plays before. Davis Is Game's Goat Davis, who was the hero of the Army forces early in the season, ap- peared to be the game's goat until the Irish point-deluge in the fourth. Prior to that he had twice ended Ca- det marches by fumbling deep in ene- my territory in addition to letting White wipe the ball for the second marker. But after the fourth session got un- der way it was apparent to everyone that his mistakes were of little con- sequence. Notre Dame started a land march on its own 26 and hurried a- long the ground to touchdown land 74 yards away with Fred Earley doing the actual scoring. A few minutes later Lujack was back in the lineup and duplicated the feat. Not e Dame played with the handi- cap of a make-shift backfield, Lu-. jack subbing for Bertelli and Bob Kelly starting in place of the ailing Julie Rykovich, but a quartet of cho- rus girls could have performed be- hind the Irish line. PETE PIHOS . . . one of Indiana's two veteran lettermen who snared one of Hunchy Hoernschemeyer's passes for the Hoosier's lone tally against Michigan. Pihos was one of the losers' line standouts. ' Wildcats Beat Wisconsin, 41-0 MADISON, Wis., Nov. 6.- (R)- Dexterous Otto Graham, Northwes- tern's all-purpose handy man, ran, kicked, and passed the Wildcats to a 41 to 0 Big Ten football triumph over a lowly Wisconsin eleven today. Before a homecoming crowd of1 11,000, Graham scored four touch-' downs, pitched a pass to a mate for another and kicked three extra points. The victorytwas Northwestern's fifth in six starts and its fourth in Conference play. For Wisconsin it was the seventh loss in eight games, and the fourth consecutive Saturday without a touchdown. The Wildcats scored three times in the first quarter, twice in the third, and once in the fourth, missing only during the second when reserves were on the field. Wisconsin playing its last home game of the season, threatened only once, advancing to the Wildcat 23 in the fourth period. Northwestern made 12 first downs to Wisconsin's five and rolled up 240 yards by rushing to 41 for the Badg- ers. High School Football Pontiac 20, Flint Central 7 Mt. Pleasant 6, Grand Haven 0 Saves Hoosier Face Lujack Emulates Bertelli, Paces Irish to 26-0 Victory Over Army GOLFSIDE RIDI-NG STABLES Private or Group Instruction SPECIAL RATES FOR SERVICEMEN COURTESY CAR Phone 2-3441 University Grill OPEN TONIGHT (And Every Night) 9:00 P.M. to 1:30A.M. HOT SUPPERS SANDWICHES WILLIAM STREET Third door from State Street The Story of a Frustrated Hoosier IN.MIC. First Downs........................................... 10 Yards Gained Rushing (Net) ............................124 Forward Passes Attempted..............................16 Forward Passes Completed .................................4 Yards by Forward Passing .. ...........................48 Forward Passes Intercepted by ............................ 2 Yards Gained Runback of Intercepted Passes .............. 41 Punting Average (from Scrimmage) ........ ...............o Total Yards, All Kicks Returned .......................... 61 Opponent Fumbles Recovered...........................4 Yards Lost by Penalties...............................15 12 269 7 2 53 4 50 42 57 1 85 VICTORY HAIR CUTS! Your haircut is blended, shaped, cut to your individual tastes. Your hair and scalp problems are our problems too. Our popularity with the Service Man is commendable. We are glad to serve in the interest of public health and morale. The DASCOLA BARBERS off State on Liberty 11 =J THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN N IEN Aks GLI J ci AL: I' BARGAINS IN USED TEXT or NEW if you prefer STUDENT SUPPLIES for all Departments Invites Freshmen, Upperclassmen, Graduate Students and all Service Men on Campus to a A Rousing Sing and Tryouts for Membership 11111 mII - - m-mm-m -