T HE MICHIGAN D.A.ILY PACE REVEN ....'... . a u s urL i is r4 L r-.4 V adrs, I Indiana Takes Crown By Defeating Purdue- k '9 California Downs UCLA, 6-0; Freak Play Dims Bowl Hopes Irish Extended Hoosiers Annex First Big Ten By Green Wave, Title with Lopsided 26-0 Win But Win 32-6 (Continued from Page 1) Even though McMillin used his re- By The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif., Nov. 24 -- Beaten and battered all season, Uni- versity of California's Bears put to- gether the football "play of the years" to defeat the University of California at Las Angeles Bruins 6 to 0 today on a field of mud. The loss virtually killed the Bruins' Rose Bowl hopes. While a steady rain pelted the players andh20,000 customers, the Bears snatched at a third period op- portunity that brought about one of the big upsets of the Far Western season. California had the ball on its own 33-yard line when left end Jack Lerond went back to punt. The slip- pery ball slithered off the side of his foot-a backward punt. Lerond's blocking team mate, quaterback Ed Welch of Oakland, scooped up the ball on the 15-yard line. Barging downfield, and aided by timely blocking, Welch ran 45 yards to the Bruins' 40-yard marker, and lateralled the ball. Lerond, who had New Mexico in Sun Bowl ALBUQUERQUE,N . M., Nov. 24- (I)-New Mexico University tonight accepted a bid to play in the Jan. 1 Sun Bowl Game at El Paso, Tex., against an opponent yet to be',named. kicked the punt in reverse a few sec- onds earlier caught it, and streaked' straight for the goal, almost running out of his water-soaked shoes in the gallop to touchdown turf. Rain-soaked fans stood up scream- ing as they witnessed one of the freakiest plays on record as well as the score that broke an apparent 0-0 deadlock. An 85-yard touchdown play, tail- ing off an 18-yard backward punt, made the player who might well have become the goat of the game, the scoring hero. Army Will Not Play Bowl Tilt WEST POINT, N.Y., Nov. 24-(A')- Earl Blaik, head coach of Army's all- conquering football team, said to- night that the Cadets would not play in any Bowl games this season. The Army mentor said that the players were disappointed over not receiving an invitation to the Rose Bowl and declared by telephone that the "Army will not play in any game after the Navy contest, which, natur- ally, is the game we want to win most of all." NIGUT SUITOR Tulane Leads at Half. But Wilts Near End' By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 24--Notre Dame's Fighting Irish had to come from behind and wear down an even more fighting Tulane Green Wave here today, winning 32 to 6 beforer 63,000 spectators-the largest crowd; ever to see a regular season football game in the South. Tulane, rated by the experts as scarcely capable of giving Notre Dame a hard scrimmage, outplayed and outfought the Irish in all depart- ments"during the first two periods and led 6 to 0 at half time. Terry Brennan's 47-yard touch- down run early in the third period put Notre Dame into the ball game, and thereafter the Irish rolled to scores on drives of 24, 41 and 84 yards as the Tulanians tired badly. The yelling spectators wondered what kind of a miracle Coach Monk Simcns had performed on his Tu- lane team, as the Green Waves surged to a touchdown from the opening kickoff. Four times in the second period Tu- lane took the ball away from Notre Dame on downs, as the inspired Green line stopped the Irish offense cold. aCanadiens to Red Wings, 2-1 Take Loop Lead MONTREAL, Nov. 24-(P)-Thes Montreal Canadiens whipped the De-t troit Red Wings, 2-1 before a crowd of about 12,500 fans tonight and took; over sole possession of first place in the National Hockey League. The1 triumph gave the Canadiens a total of 16 points to Detroit's 14.t The Wings, who haven't been able1 to win on Montreal ice since Nov. 14, 1942, scored first in the opening pe-1 riod but the Canadiens tied it up in4 the same frame and won out ont Maurice Richard's tally in the secondt session. The Red Wings broke the scoringt ice after 4:08 minutes of the initial1 frame had gone by when Eddie Bru-1 neteau snared a long pass from Jack Stewart, eluded Glen Harmon and Kenny Reardon at the Montreal De-t fense and fired into the upper left corner of the net. The Canucks knotted the count with a spectacular goal by Murphy Chamberlain. Chamberlain, who had just left the penalty box took a long pass from Buddy O'Connor and sped down the ice with a clear field ahead of him and beat Lumley with a high short from five feet out. Lumley stopped the shot but fumbled with the puck and it slid behind his back into the cage. period to break the ice, Purdue disin- tegrated into a badly whipped team. In the Conference race, Indiana finished on top with five victories and a tie, while Michigan, a 7 to 3 winner over defending Champion Ohio State at Ann Arbor, wound up second with a 5-1 record. It was a great day for silver- thatched McMillin, the Dean of Big Ten coaches, whose 12th Hocsier team bagged his firstchampionship and gave him his first undefeated team since he directed little Geneva College to 10 straight victories in 1927. MMillin's "crazy T" featuring a delayed punch at Purdue's tackles couldn't get rolling in the first half, although the Hoosiers controlled the ball most of the time. Four fumbles marred Indiana's attack, which Pur- due stopped beyond its 30 throughout the first two periods. Wash. State in 7-0 Win over Washington By The Associated Press PULLMAN, Wash., Nov. 24-Turn- ing a second period pass interception into a touchdown, Washington State College today defeated the Univer- sity of Washington 7 to 0 to win Northern Division honors in the Pa- cific Coast Conference football race. Coach Phil Sorboe, ending his first s.aason as a coast conference mentor, saw his Cougars score the lone touchdown and then turn back pow- erful husk threats on the rain- drenched field. Quarterback Jack Perrault ran 11 years for the touchdown on the fourth play of the second period. Halfback Bob Ross had intercepted a Washington pass thrown by half- back John Norton on the previous play and had raced from his own 45- yard line to the 11. Perrault faded back to fake a pass, then skirted around left end without being touched to score. Halfback Don Cooley kicked the placement. Washington's big chance came in the third period and ended in a fum- ble on the six-yard line. Norton had heaved a 40-year pass to end Mar- vin Hein and a series of line plays and a penalty advanced the ball to the Cougar two-yard line. tatitics snowed thow convincing the Hoosier triumph was. Indiana rolled to 20 first downs and 249 yards, compared with four first downs and 88 yards for Purdue. Taliaferro car- L- At Long Last! ~ I __ li - First Downs Yards Gained by Rushing (net) Forward Passes Attempted Forward Passes Completed Yards Gained by Forward Passes Forward Passes Intercepted By Yards Gained Run-back of Intercepted Passes Punting Average (From Scrimmage) Total Yards, Kicks Returned ' Opponents Fumbles Recovered Yards Lost by Penalties 4 20 88 249 15 17 1 7 -2 79 0 3 0 49 42.5 31.5 78 17 3 1 15 45 Ij RINGS BADGES * WALLETS COMPACTS CIGARETTE CASES * NOVELTIES BURR, PATTERSON &AULD CO. Tied the ball 18 times for 100 yards, while Pihos averaged almost five yards a crack with 50 on 11 attempts. serves plentifully in the final period, there was no stopping the title-bound Hoosiers. PURDUE Whitmer O'Brien Crowe Kodba Logan Hughes Maloney DeMoss Canfield Shaw Mihal Indian- Pihos 2, (sub for ,I INDIANA s. jk -A L E Ravensbur L T Dea L G Sowinsk C Cannady R G Brown R T Goldsberry R E Kluzewski Q B Raimondi L H Taliaferro R H Groomes F B Pihos a scoring: Touchrowns - Kluszewski, Ninajlovich Kluszewski). Points after a ci )i F R A T E R N I T Y J IE W I L E It S Ru'riit ANN C)AKES, MANAGER ! / touchdown: C. Armstrong (sub for Goldsberry) Z (placements). Big Ten Standings IB 1209 SouTH UNIVERSITY TIz.tPHONI 8882 l{ t 5 } x l C ; r 6 Y> t dl i i' i 1100 f 1, I I .l TEAM Indiana MICHIGAN Ohio State Purdue Northwestern Wisconsin Illinois Minnesota Iowa w 5 5 5 3 3 2 1 1 1 L 0 1 2 3 3 3 4 5 5 T 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 Pct. 1.00 .833 .714 .500 .500 .400 .200 .167 .167 Aft to .. c[cu L tess ' , ( 5ponte T~VUl j .~~n'a'3I W.- N /. - :a:. .. ' Ana r. ; r° Drake Captures NCAA Crown; Miami Second By The Associated Press EAST LANSING, Nov. 24 - Drake University still rules supreme in mid-western cross-country circles to- day after winning its second succes- sive National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation title on the snow-covered four-mile course at Michigan State College. Paced by defending champion Fred Feiler, whose fleet feet carried him to his second N.C.A.A. individual crown in two years, the Drake Harriers cap- Chuck Birdsall and Bob Thom- ason, Michigan's two entrants in the NCAA cross-country cham- pionships at East Lansing yester- day, both finished well out of the money in the four-mile grind. r r2l S BLACK - f- r CALF r r F~ -** f x S i 1'r C; yw.,. :::., y } ,SY} ., ' y j } : ." :. } .'% 5 .r.y,. i . ;. . t- . . . , . f. X ..r , ';, e , " s ::#: - .} , ,. 4 h r. ".... i ..:i }7 }} v ? r F_ 1, Smooth, simple lines, perked up by punchwork . There's a new lift here for your tailored clothes . definitely the way you want to look this particular season. Altogether chic is 1Vtl W ujjet'4 interpretation of the new "freedom of the sleeves" in this short-jacketed date suit of luscious, wide-wale Cord du Roi. Heave iiy soft colors. 22.70 BUTZL'S tured first, eighth, 11th, 14th and 16th places to edge out second placeI Notre Dame by 15 points. 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