w SUNDAY,..N EMER 24, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DlAILY PAVIV qwvrv a aa a.I ~i~l~li 1 V 1]41 'l'l L''1 L rxa .C. A5 ~ I Illinois Versus UCLA Likely ose Bowl Setup PACIFIC COAST Big Nine Standings- Gridiron Roundup Bruins Get Breaks To Squeeze By USC 13-6 W T L Pet. Pts Illinois Michigan Indiana Iowa Minnesota Ohio State Northwestern Wisconsin Purdue 6 5 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 3 4 3 3 5 5 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 .857 .785 .667 .500 .429 .416 .416 .286 .082 133 163 76 63 51 112 89 84 68 Op 58 46 67 44 108 144 87 131 144 Illinois .m ) (Cont inued from page 1) and Bob DeMoss turned out to be a starring vehicle for Pete Pihos, as The Georgeous Greek tallied three touchdowns In spite of a game leg that has been bothering him all sea- son. Neither Raimondi nor DeMoss managed to shatter the passing rec- ords set by Otto Graham of North- western in 1942, although the Indiana flipper completed nine tosses in 15 attempts, two going all the way, while the Boilermakers' one-man bak- field hit with five of ten throws, one for a touchdown. Gophers Continue lo Roll Another Big Nine clash saw the revitalized Minnesota Golden Go- Oihers continue a late season rush that has netted them fifth place in the conference standings as they made Wisconsin their third consecu- tive victim, 6-0. Freshman ifalfback Billy Bye slipped 10 yards off tackle into pay dirt for the only score, of the day. The defeat dropped the Badgers into eighth place, just above Purdue, the league doormat6 Iowa, the only conference mem- ber that didn't play yesterday, stood pat on its three and three record to finish fourth, its high-water mark for the past half-dozen years. Thus did 1946 ring down the cur- tain on the first ogicial post-war Big Nine season. A season unpreci- dented for upsets, surprises and gen- eral gridiron chicanery. Notre Dame 41, Tulane ( NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 23-(YP)- Notre Dame's Irish treated a recor southern crowd to a demonstratio of near-perfect football choosin 41 to 0,tasrthe score by which the lesired to trounce the Tulane Greei Wave. Nearly 70,000 spectators, the larg est number ever to see a regular sea son game in Dixie, came only to se Notre Dame, and that's all they saw When their better players were in the Irish performed with the methodi cal efficiency of a mechanical cottoi picker -and just about as mucl mercy. The great Irish quarterback Johr Lujack put on a magnificent passin show, comple .ing 8 out of 9 for total yardage of 120. Notre Dame took the opening kick off 77 yards to a touchdown in 1 plays. The next time the Irish go the ball they went 88 yards to anothe score in eight plays. Zalejski scored twice in the seconi period, sweeping right end for 23 an( 12 yards to climax marches on 91 an 49 yards respectively. Early boote both extra points. The Irish ;lowed the pace to on( touchdown in the third period, when Lujack's passing and Gompers' run ning engineered an 84-yard advance Mello cracked over for the last yard Midway of the final period Notr Dame's reserves moved 80 yards mostly on Mike Swistowicz' fancy running, to score on a five-yard slicE by Coy Magee. Jim Early convertec five of six extra point attempts. MSC 26, Maryland 14 EAST LANSING, Nov. 23-U(P)__ Michigan State College out-rushed and out-passed the University of Maryland's football team today to notch a 26 to 14 triumph over Coach Clark Shaughnessy's charges in an intersectional game before 16,- 249 chilled fans. The Spartans, showing the most power they have all season-took a 20 to 7 lead over the "T"-charged Terrapins at the half and coasted to their fourth victory, against five ) defeats. The licking was Maryland' fifth in eight contests. - Right halfback Lynn Chandnoi d was the scoring star for MSC, tak n ing a 23 yard pass from halfbac g George Guerre for State's firs y touchdown in the opening perio ,n and galloping over early in th second stanza on a reverse swee - from Maryland's six yard line. - The other Spartan tallies wer e made by fullback Jim Blenkhorn on . a 21 yard plunge and Guerre on a , buck from the two. n How Bowl Hopefuls Fare NEW YQRK, N. Y.,-(P)-Nov. 2 n -(LP)-Georgia and Georgia Tecd g each a candidate for an invitatio a and each a contender for the South east circuit flag, loafed to easy vic - tories over Minor League oppositio 1 in preparation for their own meetin t next week. Georgia smeared Chatta r nooga, 48 to 27, with the losers get ting 20 points in the final quarte, d Georgia Tech mastered Furman, 4 d to 7. Mississippi State, another bow d prospect, also kept in the headline d by downing Ole Miss, 20 to 7, pri marily on the work of Tom (Shorty TMcWilliams,ex-Army star. n Tennessee, however, had its diffi - culties but pulled itself together fo a 7 to 0 decision over Kentucky tha . insured Gen. Robert Neyland's eleve e of Jan. 1 consideration. In the Southern conference, an y other breeding ground of Bowl teams e North Carolina loosed the fame d Charlie Justice for 15 points in thi final period to defeat Duke, 22 to 7 That meant the loop title for Car Snavely's men. Penn State, one of the few eastern teams in the Bowl auction now thai Army has closed the door, was tripped by Pittsburgh's youngsters, 14 to 7 while Yale made Cornell a title pos- sibility in the Ivy league by rebuffing Harvard, 27 to 14. Cornell plays Penr Thursday and a win would send the title to Ithaca. A Quaker triump means a title deadlock between Har- vard and Penn, with Yale and Cor- nell only a nalf game behind. Oklahoma pushed Nebraska out of the Big Six picture, 27 to 6, but still * must await the outcome of Thurs- day's Kansas -Missouri embroglio to know who will share the title with the 'Sooners. Rice, 13 Texas Christ., 0 HOUSTON, Tex., Nov. 23-(P)- Rice pounded Texas Christian for a 13-0 victory today to keep alive its chances for a Southwest Conference championship tie with Arkansas. Balked in she first two periods by a stubbornly fighting Christian line, the Bulky Owls took the second half kick-off 72 yards for a touchdown. They added another in the final three minutes after recovering a Horned Frog fumble. A crowd of 28,000 watched the Owls rip the Purple for 231 yards on the ground with battering Carl Russ, chunky fullback, the mainspring of the attack. * * * Oregon State 13, Oregon 0 CORVALLIS, Ore., Nov. 23-(AP)- Oregon State's favored Beavers tamed the insurgent Oregon Ducks in the second half here today for a 13-0. Coast Conference victory in the 50th annual meeting of the tra- ditional rivas The Ducks, led by halfback Jake Leicht, had the Oregon Staters back on their heels through the first half, but the mid-game intermission was enough for the Beavers to regain their stride. They took the kickoff and marched straight downfield for their first touchdown. Then almost wtihout letting Oregon touch the ball, they came back to score again in the fourth quarter. Olalf~l--fl L L-rrLF1rlrl hItflJFLGf-Lf-l XMAS IS CLOSER THAN YOU THINK! o 1352 WILMOT *alterations Telehone 3906 Hours: 9:00 to 5:00 fil UNHERALDED HERO - Lanky Art Dufelmeier the unsung half- back of Illinois who made yes- terday's title clincher for Ray Eliot a one man show. Grid Scor'es EAST Yale 27, Harvard 14 LaFayette 13, Lehigh 0 Rutgers 25, Bucknell 0 Dartmouth 20, Princeton 13 West Chester Tchrs. 32, Wagner 0 Delaware 20, Muhlenberg 12 Western Maryland 46, Mount St. Mary's 7 Georgetown 19, New York University 12 Pittsburgh 14, Penn State 7 Holy Cross 12, Temple 7 Buffalo 36, Johns Hopkins 0 Dickinson 33, Allegheny 6 Columbia 59, Syracuse 21 Boston College 13, Alabama 7 Morris Harvey 6, Glenville 0 MIDWEST Michigan State 26, Maryland 14 Michigan 58, Ohio State 6 Illinois 20, Northwestern 0 Indiana 34, Purdue 20 Akron 13, John Carroll 6 Ohio University 25, Xavier 6 Dayton 29, Marshall 7 Minnesota 6, Wisconsin 0 Dennison 31, Wittenberg 0 Mount Union 19, Kenyon 12 Oberlin 23, Wooster 0 Wichita 13, Toledo 7 SOUTH Citadel 21, Davidson 13 North Carolina 22, Duke 7 Georgia Tech 41, Furman 7 North Carolina State 37, Florida 6 Randolph Macon 14, Wofford 13 Tennessee 7, Kentucky 0 Virginia State 14, North Carolina State College 6 University of Virginia 21, West Vir- gina 0 Sewanee 25, Hampden-Sydney 0 Quantico 25, Cherry Point Marines 0 Clemson 21, Auburn 13 Mississippi State 20, Mississippi 0 Notre Dame 41, Tulane 0 Georgetown 41, Hanover 7 Tennessee State 19, Kentucky State College 0 Virginia 21, West Virginia 0 Arkansas State 13, Lincoln Univer- sity 7 Georgia 48, Chattanooga 27 LOS ANGELES, Nov. 23-(/P)-Caitalizing on two tremendous breaks, the Blue and Gold of UCLA today won the right to play in the Rose :Bowl New Year's Day by defeating the Southern California Trojans 13-6 for its ninth straight victory of the 1946 -------__-_ season. Performing in the mud before the largest crowd of the season here, 93,- 714 rain-soaked fans, the Bruins Follow our clinched the trip to Pasadena and a contest with a Big Nine team, pro- bably Illinois. All that was needed to- night was a perfunctory vote of ap-forBeth proval by members of the Pacific Coast Conference. a The Bruins, greates aggregation in the school's history, scored the first touchdown four minutes after the opening kickoff, saw the count knotted as a determined Cardinal and Gold machine drove 43 yards ,Round the C in the second quarter, and carne back to win the game early in the fourth period on a fumbled punt You'll find WN recovered on the Trojan five yard line. Coats, Suits The triumph was the second for the Bruins over the Men of Troy since their first crosstown feud be- gan in 1929, and the New Year's Day engagement at the Pasadena Bowl of Roses will be the second for the Blue and Gold. *5" What was expected to be a pass- ing performance by UCLA quar- The COATS-You'll find fu terback Ernie Case, one of the best classics . . . dressmaker beau in college ranks, was tossed out super collection. Sizes 9-17a the window by the squirmy field and wet ball. The Bruins punted -and prayed. The latter paid off SUl and it was the supposedly punch- less Troys who built up 176 yards by land and air to a mere 67 for 22.50 - 290 their opponents, and nine first downs to the Bruins' three. The SUITS-Checks, stripesa The first score came in typical coat types in 3/4 lengths ... al Uclan fashion, however. Spring. Sizes 9-15 and 10-2. After a series of punt exchanges, pg._s9- _d__ the Trojans were backed up to their 26 and tried to kick out. Right tac- kle Bill Chambers blocked it. His brother tackle, 215-pound bon Malm- berg, scooped it upon the 14 and paddled across the goal line. Case 5.00 10A missed the try for a placement con- version. Beautiful sheer Wools and Ray USC quickly elected to take the 16!/2-24 2. offensive. Late in the first quarter they rocked the Bruin line with suc- cessive jolts. One pass, Mickey Mc- SWEATERS Cardle to Don Hardy, brought 12, and Pullovers in 100% wool-- Don Doll went through the left side Pastels and dark shades of the line for the tally. Johnny at $2.49,1- 3.98 - $5.00 Naumu missed the conversion with a try and the count was even. 11 w A 1TTG.IC i P i U CLA Oregon State Southern California Washington Stanford Oregon Montana Washington State California Idaho 0 0 .04)0 r i I Leadership ,r Values w 7 3 3 I 1 it orner on State inter's Success and Dresses kTS .95 - 49.95 tr-trimmed charmers, versatile ties and Shorties . . . a truly and 10-44. ITS 95 - 39.95 and solids . . . versatile under- i good for winter and through 0. i r z 2 s s s T 0 1 0 t) 1 0 Q SSES 0O 15.00 yons ... Sizes 9-17, 10-40 and SKIRTS Skirts in plaids and solids, 100% wool - 2.98 - 3,98 - 5.90 Costume Jewelry Beautiful earrings and pins- many reduced more than Va of original price. 49c --98c - 5.00 Collars 0Cuffs P0. 2.0400 714 .7141 .500 .2.9 .0 .166 .1.43 Red Wings 4, Toronto 2 TORONTO, Nov. 23-P)-Veter- an Sid Abel scored two goals tonight to lead the Detroit Red Wings to a 4-2 triumph over the league leading Toronto Maple Leafs in a National Hockey League game before 13,462 fans. :run ,yI Ui i i of Fur and Bunny Lamb at 1.98 - 2.48 - 2.98 SCARFS Wool fascinators and scarfs- at -98c and 1.98 Genuine SCALP TREATMENT For - oily - dry hair - For Dandruff - Itchy Scalp - and For Checking Falling Hair THE DASCOLA BARBERS Between State & Michigan Theaters All Sales Final Ei'atei/th 1oneron ShOP 'Round the Corner on State I .=. UJ "" i I I SOUTHWEST S.M.U. 35, Baylor 0 Rice 13, Texas Christian 0 Oklahoma 27, Nebraska 6 Oklahoma Aggies 59, Drake 7 FAR WEST New Mexico 14, Kansas State 7 Montana State 45, Colorado School of Mines 7 U.C.L.A. 13, Southern California 6 Stanford 25, California 6 Oregon State 13, Oregon 0 s As A Gre gek Column 11 11 11- A THOUGHT FOR CHRISTMAS: 1947 MICHIGAN CALENDAR or4o $1.50 12 BEAUTIFUL VIEWS OF THE MICHIGAN CAMPUS 100% WOOL CASIJAL'i $39.95 .to $79.95 Your pet pure wool casual that's tops over everything. It will take you to classes and out of an even- ing. When the snows come it's fine wool will take to it with- out a whimper. Just about any wardrobe 'harmonizing color for sizes 9-15 and 10-20. Main at Liberty uu t. T . ; L N' Mana 'iet