SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1945 TH m MU N. 4U A ANA A.DP tAI . Tk.3...4 Fightingl'avyScu ftczse Nihgza YA(.i B 6L'' V t,%,, 33M MViddies Score 20 - Poits Fifal HJa Northwes er -IlliiVictors Goa es Cadets eat -Irishi TOP sc s iBlanchard, avis Lead E' (1 _ (Continued from Page 1) Bob Kelly kicked from his own six to ank Fonde on the 40. Fonde ap- parently had a touchdown on the re-I turn, but officials ruled he stepped out on the Navy 13. Weisenburger Goes Over Fonde picked two around right end. Weisenburger then pitched a short jump pass to Fonde, who got to the two. Weisenburger went over on the next play. George Chiames kicked the extra point, making the score 13- 7. Michigan had two great opportuni- ties to score before the half ended, but failed to capitalize on either. The first occurred when Mike Prashaw broke through to block Minisi's punt, and Joe Soboleski recovered for the Wolverines on the Navy 31. Dan Dworsky rammed through cen- ter to the 17. Two line plays gained two. Elliott then cut loose a picture pass that Leonard Ford had in his hands and dropped in the end zone. A missed signal ruined any chance to gain on the final play of the series. The clock thwarted Michigan's sec- ond effort. Starting on their own 44, the Wolverines cut loose with a bar- rage of passes that carried to the Navy 16. Elliott did the throwing with Fonde on the receiving end most of the time. Wolverines Miss Chance Weisenburger slipped up the mid- dle to the four, but two passes and a running play failed to cover the final distance as the half ended. The first half of the third quarter was purely a punting duel with the ball moving up and down the field between the 30 yard lines. Michigan finally got a break when Dworsky in- tercepted Smith's long heave and came back to his own 34. Jenkins countered that by snaring Elliott's pass on the next play and bringing it to the Michigan 33. Scott got a first down at the 15 on a sweep, T but the Middies lost six yards in the next four plays. Navy made another break for itself when right tackle Newbold Smith blocked Weisenburger's punt out of bounds on the Wolverine 13, and this one paid off. On the next play, the Middies dusted off the old Statue of Liberty and Minisi went over stand- I ---e e - - - l INTERCEPTOR-Ed McNeill grab- bed two Navy passes, one pirevent- ing another Middie score in the closing moments. ing up after taking the ball from Bruce Smith. Currence again con- verted. Middies Begin Romp Navy scored again the next time it got its hands on the ball. Again a pass interception provided the oppor- tunity, and it came at the very end of the third quarter. Johnny Welsh did the honors this time, taking El- liott's pass away from Art Renner on the Wolverine's 35. Joe Bartos, unheralded halfback from Lorraine, Ohio, uncorked successive runs of 11 and 24 yards for the touchdown. Currence's kick was perfect, the score was Navy 27, Michigan 7. Michigan fought back gamely, marchin gto the Navy 25 via the air before losing the ball on downs. But Navy was not to be denied its field day and went roaring down field again for its fifth score. A fumble by Fonde on an attempted punt re- turn was the break this time. Taking over on the Michigan 44, the Middies had a touchdown in six plays. A flank pass from Bruce Smith to Pete Williams covered the final six yards after Bartos and Kelly had set By The Associated Presy MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 10-UP)- Indiana dealt the Minnesota Go- phers their worst trouncing in hi- story today by combin ig a smoot h running attack with gassing to pilef up a 49 to 0 score. The Hoosiers, leading the West- ern Conference, had little trouble keeping their record clear of de- feat. It was the third drubbing admin-s istered Minnesota by a Big Ten team this year and the first time that a Bernie Bierman-coached team had been defeated in three consecutive games. George Taliaferro, the great In- diana Back who galloped 94 yards on the opening kickoff, staked theI Hoosiers to a substantial lead in the first half and then left the game as coach Bo McMillin sub- stituted liberally. Minnesota made but one serious scoring threat-a second period passing attack that moved the ball from its own 17 to the Hoosier 35 in three plays. On another pass, halfback Tom Cates crossed the goal line but the play was called back because Minnesota was hold- ing. The Hoosier touchdown runs as well as their other big gains on the grounds were made behind beauti- ful blocking. . *~ * * Badg~ers Row MADISON, Wis., Nov. 10-(IP)- Northwestern and Wisconsin fought on even terms through three periods of a Big Ten football game today, but two Badgers fumbles in the final quarter proved costly as the Wildcats recovered and went on to scores that proved the margin of victory. The score was 28 to 14. It was a great offensive battle through the first three periods and up to the final quarter there had been only three punts. Sharp passing by halfback Jim Farrar accounted for two of the Wild- cat touchdowns and line smashes by Dick Connors brought the other pair after Northwestern had recovered Wisconsin fumbles deep in Badger territory. The Badgers got one touch- down through the air and another on a line smash after marches of 80 and 60 yards with Jerry Thompson and Ben Bendrick doing most of the ball carrying. 066. Even the referee took a beating as the Illini, paced by willowy Jack Pierce who unreeled touchdown runs of 82 and 57 yards, exploded for 26 points in the second period and coasted to an easy victory. Referee Lyle Clarno from Bradley Tech was carried from the field with a fractured ankle after he was mowed down as Al Zummerma galloped 19 vard3 for Illinois' fourth touchdown in the second period. atte ib mud PITTSBURGH, Nov. 10 - For more than 50 sodden minutes an underdog Pitt football team threat- ened to spring the upset of a score- less tie, or even a victory, in its football gamne with Ohio State in the muck and mire that was the Pitt Stadium field today, but the aroused and desperate Buckeyes finally surged to two quick touch- downs and a 14 to 0 victory. Twenty thousand drooping and bedraggled spectators who braved the steady, dreary drizzle were re- warded with thrilling defensive stands by the Pitt team, and even one mighty, but futile, threat by the Panthers, before Ohio State speed and might had its way. That one great. threat, at the start of the final period, was the swan song of the stubborn Pitt eleven. Ohio State took over the ball after a fourth down Pitt pass into the end zone had failed and marched 80 yards to score. Alex Verdova splashing around his left end, and bowling over Jim Robin- son with a headlong surge, went 18 yards for the touchdown. Short minutes later speedy Ollie dine, the standout offensive Buck- eye back today, sliced through the Pitt line and raced 63 yards to cross the goal, and the Saturated game was on ice, although the Bucks tried to cool it still more in the fading moments and had the ball on the Pitt 10 as the game ended. k Penn State 27 Temple 0 Cornell 20 Colgate 6 Brown 20 Yale 7 Dartmouth 13 Princeton 13 (tie) Harvard 28 Kings Point 7 New York University 19 Lehigh 0 Rutgers 32 Lafalette 14 Marquette 26 Kansas 0 Nebraska 24 Kansas State 0 Georgia 34 Florida 0j Tennessee 34 Mississippi 0 Kentucky 19 West Virginia 6 Duke 26 North Carolina State 13 Georgia Tech 41 Tulane 7 Texas A & M 3 Southern Methodist 0 Oklahoma A & M 12 Tulsa 6 Michigan B 49 Hillsdale 6 Detroit 20 Cincinnati 0 Rice 26 Arkansas 7 Texas 21 Baylor 14 Texas Tech 12 Texas Christian 0 Oregon State 7 Washington 6 Washington State 20 Oregon 13 Pennsylvania 32 Columbia 7 NAVYNOET Among the distinguished guests at the game was Admiral William (Bull) Halsey, Commander of the Third Fleet and hero of many Pacific naval battles. As per schedule, the Michigan cheerleaders presented Bill X, the Navy goat with a sackfull of tin cans before the game. Bill desponded in good style by munching meditatively on one of the choice specimens. Dan Dworsky started at quarter- back for Michigan in place of Howard Yerges. Yerges took over the signal- calling on offense later in the game, even though his weak ankle had not healed completely. About 2500 Midshipmen paraded' onto the field before the game along with the Navy band. The game got under way in a cold, misty rain that finally subsided about midway through the first quarter. The skies continued to threaten all the way. however. It was Navy's second victory in the five-game series. Michigan has won two, one by a 54-0 score in 1928, the largest count ever rolled up, against the Middies. The other was tied. I r m cori g raraae By The Associated Press NEW YORK. Nov. 10-Army's were th-e bosses. On the second pla NEW ORK No. 1-Ary ~from scrimmage after they had r"( atomic twins, Glenn Davis and Felix ore um le ee in h covered a fumble deep in Iris (Doc) Blanchard, ran wild for five ground, Davis broke to his left, c1 touchdowns between them as the back and raced 26 yards for his fir I Cadets' great eleven overpowered No- score. tre Dame, 48 to 0, for its 16th con- Dick Walterhouse placekicked tb first of his six extra points, and Not: secutive victory today. Dame headed for its first defeat sin( It was the first time in their grid- the Cadets turned the trick a yes iron rivalry- that Army won two ago. .:traight games- from the Fighting Davis scored another early in I1 Irish. The score might have mounted second period climaxing a grindir drive of 74 yards. and Blanch;: higher than last year's 59-0 had not soon after ploughed across from 11 both Blanchard and Davis been one after the Cadets had gone yanked midway of the third period yards. and the second and third Cadet Davis made it 28-0 with a spectam teams been permitted to play out the lar 21-yard run early in the th r contest.quarter, and the big, bruising Blanh Davis, wing-footed halfback of the ard intercepted a pass by Georg Cadets, reeled off three touchdowns Ratterman two minutes later befoi on beautiful runs and Blanchard, blurting 36 yards for another, sc, pile-driving fullback, bounced across From there on the two terro for a pair before Cdach Earl Blaik de- watched the game from under the cided the throng of 76,000 had seen fur-collared great coats while the enough of his twin beauties. less talented teammates played of The Army seconds wobbled across the string. for two more scores in the final quar- Right after the Irish missed the ter, the last one in the closing seconds big scoring chance, the Cadets pie of play. Blanchard and Davis each 73 yards down the field for the ran his total touchdowns for the sea- sixth score. son to 13. The final Army touchdown w Notre Dame's scrapping youngsters scored on a pass from Walterhouse t lost their one great chance to score Clyde Grimenstein, sub-end, aft on a fumble late in the third quarter Walterhouse had raced 16 yart after they had marched 58 yards around end to the Notre Dame 2 yar down to the Cadets' one yard line. mark. Bill Gompers, trying desperately to Army out-statisticked the Irish dive that final yard, let the ball- pop a wide margin, gaining a total of 4 from his grasp into the waiting arms yards by rushing to the losers' 1E of Bob Stuart, who ran it out to the and piling up 19 first downs to Not: 27. C tDames 16. Two Irish first downs r( The Cadets, as usual, chilled their sulted from penalties against Lt adversaries right at'the start, and left Cadets, who dropped 121 yards b( no doubt in anyone's mind that they cause of infractions. TYPEWRITERS Bought, Rented Repaired STUDENT and OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 6615 ". .... WILCOX's RIDI STABLE Horses for hire and boarded. English or western saddles. GROUP or PRIVATE RIDING LESSONS HAYRIDES, a courtesy car Located at Fairgrounds, Ann Arbor- Phone 2-6040 SAILORS' REVENGE: Great Lakes Snaps Michigan State's Streak at Five Games A NN ANN it up with long runs. ed the extra point this MICHIGAN Hershberger Johnson Tomasi Watts Wilkins Minton Renner Dworsky Teninga Nussbaumer Weisenburger Po S LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB Currence miss- time. NAVY Duden Kiser Carrigan R. Scott Deramee Coppedge Bramlett B. Smith C. Scott Minisi Jenkins i _ ,: ,. i"1 * * * +LlbEAST LANSING, Nov. 10-()- One of wartime football's worst up- Purdue Tested sets the 14-0 victory MichigankState College scored -over Great Lakes in Lafayette, Ind., Nov. 10-A scrappy 1942, was avenged here today as a little football team from Miami Uni- smooth-operating Bluejacket ma- versity of Oxford, O., gave Purdue's chine ran up a 27-7 score on Coach squad a stiff workout today before Charley Bachman's Spartans. The the Boilermakers won, 21 to 7. victory for Lieut. Paul Brown's eleven Only a Miami fumble in Purdue's ended State's five-game unbeaten end zone in the closing minutes of the streak. last quarter prevented a closer score. Great Lakes displayed the most Purdue was contenit with its 14 to 0 power seen in State's Macklin Sta- lead at half-time but couldn't hold dium in two seasons as they rolled to the uninpressed Indians with Boiler- four touchdowns while holding the maker reserves. Spartans to 40 yards rushing and a Miami, beaten only once before single touchdown. State wasn't even this season, showed its caliber early in the game except for a few minutes to the crowd of 12,000. In the score- in the finel period against the Blue- less first quarter halfback George jackets third team. Campbell raced 57 yards through a The victory was the fourth in a row gaping hole to Purdue's 14-yard for the Sailors and the defeat for the marker, where the riveters held. Spartans was their first since their * * *40-0 beating by Michigan in the sea- son's opener. Sparkplug in the Bluejackets' pow- erful running attack which piled up CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Nov. 10-Illi- 323 yards on the ground was right nois scored its first 1945 Western halfback Frank Aschenbrenner who Conference victory and buried Iowa broke loose on touchdown runs of 80 in the Big Ten cellar today by crush- and 90 yards and plunged five yards ing the hapless Hawkeyes, 48-7, be- for Great Lakes' final tally. The for- fore a slim Dad's Day crowd of 14,- mer Marquette star led the individual running statistics with 120 yards gained in seven attempts. An almost unknown halfback, Harry Robinson, scored the Sailors' other touchdown on a four-yard smash. Halfback Bob Sullivan kicked three out of four extra point goals for Great Lakes. o Don Hendricks, understudy to State's stellar fullback Jack Breslin, scored the lone Spartan touchdown on a two-yard line buck and Bob Malaga added the conversion point. The Bluejackets had almost com- plete control of the team statistics, out-gaining State on the ground 323 yards to 40, piling up 15 first downs to three for the Spartans and running back kickoffs and punts for a total of 225 yards as compared with 120 for State. The Spartans held a slight advan- tage in the air, completing nine out of 21 pass attempts for 56 yards while Great Lakes was making good on three out of ten for 50 years. The teams were even on punting, State getting off 11 kicks for a 39-yard av- erage and the Bluejackets booting four for the same. (4/ BARGAINS IN USED TEXT O (} { .41 Y ff ' '.Z _p'xY6. .:;_: . : These colorful quilted be I HOW WARM and GAY are BEDJACKETS "n" nn n.*n nr djackets are just I -- r _ Art - " "_ I. I I ti1 made for studvin ,, in bed. Prettv in white or . I IIa £ di . I.I I mad forstuvine in ed.Prer~r nwhie orII -- - -- - -