100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

December 01, 1946 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1946-12-01

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1946

- TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE SEVENS

Army

Staves

ff

i ies'

Lai

aif

DI" Ve

21-18

Bowl
Lineups
January 1, 1947: Rose Bowl, at
Pasadena, Calif.: Illinois vs UC-
LA. Sugar Bowl, at New Orleans:
Georgia vs North Carolina. Or-
ange Bowl, at Miami: Tennessee
vs Rice. Cotton Bowl, at Dallas:
Arkansas vs Louisana State. Cigar
Bowl, at Tampa, Fla.: Delaware
vs. Rollins. Alamo Bowl, San An-
tonio, Tex.: Hardin-Simmons vs
Denver. Will Rogers Bowl, at
Oklahoma City: Pepperdine vs,
opponent to be designated. Suii
Bowl, at El Paso, Tex.: neither
team selected. 'Gator Bowl, at
Jacksonville, Fla.: neither team
selected.
December 14, 1946: Tobacco
Bowl, at Lexington, 'Ky.: St. Bon-
aventure vs Muhlenberg.
December 7: Glass Bowl, at
Toledo: T a 1 e d o University vs
Bates. Little Rose Bowl, at Pasa-
dena, Calif.: Kilgore, Tex., Junior
College vs Compton, Calif., Jun-
ior College.

Irish Down USC To Finish
Another Undefeated Season
Coy McGee Scores Twice on Long Runs
To Lead Irish in 26-6 Win over Trojans
SOUTH BEND, Ind., Nov. 30-(P)-A tiny TLexan, 160-pound Coy
McGee, fired Notre Dame to a relentless 26 to 6 closing triumph over
stubborn Southern California to give absent Irish coach Frank Leahy
his first undefeated season since 1941 before a capacity crowd of 56,000
at Notre Dame Stadium today.
As slashing and explosive as the "coachless" Irish were in piling
up their eighth victory against a scoreless tie with Army for the sea-
son, they couldn't stop the in- t

spired Trojans from scoring the
first touchdown against Notre
Dame's first stringers and making
it a 13 to 6 ball game until the
final period
McGee ,treaked 77 yards for
the first fish score in the second
quarter, seconds after he galloped
50 yards on another break-away.
The Longview,' Tex., fireball
launched a 13-point Irish attack
in the final period with an eight-
yard payoff jaunt around end.
The Irish ploughed to 26 first

I[I,

downs against Southern Cali-
fornia's nine and an amazing 517
yards by rushing against 108.
Southern California, held be-
yond the 50 the first half, exploded
for a 45-yard touchdown drive
late in the third period when
Johnny Naumu squirmed over
from the one4oot stripe.
Notre Dame Marches 88 Yards
It took a Notre Dame pass inter-
ference on a goal-line toss from
George Murphy intended for
Naumu to set up the touchdown.
Naumu missed what then seemed
an important placement try for
point. That shoved Notre Dame's
lead to 13-6, but the Irish then
loosed their full offensive fury.
Starting on their 12 after South-
ern California's touchdown-fol-
lowing kickoff, the Irish thunder-
bolted to the Trojan 8 in just seven
plays and then stocky McGee
darted clear around end for his
second touchdown.
The final score:
Southern Californit 0 0 6 0- 6
Notre Dame ......0 13 0 13-26
Southern California scoring:
Touchdown, Naumu.
Notre Dame scoring: Touch-
downs, MlGee 2, Hart, Cowhig.
Points After- Touchdown: Earley
2 (placements).
Spar tans UWin
Season Finale
EAST LANSING, Nov. 30-(YP)
-Washington State College's for-
mation wasn't quite potent enough
in the final half today as Michigan
State College piled up three touch-
downs in tne last two quarters to
come out on top in a thrill-packed
game, 26 to 20.
The teams were deadlocked at
the half; 6-6, but Coach Charley
Bachman's outfit came back to
push over a pair of touchdowns in
the third period and added anoth-
er in the final chapter. The Cou-
gars scored once in each of the
last two :stanzas.
The victory gace MSC a won
five, lost five record for the season
while Washington State finished
with but one victory and one tie
in eight games.
The Cougars held the lead only
once-for a brief period in the
fourth quarter-but Michigan took
the next kiskoff and came roaring
back to cover 61 yards to the end
zone in thrce plays.
DIRECTORY SALES
MONDAY, DEC. 2

Gridiron
Roundup
EAST:
Army 21, Navy 18
North Carolina State 28, Mary-
land 7
Holy Cross 13, Boston College 6
MIDWEST:
Notre Dame 26, Southern Cali-
fornia 6
Michigan State 26, Washington
State 20
SOUTH:
North Carolina 49, Virginia 14
Alabama 24, Mississippi State 7
Tennessee 7, Vanderbilt 6
Auburn 47, Florida 12
Georgia 35, Georgia Tech 7
University of South 13, Kenyon
6
Louisiana State 41, Tulane 27
SOUTHWEST:
Southern Methodist 30, Texas
Christian 13
Hardin-Simmons 21, Texas
Tech 6
Oklahoma 73, Oklahoma A&M
12
Rice 38, Baylor 6
FAR WEST:
UCLA 18, Nebraska 0
Oregon State 21, Washington 12
Canadians Top
Red Wings on
4-1 Conquest
MONTREAL, Nov. 30-(AP)-The
Moritreal Canadians made it two
in row over Detroit, downing the
Red Wings 4-1 here tonight in a
tight-checking game to keep pace
with the Toronto Maple Leafs at
the top of the National Hockey
League. A crowd of 11,256 saw
center Elmer Lach lead the habi-
tants to victory with a pair of
clean-cut goals.
Lach go: both goals in the first
period, one unassisted and the
other with tne help of veteran left-
winger Toe Blake and Jimmy
Peters.
Butch Bouchard, off Maurice
Richard's pass, and Buddy O'Con-
nor on a play with Murph Cham-
berlain and Leo Lamoureaux put
the Canadians ahead 4-0 before
the Wings were able to break into
the scoring column. Ray Conacher
broke goaile Bill Durnan's hopes
of a shutout as he grabbed a blue-
line pass from Sid Abel and shot
through a maze of players at 10:18
of the second period.

Cadets

Inspired Navy Ouitlasscs Army;
Baysinger, Hawkins, Williams S1hine
By The Associated Press
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 30 - Army's cai:eening Cadets wound
up their three-year run unbeaten today, but only by the slim margin
of three extra points, as the Navy picked itself off the floor from its
worst season in history to battle the mightiest gridiron machine of a
generation to a standstill.
The score was 21 to 18, and the only reason the impossible didn't
happen was because Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis set off all their
sizzling fireworks in the first half, and the Middie kicking toes couldn't
hit the bullseye.
From the start of the second half it was Navy's ball game, as the
up-to-now meek Middies, mauled

To Victory

CHICAGO. Nov. 30-(AP-Bas-
ketball coac'hes of tne Western
Conference and officials will meet
here tomorrow for their annual
rules interpretation session.
The Conference cage season
gets under way Monday with
South Dakota State playing Iowa
at Iowa City, Wabash engaging
Indiana at Bloomington and Law-
rence opposing Wisconsin at Mad-

Conversions Help

and manhandled in seven straight
starts up to today, gave the Cadets
the fight of their lives before they
were able to come home with that
bare three point edge.
It left the 102,000 customers who
had the hl:ge Municipal stadium
bulging at the seams-among
them President Truman-hanging
on the ropes and gasping as the
middies stopped Blanchard and
Davis to a slow walk in the final
two periods and sailed down-field
for two touchdowns on their own.
Jack Ray, the Texan with the
thread-a-needle toe, booted the
point after each one of the tallies,
and that did the trick.
That was enough to put this
third unbeaten season of the
Kaydets, a string that saw the
Army banners flying ever since
they lost the 1943 Navy game, 13-0.
In that startling stretch, they piled
up 27 victories in 28 trips to the
post, with only their scoreless
standoff w ith Notre Dame three
weeks ago marking the run.
Baysinger Calls Plays
The middies drove 82 yards be-
tween Army's first and second
touchdowns for one of their own.
Then they clawed and dug and
inched their way 78 yards more in
the third period, and finally, capi-
talizing on a queer quarterbacking
stunt by the usually errorless Arn-
old Tucker late in the third period,
they clicked for 35 years in a hur-
ry for thel: last marker early in
the fourth.
And in Reaves (Base) Baysinger,
tall, slim Syracuse, N. Y., quarter-
back who never did signal-calling
before the Notre Dame clash three
weeks ago, and Bill Hawkins of
Richmond, Va., fresh off the hos-

Cage Coaches Confer

pital list, they had the scoring
punch.
Earl Passes for TD
The final one, for which they
got the op:rortunity when Tucker
called for a fourth-down rush well
in his own territory and Blanchard
failed to make the distance, they
unfurled Bill Earl, -a tiny 160-
pound pitcher. Earl tossed a short
one whien Leon Bramlett, the
Navy captain, caught in the end
zone.
After the first touchdown, Bob
Van Summern 's place-kick was
blocked. M wkins tried the other
two but he was wide on one and
had the other partly blocked.
Then in the fading moments
came the biggest thrill of all. An
Army kick carried only to the
Navy 33. Pete Williams, a 170-
pounder whose specialty is run-
ning the ends, picked up nine
yards in two ties.
The cadets, with the clock tick-
ing off the final seconds, stopped
Chewning twice more. Then Navy
drew a five yard penalty for de-
laying the game. Williams whipped
around right end to bring it back
to the foul, but that was all Old
Father Time allowed them.
The final score:
Army ...........7 14 0 0-21
Navy ..........0 6 6 6-18
Army Scoring: Touchdowns,
Davis, Blanchard 2.
Points After Touchdowns: Ray
3 (placements).
Navy Scoring: Touchdowns,
Baysinger, Hawkins, Bramlett.
Genuine
SCALP TREATMENT
For - oily - dry hair - For
Dandruff - Itchy Scalp - and
For Checking Falling Hair
THE DASCOLA BARBERS
Between State & Michigan Theaters

-DAY
SERVICE
on
DRY CLEANING
IF BROUGHT IN TO EITHER OF OUR STORES ON
MONDAYS, TUESDAYS OR WEDNESDAYS,
13 0X1

ison.
Tomorrow's meeting will mark
the introduction into Conference
circles of two new coaches, W. H.
"Tippy" Dye, former Ohio State
star, who replaced H. G. Olsen
as head coach at Ohio, and Os-
borne Cowles, formerly of Dart-
mouth, who succeeded Bennie
Oosterbann at Michigan.

U

n., a,) 9;
S rothers

STORES AT
214 SO. STATE ST. - 1115SO. UNIVERSITY

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

(Continued from Page 5)

ular Sunday morning
services at 10:30 a.m.

worship

I

University Lutheran Chapel,
1511 Washtenaw, has two identical
services Sundays at 9:45 and at
11:00. This Sunday the Rev. Al-
fred Scheips will preach on the
subject, "Open Your Hearts to the
King of Glory".
Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu-
dent Club, has its regular supper
meeting every Sunday at 5:15 at
the Student Center.
First Church of Christ Scientist,
409 S. Division St.

Sunday morning service at 10:30
Subject, "Ancient and Modern Ne-
cromany, alias Mesmerism and
Hypnotism, Denounced."
Sunday School at 11:45.
Wednesday evening service at
8:00.
First Unitarian Church:
1917 Washtenaw Avenue; Edward
H. Redman, Minister
10:00 a.m., Unitarian Friends'
church school.
11:00 a.m., Review sermon by
Margaret Halsey's "Color Blind"
by Rev. Edward H. Redman.
6:30 p.m., Unitarian Student
Group.

r

I

The New KAYSER Anklet
WOOL for WARMTI
and
NYLON for WEAR
SOFT ANKLETS-500 wool and 50%
spun nylon. They're wonderful to wear
with saddles or loafers-and they come in
white and yellow. Sizes 9-11.
S 1.00

-I -
L 00%UFKS
FOR CHRISTMfl"S' GIFTS:
BEST SELLERS
The Hucksters-By Wakeman ........ ....... 2.50
The Miracle of Bells-By Janey ............... 3.00
The Fall of Valor-By Jackson............... 2.75
B. F.'s Daughter-By Marquand ............2.75
Peace of Mind-By Leibman ................. 2.50
This Side of Innocence-By Caldwell ........... 3.00
The Egg and l-By MacDonald .................2.75
OTHER GIFT SUGGESTIONS
REPRINTS . . . from 1.00 to 3.95
JUVENILES... 25c to 3.00
FOUNTAIN PEN and PENCIL SETS
Sheaffer and Parker
STATIONERY for Everyone

size

IW u Su avuNu WI NU T® WIVIulE'A

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan