SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN I a : 1 y.f 1 Notre Dame, OSU, Illini, Red Sox 7-20 To Whip Wildcats, Hoosiers Win Lujack Passes Bury Pitt, 33-0 Irish by 2nd Barrier In National Title Race SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 5-(P)- Notre Dame, eyeing national football laurels, brushed aside an outclassed but game Pittsburgh eleven, 33-0, as sharpshooting quarterback Johnny Lujack staged a one-man show for an Irish home opener throng of 50,- 368. It was cool cunning Lujack, Navy servicemian and star of the 1943 Irish juggernaut, who ripped the claws from the outmanned Panthers with a shower of orthodox nd unorthodox passes for Notre Dame's second straight victory of the season. Lujack, who completed 10 of 21 passes for a gain of 211 yards, tossed two touchdown passes and set up two other Irish tallies with his needle- threading tossing. Halfback Terry Brennan and full- back Jim Mello scored two touch- downs each as the Irish slashed through the wilting Panthers for a pair of scores each in the second and third periods and a single payoff in the fourth quarter. 4): v v; Boston College Thumps *MSC EAST LANSING, Oct. 5-(IP)-A potent Boston College brew of "T" was too much for Michigan State College today as the Eagles served the Spartans a 34 to 20 beating in a raz- zle-dazzle contest before 21,016 fans. Speared by the brilliant passing of freshman quarterback Don Panciera, the Eagles took a 14-13 halftime lead and then pushed over three more touchdowns in the last two periods. Coach Charley Bachman's Spar- tans, with halfback Russ Reader car- rying the load, managed to keep pace for the first two periods but Boston shot the MSC pass defense full of holes after the intermission and State had ony one scoring opportunity after that when right halfback Bill Spiegel broke loose after four minutes of the third stanza and galloped 66 yards for the State's final score. Boston piled up a net gain of 537 yards-307 by rushing and 230 in the air-while State made 203 on the ground and 87 by passing. U sets Mark Big Nine Card Indiana, Wildcats Stage Conference Surprises By DICK KRAUS Upsets, not setups are the key- note Qf 1946's Big Nine Conference campaign, and yesterday's standings scrambling day of football activity proved conclusively that pre-game dope buckets are as obsolete as hoop skirts. On a card which featured four Conference games there were two 'upsets, one near surpri;e, and a 43-7 romp for Illinois over a crippled Pur- due squad. Favored Wisconsin ran into a 28-0 shellacking at the hands of Northwestern's Wildcats, while a well-thought-of Minnesota eleven went down before twice-beaten In- diana, 21-0. Michigan squeaked past an Iowa squad that the experts had expected then to be snowed under. Ohio State, after last week's tie with Missouri, went West and humb- led a Southern California squad that had already envisioned a Rose Bowl bid. Big Joe Whisler stepped into the fullback slot vacated this season by Ollie Cline and powered his way to all three of the Buckeye touchdowns. Whisler teamed up with left half Tommy James to harms the favored Trojans in their own baliwick. Perry Moss sparked Illinois as Buddy Young failed to break away for the second straight week. The ex-Tulsa passing ace demoralized a Purdue eleven that concentrated on stopping the Young's end sweeps. The Illini and the Hoosiers re- bounded from decisive setbacks by Notre Dame and Michigan to score impressive wins. Next week they will meet at Bloomington while Wiscon- sin battles Ohio State and North- western tangles with Minnesota in Big Nine games. Iowa and Purdue take a week's respite from Conference competition, but the Boilermakers, who will run into Frank Leahy's Notre Dame buzz saw, should have a thirdETAOIN into Frank Leahy's Notre Dame buzzsaw, should have a third straight nightmarish week-end. The Hawk- eyes will face Nebraska. There will also be a game at Ann Arbor. Big Nine Standings DICK HOERNER - Bull-dozing fullback who proved Michigan's No. 1 headache as Iowa came close to upsetting the Wolverine victory cart yesterday. Grid Scores MIDWEST Boston Coll. 34, Michigan State 20 Kansas 14, Wichita 7 Nebraska 31, Kansas State 0 Notre Dame 33, Pitt 0 Tulsa 48, Drake 13 EAST Army 46, Cornell 21, Columbia 23, Navy 14 Dartmouth 20, Syracuse 14 Harvard 49, Tufts 0 Holy Cross 16, Detroit 14 Penn 66, Lafayette 0 Penn State 48, Bucknell 6 Princeton 33, Brown 12 Yale 27, Colgate 6 SOUTH Alabama 14, South Carolina 6 Georgia Tech 32, VMI 6 No. Carolina 14, Clemson 7 Tennessee 12, Duke 7 Tulanes27, Florida 13 Vanderbilt 7, Mississippi 0 SOUTHWEST Arkansas 34, Texas Christian 14 Oklahoma 10, Texas A & M 7 Texas 54, Oklahoma A & M6 FAR WEST Colorado 6, Utah State 0 Oregon 14, California 13 Oregon State 35, Portland 0 Stanford 33, San Francisco 7 UCLA 39, Washington 13 Washington State 32, Idaho 0 4 Cards in Pollet To Face 1 Hughson Today sellout Crowd To See Opener in St. Louis By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS, Oct. 5-St. Louis' own Cardinals, who survived a rough tript to the finals, and the highly-favored1 Boston Red Sox held their last skullt sessions and workouts at Sports-f man's Park today preparatory to hooking up at 1:30 (CST) tomorrowf afternoon in the opening game of thei 1946 World Series.c A sell-out crowd of about 34,000 was assured for both of the games which will be played here before the two clubs move up to Boston to con- tinue the struggle.c Prospects were that a couple ofi Texas residents, left-handed Howief Pollet of Houston and "Tex" Hugh-t son, a long right-hander from, Kyle,E would be nominated as the starting pitchers in the opener.s Pollet, who turned in 21 victories for the Cards during the season, in- cluding a vital 4-2 triumph over the Dodgers in the first play-off game, was certain to go for freshman man- ager Eddie Dyer if the strained shoulder muscle which has hampered him recently is not too painful when he warms up tomorrow. Although manager Joe Cronin of the Sox had not stated a definite choice among his "big three"-Hugh- son, Dave "Boo" Ferris and Mickey Harris--the Cards felt it was a fore- gone conclusion they would have to look at Hughson. WORLD SERIES AT A GLANCE Participants - Boston Red Sox (AL) won 104, lost 50, and St. Louis (NL) won 98, lost 58. Odds-(Betting Commissioner J. J. Carroll, St. Louis-on Boston to win series 7-20; on St. Louis 11-5. Probable pitchers first gamle- Hughson (21-11) or Harris (17-9) vs. Pollet (21-10) or Brecheen (15-15). Weather forecast for first game-- likelihood of occasional showers,. temperature around 70 degrees. Probable attendance at St. Louis- 34,000 ,capacity at Sportsman'sI WEST POINT, N. Y., Oct. 5-(P) -The Big Red of Cornell saw red often enough today to pile up more points against Army's footballers than any other grid outfit has done for three years, but not nearly often enough to stop the Cadets from ca- reening to their 21st straight victory, 46 to 21. Not since Notre Dame kicked the Army mule all around the Yankee Stadium in 1943 has an upstart set of gridders dared to do what the Cor- nells did this time, actually leading for a few moments in the first quar- ter, then coming up off the floor to score twice more in the closing half. Doc Blanchard of Army was on the sidelines again for the second straight Saturday, but his touchdown twin, World Series ANN ARBOR BOUND.. . Davis Leads Army to 46-21 Triumph over Scrappy Cornell Ir .8 Glenn Davis, was more than enough. The California comet whizzed over for four touchdowns-three of them in the first quarter. More than any other club this sea- son, Cornell demonstrated that the Army second team isn't too strong. Two Cornell touchdowns-at the end of the third quarter, when rapid-run- ning Wally Kretz went over after Bob Dean's passes had set it up, and at the start of the final chapter when Jack urns heaved a 22 yarder to Hillard Chollet-were counted against the Army second stringers. Army got off to a galloping run- ning start on the third play of the game when Davis sliced inside his own right end and was off and run- ning for 63 yards and the opening score. -DAY SERVICE on DRY CLEANING IF BROUGHT IN TO EITHER OF OUR STORES ON MONDAYS, TUESDAYS OR WEDNESDAYS. C? ~ "FREE" MOVIES of MICH. vs. IND. Presented TODAY, October 6 IFI W Michigan ............ 2 Illinois ..............1 Northwestern .........1 Iowa ................ 1 Indiana ............. 1 Ohio State...........0 Wisconsin............ 0 Minnesota............0 Purdue .............. 0 L 0 0 0 1 1 Q 1 1 2 VIII Brothers I U YESTERDAY'S SCORES Michigan 14, Iowa 7 Illinois 43, Purdue 7 Indiana 21, Minnesota 0 Northwestern 28, Wisconsin 0 Ohio State 21, Southern Cali- fornia 0 The Sports Building will be open until noon today and every Saturday. The building is open daily until 6:30 p.m. In addition the Friday evening sports pro- gram for Veterans and their wives has been resumed and takes place from 7 to 9:30. STORES AT 214 S0. STATE ST. - 1115 SQ. UNIVERSITY BOOKS TED! ,i 4 t if, .}§jp IC K I THE PRESENT BOOK SHORTAGE CAN BE HELPED IF YOU WILL SELL ALL OF THE TEXTBOOKS YOU Be a Sport! ARE NO LONGER USING FOR Whatever your favorite sport tennis, golf, badminton, or volleyball -- you'll find that Moe's Sport Shop has the gym shoes, shorts, and sweat shirts to suit every Michigan coed. to I I i i