SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN __ Wolverines Rally To Deadlock Fighting Wildcats, 14- 14 Schwall, Murakowski, Aschenbrenner Shine v (Continued from Page 1) ern 39. Another aerial by Chappuis was too long for Elmer Madar and Elliott was stopped off left tackle on the Wildcat 37 bringing up a third down and eight for Michigan. Chappuis faded again and pitched a long pass to Elliott on the goal line. The Wolverine wingback took the ball from a Wildcat defender, bobbled it, then clutched it and fell over the goal line for the initial Michigan score. "Automatic Jim" Brieske converted and it was 7-0. It was midway in the second period when Northwestern evened the score. The Cats drove 73 yards to the Wolverine 11 only to lose the ball when quarterback Jer- ry Carle's fumble was recovered by Paul White. On the second play Pete Elliott lost the ball and Sarkisian recovered it for the Cats on the Wolverine 17. Schwall found a huge hole ,over Michigan's defensive right tackle and drove 17 yards for the first Purple touchdown. The Cat wing- back's place kick was squarely be- tween the uprights and Northwest- ern had tied it up. Three plays after the kick off Francis Depauw fell on Hank Fonde's fumble on the Michi- gan 49 and the Wildcats were off .again. Carle missed with a pass but then hit Aschenbrenner with a screen pass which the fleet halfback car- ried 17 yards for a first down on Michigan's 32. Behind beautiful downfield blocking Murakowski skirted around his right end to the Michigan 2 when he was knocked out of bounds. The Wildcats were set back to the seven on an offside penalty but Aschenbrenner made three and Murakowski one on two tries at the Wolverine line. Schwall moved to the sic-inch line bring- ing up fourth down and less than one for the Wildcats. Murakowski dove over center for the tally and Schwall again added the extra point. Northwestern almost had another score as time ran out in the first half. Howie Yerges tried a long des- peration pass from the Michigan 14. Jack MacKenzie plucked the pig- skin out of the air at midfield and carried it back to the Michigan one- yard line. But the Wolverine line rose up and knocked Ralph Everist back to the two as the half ended. Northwestern returned -to the field after the halftime intermission and picked up where it had left off, piling first downs and being stopped several times within the shadows of the Wolverine goal posts. Then just as it seemed that another fumble, this time by Chappuis on the Michi- gan 26, would end the Wolverines' hopes, the big break came. On three plays the Wildcats had moved the ball only six yards to Michigan's 20. With fourth down the Wildcats tried a long pass in- to the end zone but it fell incom- plete. However, the time keeper .1- had signaled the end of the third period as the Northwestern signals were being called. The teams changed ends of the field and Northwestern again had the ball with fourth down and four to go. Birson flipped a jump pass to the left but Wiese was there. The Maize and Blue fullback gathered in the pigskin and raced to the Mchi- gan 40 where he lateralted to Bumps Elliott. Elliott? tightrope - walked down the far sideline as Wiese fend- ed off the Northwestern safety man. Brieske again converted to knot the score at 14-all. Both teams threatened in the closing minutes but fell short of scoring. With three minutes to go Schwa;n tried a field goal from the Michigan 20. The attempt was blocked by the charging Wolverine forwards. Jack Weisenburger grabbed the loose pigskin and raced to the Northwestern 45. Chappuis passed to Bob Mann on the 20 but Don Robinson's pass a few seconds later was intercepted by Burson in the end zone for a touchback. The game ended a minute and a half later when Derricotte intercep- ted a pass from Burson on the Michi- gan .30 and carried it up tc the 37. The starting lineups: M-Purple HIghlights. Yesterday's attendance of 74,500 boosted Michigan's four-game total attendapce figures to 290,238. With three games still left on the home slate the Wolverines are a cinch to outdraw their previous home record of 306,506 set in six games last fall. Officiating Below Subpar officiating continued at yesterday's game. Gene Derricotte's long pass to Paul White was dropped by White on the Northwestern 16 but the officials apparently did not .notice the muff. Northwestern has yet to defeat a Crisler-coached Michigan team. In 1938, Crisler's first year here, the two teams played to a scoreless deadlock. Since then the Wolverines had won six straight from the Wildcats. "We just weren't sharp," was Cris- ler's explanation of the Wolverines' showing. "We played as well as we knew how but we were sloppy," Cris- ler told Wildcat Coach Lynn Waldorf in the Northwestern dressing room after the game. "Your team was fine out there and I guess we should both be happy it was a tie and neither of us had to lose." Waldorf Is Happy Now Waldorf grinning widely in con- trast to Crisler, who slounced deject- edly, said, "We just seemed to have the knack of being in the right place at the right time. It was the best game my boys have played all year." * * * Bob Derleth and Joe Soboleski played great defensive games for the Maize and Blue. Derleth interrupted a Northwestern drive in the final period when he broke through to spill Vic Schwall for a seven-yard loss. A Vic Schwall for a seven-yard loss. Joe dumped Jerry Carle in a similar spot for a nine yard loss. Far West Grid Scores Brighham Young 10, Colorado 7 Bradley 20, Colorado Coll. 0 So. California 28, Washington 0 UCLA 13, California 6 Utah State 47, Colo. Aggies 0 Denver 20, Utah 14 Michigan 'B' Team Rips Wayne Jayvees, 45 to 0 Six Wolverines Make Scoring Column; Lentz Leads Parade with 2 Tallies By JACK MARTIN Battering its way to a touchdown in the first two minutes of the game, Michigan's B team continued the torrid pace through all four quarters to trample the Wayne Jayvees yesterday morning on Ferry Field, 45 to 0. Six Wolverines hit the scoring column in the goal-line jamboree, with halfback Chuck Lentz accounting for two of the seven touchdowns. - The first pay-off march began when Don Kuick caught a Wayne punt in mid-field and carried it back to the Tartar 24. A moment later Kuick took a reverse to the 19, from where John Ghindia used a quarter-sneak to take it to the 11. Ghindia repeated the performance to the Tartar five. . Kuick then took another reverse to the three, and Ghindia plunged to the two. Lentz struck off right tackle on the next play for Michigan's first score. End Irv Wizniewski converted to make it 7-0. The next six points came only mo- v ments later. Lentz took a Tartar it to the wayne 27. Lentz and Ghin- punt to the Wayne 48. After Ghin- dia alternated to carry it down to dia had lost ten yards attempting to the five, and then Lentz skirted right pass, Kuick took a reverse, faked a end for the score. Wizniewski's kick run, and then tossed to Wizniewski was good for a 33-0 score. who streaked for a touchdown un- After plunges by Jim Holgate and molested. The kick was no good, and Norm Jackson had put the ball on the Wolverines led, 13-0. the Tartar ten, the former took a Brunsting Scores reverse and crossed over for the sixth Michigan then waited until mid- tally, a few minutes after the last way in the second quarter before quarter had begun. invading the Tartar end zone again. The final points came after a bril- Jim Morrish raced to the Wayne 43 liant run-back by Bill Jennings of after taking a punt on his own 35. a Tartar punt had placed the ball Red Witherspoon gave the ball to on the Wayne 28. Jennings then Jim Holgate on a reverse, who then th Wan 28Jeigshn Jah Hlefte takl ters o thenHo- passed for the score, and Michigan's crashed left tackle to the 28. Hol- apg a oet ned gate repeated the same reverse to come to an end. the 20. He fumbled but the Wolver- ines pounced on the ball on the Tar- BIG NINE - tar 13. Morrish went around right end to STANDINGS the two, but a clipping penalty brought the ball back to the 25. Af- , Michigan .........2 0 1 1.000 ter Morrish had passed to the 15, Northwestern .... 2 0 1 1.000 Lou Brunsting faded for another Iowa .............2 1 0 .750 aerial but sped around right end in- Illinois ...........2 1 0 .750 stead to go over standing up. Brun- Indiana .......... 2 2 0 .500 sting converted, and the score at Wisconsin .........1 2 0 .250 half-time was 20-0. Ohio State ........0 1 1 .000 Ghindia Intercepts Pass Purdue........... 0 2 1 .000 The fourth score came on an in- Minnesota ........0 2 0 .000 terception by Ghindia. The Michi- gan quarterback snagged the Tartar STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES toss on the Wayne 40 and loped TYPEWRITERS coolly down the right side of the field to pay-dirt. The kick was Bought, Sold, Rented, Repaired blocked, to make the score 26-0. O. D. MORRILL Lentz set up the fifth t-d with a 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 beautiful pass to Ghindia who took Cross-country season will come to Michigan this coming week with no less than three hill-and-dale endur- ance contests scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. The fraternities will launch the competition at 5:20 p.m. Tuesday, followed at the same time the next day by the residence halls, and Thursday by the independents. The climax will come the follow- ing Wednesday, Oct. 30, when the best three teams from each ofnthe three groups will clash in the intra- TURKEY TROT FINALE: I-M Harriers To Open Season mural department's annual Turkey Run. A varsity team will also enter the competition. A sorority will sponsor each of the competing teams in this final event, and the winner will be furnished a turkey dinner by the girls who are backing them. The turkey will be contributed by Mr. Phil Diamond, local businessman who is one of the cinder sport's most ardent followers. The cross-country course to be used is the regular varsity two-mile route around the golf cours. MICHIGAN McNeill Hilkene Tomasi White, J. T Kraeger Pritula Madar Yerges Derricotte White, P. Wiese NORTHWEST'N LE LT LG . C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB *I * Gorski Ivy DiFrancesca Sarkisian Hirsch Sawle Wiltgen Burson Aschenbrenner * Schwall Everist C. (M) Touchdowns: Elliott, Schwall (N), Murakowski (N) Conversions: Brie s k e (M) 2, Schwall (N) 2 Substitutions: Michigan: Ends: Ford, Renner, Mann, Bahlow; Tackles: Carpen- ter; Guards: Sickles, Soboleski, Lintol; Centers: Brieske, Watts, Callahan; Quarterbacks: Robinson; Halfbacks: Elliott, P., Elliott, C., Chappuis; Fullbacks: Dworsky, Wiesenburger. Northwestern:' Ends: Farrell, Thomas, Holland, Zuravleff, Clark; Tackles: Hirschberger, Day, Ford, Eggers; Guards: Depauw; Cen- ters: Tourek, Golan; Quarterbacks: Carle, Baggot, Keefe; Halfbacks: Conners, MacKenzie, Hunt, Laser, Siegle; Fullbacks: Murakowski. Time of game: 2 hours and 24 minutes. Leafs Whip Red Wings TORONTO, Oct. 19-(P)-The Toronto Maple Leafs celebrated their home opening of the new Na- tional Hockey League season by routing the Detroit Red Wings, 6-3, tonight before 14,640 fans. Men, just the thing you've been looking for to complete your comfort white studying or loung- ing. 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