SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Cincinnati.. 18 Wayne . . 0.0.e 25 Harvard .. 13 Purdue . . . . . 10 Rice ....... 18 Notre Dame . 41 Bos. College . 14 Mich. State 7 Buffalo . . .. 20 Holy Cross.. 6 Pitt 8 Texas ......13 Iowa 6 Villanova ... 12 S0 0 . 0 0 . .0 0 Illinois Wolverines' Cap italizes On Breaks To Upset Michigan, 13 -9 12 Fumbles1 Pave Way For Dfeat (Continued from Page 1) when Michigan was knocking on the door of the Illini goal line. With third down and seven on the Illinois 9, Yerges dropped a direct pass from J.T. White at center. White, how- ever, fell on the loose ball and the Wolverines had another chance. But there was another muff i the Maize and Blue backfield and Illinois took over on its own ten-yard line. Despite roughing and attempts to steal the pigskin by Michigan with the time running out, the Illini man- aged to hold onto the ball and secure their triumph. Michigan Scores First It was the fiifth straight game in which the Wolverines have scored first but the lead didn't last long. After Wiese's second-period tally, the Illini drove 75 yards down the field for their initial score. Jack Weisenburger kicked off to Buddy Young who returned the ball from his five to his 25. Julie Rykovich made a yard off his own right tackle and Young circled left end for another four to the Illini 30. Russ Steger stumbled through center for six more and it was first down. On a quarterback sneak Perry Moss pounded through for nine yards and Steger found a big hole off left tackle for eight more. Moss Passes To Heiss Stymied for two downs on the Michigan 44 Illinois elected to pass. Moss faded, couldn't find a receiver and then with two Wolverine players hanging onto his legs, the Illini quarterback calmly lofted an aerial to Bill Heiss who pulledit down. on the Michigan 16 for a first down. Paul Patterson then took over for Coach Ray Eliot's men. The Illini back dropped back to pass but de- cided to run with the ball when he couldn't find a receiver. It was 16 yards to the goal and Patterson covered it all in a brilliant weaving dash for the score. Don Maechtle came in and booted the extra point to deadlock the score at 7-7. Zatkoff Intercepts The two teams wound up the second period battling it out be- tween the 25-yard line stripes. Ry- kovich booted off to open the third stanza to Wiese who carried the leather back 21 yards to the Michi- gan 36. In between a pair of two- yard bucks by Wiese, Chappuis flip- ped the Maize and Blue fullback a seven-yard pass to give the Wolver- ines a first down on their own 47. Chappuis then tossed an aerial in- to the flat zone. Coming up fast Illini end Sami Zatkoff pulled the pigskin down, tucked it under his arm and sped 52 yards to the Wol- verine goal line. Maechtle's attempt- ed conversion was blocked by Quent Sickels, but the Illini had the lead and they held on to it, throwing back three fourth-quarter Wolverine drives inside the Illinois 20-yard line. Kick BlockedI Michigan scored a safety when Bruce Hilkene bulleted through to block Dike Eddleman's fourth-period kick attempt from his end zone. But it was just an appetizer. The Wol- verines took the ensuing kick-off and marched right back to the Illi- ni 9 where a pair of fumbles and a goal line stand stopped the Michigan attack cold. Chappuis and Wiese were the Wol- verine standouts. Chappuis gained 89 yards in 16 trips with the ball and completed eight of 13 passes for 82 yards. His total of 171 yards was 20 yards better than the whole offensive ALL-AMERICAN - Alex Agase, Illini guard, whose rugged play in the center of the Illinois line was one of the big reasons why Michi- gap ball handlers ran up the ama- zing figure of 12 fumbles. effort of Illinois on the ground and in the air. Wiese drove for 67 yards on 18 bucks. The starting line-ups: ILLINOIS MICHIGAN Zatkoff LE Ford L. Agase LT Derleth Prymusky LG Tomasi Wenskunas C J.T. White A. Agase RG Sickels Franks RT Carpenter Owens RE Renner Moss QB Weisenburger Rykovich LH Chappuis Young RH. C. Elliott Steger FB Wiese ILLINOIS 0 7 6 0-13 MICHIGAN 0 7 0 2-9 MI-11iliStatistics M ILL. Total first downs .... 18 9 By rushing ........ 14 6 By passing .........4 1 By penalties .......0 2 Net yards rushing ... .190 112 Yards lost .........30 14 No. of Rushes ...... 54 40 Net yards forwards . .142 39 Forwards attempted 21 6 Forwards completed 11 1 Behind line .........1 0 Passes intercepted by .. 0 2 Yds., interceptions ret'd 0 57 Punts, number ........ 4 7 Average distance .. 30.5 31.4 Returned by .. .. ... 3 0 Blocked by ..........1 0 Kickoffs, number ......2 4 Returned by ........ 4 2 Kickoffs, average .... 52.5 42 Yards kicks ret'd . ... 92 43 Punts .............33 0 Kickoffs ...........59 43 FUMBLES ...........12 1 BALLS LOST .......1 1 Penalties .............4 1 Yards penalized...... 30 5 MSC Damped As Cincinnat i 0 .) Rallies To Win Bearcats Last Half Spurt Means Game EAST LANSING. Oct. 26-(IP)- Brandishing a crushing running at. tack, the University of Cincinnat football team today pulled its secon major upset of the season by down ing Mi higan State College 18 town before 22,524 fans, the largest crow to witness a MSC home game thi season, The bruising Bearcats used groun plays only in coming from behind a 7-6 disadvantage at the half to scori twice in the final period. Freshman quarterback Bill Wil- lYams ran 15 yards for the deciding Cincinnati score midway in the fourth quarter and fullback Al Sabatato later plunged over from the one yard line with an "insur- ance" touchdown. The Spartans tallied in the secon period on a 10-yard pass from half back Russ Reader to end Ken Balg and Reader kicked the extra point t give MSC a 7-0 lead. The Bearcats snarled right bac when halfback Roger Stephens in- tercepted one of Reader's passes anc race 61 yards for a touchdown. On Cincinnati conversion attempt wa blocked and the other two were wide After marching 65 yards to Cin- cinnati's 11-yard line in the third quarter, therSpartans lost the ball when center Jim Pramik inttir- cepted another Reader pass. State didn'tsget past its own 28 in the final stanza. The Spartans were unable to crac Cincinnati's rugged line after th MSC score, their only long gains afte] that being a kick off return by half- back Horace Smith and a run bac of an intercepted pass by half bac Lynn Chandnois. Smith took the kickoff after the Bearcats first touchdown on his owr four yard line and returned it to the 37 before he was nailed. Chandnoi intercepted a pass on State's 18 ir the third period and went all the wa to the Cincinnati twenty. It was afte this long run that th Spartans wen to the 10-on two pass s by Reader- but Cincinnati stopped the rally when Primik intercepted Reader' next toss. All of State's rushing total-112 yards net-was piled un in the first half. The Spartans gained 26 yards after intermission and were shoved back for the same amount. The Ohioans went only 33 yards in the first half, but amassed 134 yards in the last two periods. UNWANTED HAIR Permanently Removed! Short wave method-Faster, Painless Phone 6373 First National Bldg. - - - -o c o o - ~S Diamondsa a , and Weddin g 198Rings 717 North University Ave. y: ocecne..,ococaeno i d 7 d is d a "e d ;e ;o k d For homecoming fans who packed the vast Michigan Stadium it was a perfect day until the Illini stopped the Maize and Blue's last chance to win in the final seconds. The weath- er, which had been unseasonably good for the first four Saturdays, was again ideal for football. The band put ona spectacular show at half time, and even the goal posts were decked with ribbons. But the partisan crowd was obviously very disappointed at the final score. *, * * Yesterday's capacity throng of 85,- 938 established a new home at- tendance record for the Stadium. It was also the first time that the bowl has been sold-out twice in one year. With two more home games to play the Wolverines will probably play to over half a million in Ann Arbor this year. All of Michigan's opponents have used the T-formation this year. Next week,hovever, the Wolverines will face the conven- tion wing-back system when they meet the Gophers at Minnesota. * * Before game time a formation of Navy planes from Grosse Isle roared over the field forming an I and an M. This was in celebration of to- day, Navy Day. Illinois' flashy halfback, Buddy Young, was spilled hard for no gain the first time he got the ball. Two plays later, however, the "Ebony Express" got loose around the end for a first down, demonstrating the speed which makes him such a feared funner. That was the only time he did turn the Michigan end, how- ever. One of the most razzle-dazzle plays this season was that involv- ing Chappuis to Mann and Weise. Bob Chappuis ran up to the line and then threw a jump pass to Bob Mann. Bob Weise then took Mann's lateral and was almost away for six poiits. The play gained 25 yards. Later in the game the Wolverines successfully pulled the same play. Incidentally that was the extent of Michigan's deception on offense. * * * Fumbles with the Maize and Blue were all too common but the craziest of all was recovered by Howie Yerges, on the Illini six. Chappuis carried the ball to the 15 and the ball then popped into the air where it was deflected by a paid of Illinois players on the five. Yerges then outraced Russ Steger for the ball, touching it just before it rolled out of bounds. As in the first four games Michi- gan was the first team to score, with Weise bulling over from the six. How- ever, it took the Wolverines two pe- riods to do it. * ** Coach Fritz Crisler kept his starting line in for the entire first period. Usually the Wolverines have changed lines every few minutes. The Illini line, which was supposed to outweigh Michigan by several pounds per man had only a two pound advantage at the kick- off. Today's win was the first that Ray Elliott has scored ever Fritz Crisler, and the second that the Michigan coach had dropped to the Illini STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented, Repaired O. B. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 M-Illinois Sidelights BUFFALO BUFFALOED! Wayne Defeats Buffalo, 25-20 BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 26-(P)- Wayne University of Detroit scored its football victory of the season to- day by upsetting the University of Buffalo, 25-20, before 4,500 specta- tors. Buffalo made the first touchdown on Vic Manz' 11-yard pass to Bill Rudick. Bud Houser added the extra point. Wayne struck back in the sec- ond period on Hank Haag's 8-yard flip to Constantino Barbas, but Haag's extra-point try was blocked. The Detroit eleven went ahead to 11 Just Received! Shieaffer FOUNTAIN PEN and PENCIL-SETS Priced from $6.00 to $21.00 at FOMMLLETT'FW STATE STREET AT NORTH UNIVERSITY stay on Frank Gawronski's 16-yard slash late in the half. Haag's pitch to Ed Futrell, good for 11 yards, provided the third Wayne score. Eddie Mittlesteadt swept nine yards for a Buffalo touchdown, but the visitors retaliated with a 36-yard dash in to the end zone by Haag, after taking Val Ventro's lalteral. Mittlestead's 38-yard punt return closed the scoring. Read and Use The Daily Classified Directory Keep A-Head Of Your Hair Let Us Style Your Hair! 8 Barbers - No Waiting THE DASCOLA BARBERS Between State and Michigan Theatres I _ . -- s t Be PatienA, Girls! n y0 ro I'm Coming! h. SKI FUN! Just the thing that every coed will want to complete her sweater wardrobe. Wear them with your favorite skirts, slacks and ski suits. 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