OCTOBER 12, 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Pacfiic Coast Teams Whip Badgers, Minn Whips NU, 37-21; Pro Gridders Iowa Tops Indiana, 214Ga So -_ This Afternoon Football Scores By The Associated Press Southern California's rollicking Trojans gave a spectacular dis- play of power and precision today as they scored in every period to hand Ohio State's fading.-Bucks a 32-0 setback, their second of the season, before a capacity crowd of 76,559. The colorful coast team tore apart Ohio's 5-4-2 defense for 194 yards rushing, and passed over and through it for 106 more. It outgained the Bucks 300 yards to 183, despite the fact Ohio State had the ball for 71 plays to 58 for the visitors. xBadgers Get Shock California's first invasion of the Midwest in its 70 year football history was a smashing success today as the Bears dumped Wis- consin, 48 to 7, before a sellout crowd of 45,000. It was California's fourth straight win. The Badgers' Wally Dreyer fumbled on his own 15 after 90 seconds of play. The Bears re- covered and scored in four plays, with John Graves pass- ing to Jack Swaner for the touchdown. Jim Cullon, a guard, then boot- ed the first of six placements that hit the mark. Aggressive and determined to take advantage of every break, the Bears continued to dominate the play and followed through with two touchdowns in each of the last three periods. * * * Golphers Ran Wild Minnesota's football team, aid- ed by a pair of fumbles and a bad pass from center on the part of Northwestern swept to a 37 to 21 victory today in the opening game of the Western Conference season 'for both teams. A sell-out crowd of 60,609 watched in 76-degree weather as Minnesota's Gophers quickly took a 16 to 0 lead in the first period, an advantage the Wild- cats never could overcome. Except for spots, Northwestern's ground game netted little yardage and most of its decisive gains were made by passing. Jim Farrar, Wildcat quarterback, did the pitching on a jump pass over cen- ter that worked for two touch- downs and contributed import- antly to another. It wasn't until the second per- iod that Northwestern could score. The Wildcats then marched down the field from their 28-yard line with end Ken .Wiltgen catching Farrar's jump pass for the touchdown. Farrar tossed another pass to halfback Art Murakowski who counted the second Wildcat touchdown on the first play of the fourth period. Minutes later, half- back Art Murakowski closed out Northwestern's scoring by dash- ing around right end. Farrar kicked all three points after touchdown. * * * Iowa Upsets Dapesters Little Al Dimarco and Emlen Tunnell furnished the one-two punch today as Iowa toppled In- diana 27-14 in a Western Confer- ence football game before 51,150 homecoming fans. Little Al, with a whip-lash right arm, fired to Tunnell, the Negro halfback, for three touch- downs in the first half to give the Hawks a 21-7 lead. 1D- Marco passed 10 times in the opening half and got bulls-eyes on seven for 147 yards. His game total was 10 out of 14 for 198 yards. Bob Smith, a hard-hitting half- back, finished the scoring with a plunge from the one yard line. s' 1 J r {[ t c s { t a u f C[ t} l > 1 i t ti G By The Associated Press BOSTON, Oct. 11-The Pitts- burgh Steelers, edged .27-26 last week by the Washington Redskins, will try to atone for the defeat tomorrow afternoon against the Boston Yanks at Fenway Park. * * * CARDINALS FIGHT FOR LEAD GREEN BAY, Wis., Oct. 11- The Unbeaten Chicago Cardinals and Green Bay Packers battle for the National Football League's Western Division leadership to- morrow before a packed house of 25,000 fans at City Stadium. Both teams have defeated the defending champion Chicago Bears, the Packers in a thriller two weeks 'ago and the Cardinals decisively last Sunday. * * * YANKS, BROOKS MEET AGAIN NEW YORK, Oct. 11-The New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers meet at the Yankee Sta- dium tomorrow but this time thel game played will be football-in a regular All-America Conference game. The Yanks, Eastern Division title defenders, currently are tied with the Buffalo Bills for the lead while the Dodgers bring up the rear of the division. * *~ * BROWNS SEEK REVENGE CLEVELAND, Oct. 11-The last time the Cleveland Browns ab- sorbed a licking the big stick was held by the Los Angeles Dons. MIDWEST Michigan 69, Pittsburgh 0 Southern California 32, Ohio State 0 Western Reserve 20, Ohio Uni- versity 7 Marquette 41, Detroit 18 Iowa 27, Indiana 14 Minnesota 37, Northwestern 21 Notre Dame 22, Purdue 7 California 48, Wisconsin 7 Nebraska 14, Iowa State 7 Kansas 86, South Dakota State 6 Miami (Ohio) 33, Bowling Green 19 Depauw 13, Rochester 12 EAST Boston University 38, New York University 7 Penn State 75, Fordham 0 New Hampshire 28, Maine 7 West Virginia 13, Kentucky State 9 Brown 55, Rhode Island State 6 Delaware 13, Bucknell 12 Rutgers 13, Princeton 7 West Virginia 60, Waynesburg 7 Franklin & Marshall 41, Lebanon Wake Forest Seores set CHAPEL HILL, N. C., Oct. 11- (')-Wake Forest, unveiling a sparkling passing attack that was good for three touchdowns in the first half, staged a startling up- set today by defeating North Car- olina 19-7. A crowd of 35,000 saw the Southern Conference game played under cloudy skies that produced a drizzling rain in the closing minutes. Valley 0 Cornell 27, Col Yale 17, Colum Villanova 13, H Penn 32, Dartn SOUTH Georgia Tech 2 University of T anooga 7 South Carolina Washington & Washington Wake Forest 19 William & Mar 7 Scuthern Meth Aggies 14 Kentucky 26, t Alabama 26, Du Vanderbilt 10,1 issippi 6 LSU 19, Texas Virginia 47, Ha Randolph Field Christi Nav Rice 33, Tulane Texas 34, Okla Texas Tech 14, Baylor 17, Ark2 FAR WE U.C.L.A. 24, Or Michigan Stat State 7 Mississippi Stat San Francis Wyoming 53, C Mines 6 University -of NI sity of Port Arizona State Western Co Washington 27 Oregon State 3; Missouri 21, C DAILY OFFICIAL BULLET. (Continued on Page 4) MAKES YOUR BIKE A MOTOR BIKE Walking Whizzer Time Time Union to Golf Course .......15 min. 3 min. Union to Stadium .15 min. 3 min. Vaughn House to Field House 15 min. 3 min. Ride to the Campus And Ride to Play It's Fast and Fun The Whizzer Way. Sensational heavy duty Schwinn bike, dual brakes, spring fork, heavy duty throughout, now available. Built specially for Whizzer motor. "BEST IN THE FIELD" fStoll1 Bicycle MotOr Sales 424 South Main Phone 7187 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY TIME PAYMENTS AVAILABLE de Vi re l ents interested are cordially ted. in- University Women Veterans: Bowling, 3 p.m., Michigan Rec- ation. Coming Events Research Club: First meeting of the academic year, 8 p.m., Wed., Oct. 15, Rackham Amphitheatre. Papers: "The Puritans and the Wits; Literary Controversy of 1700," by Prof. R. C. Boys, and "Some New Aspects of Chromo- some Structure," by Prof. William Hovanitz. Symposium: Current Research in the Social Sciences. Speaker, Prof. Robert B. Hall, Director of l i r" Inside U.S.A. by John Gunther Proud Destiny by Lion Feuchtw The Moneyman by Thomas B. C Three Ways to Mecca by Edwin+ The Merry Innocent by Nolan A Benchley-Or Else! by Robert B Gandhi and Stalin by Louis Fisc Atomic for the Millions by Eidin . ..... . .55.00 anger ...... 3.50 -ostarn ..... 3.00 Corle .......3.00 Miller .......2.50 enchley .... 2.75 her ........2.50 off & Ruchlis 3.50 CTION ION OKSTORE 1 i i { i i i the Center for Subject, "Area plications for R cial Sciences," 13, East Confer ham Building; Kappa Delta. Mathematics 14, 8 p.m., West Rackham Bldg. tels will speak of Conical Flow ccrs will be hel Showing of F Michocan," wit Gloria Marin w the Lydia Men Oct. 21 and 2 Sociedad Hispa be admitted by tax. OSUL A 1 sI gate 18 en bia 7 th loly Cross 6 D nouth 0 po do 0, V.M.I. 0 ba 'ennessee 26, Chat- Su R 26, Furman 8 De * Lee 15, George 0 , North Carolina 7 tw y 21, Virginia Tech su tr odist 21, Oklahoma fa th Georgia 0 to quesne 0 to University of Miss- cr se A & M 7 Br rvard 0 er 33, Corpus Christioe ry 6 Iv 0 st homa 14 re] Tulsa 7 bu ansas 9 th ST pa egon 7 ke e 21, Washington R te 21, University of Po co 14 Colorado School of an m Vevada 51, Univer- va land (Ore.) 6 m ( Flagstaff) 12, B lorado 8. t , St. Mary's 6 r 3, Idaho 6 W olorado 0 ca 'IN Japanese Studies. Studies: Their Im- esearch in the So- 4 p.m., Mon., Oct. rence Room, Rack- auspices of Alpha Club: Tues., Oct. Conference Room, Prof. R. C. F. Bar- on "Linear Theory u. Election of offi- ld. ilm, "Que Lindo Es h Tito Guizar and ill be presented at ndelssohn Theatre, 2; auspices of La nica. Members will y paying only the igma: 8 p.m., Mon., 3, Michigan Union. Meeting of the Ex- Tues., Oct. 14, 7:30 00 E. Engineering s of the University the club are invit- C 0 Society: Oct. 14, 311, W. Engineering eeting for all stu- I Architecture and ering. Prof. L. A. ;k. S group, La Socie- 3-5 p.m., Mon., In- titer. All interested ancais: Tues., Oct. 305, Michigan Un- on of the new offi- es, and group sing- bers accepted. Any one year college quivalent may join. nts and graduate ordially invited toI rs. Any woman stu- ,o apply for admit- peratives for the r, 1948, may con- tg or Tanya Pyt- riel Lester House. Committee: Tues.. Hillel Foundation. sted in working on are urged to at- ing. apterInter-Colleg- deration of Ameri- udent from Egypt "Palestinian Cul- Tues., Oct. 14, Hil- . Social dancing. 4ns Picked [s Underdogs n Ram Game By The Associated Press DETROIT, Oct. 11-Despite an couraging 21 to 7 victory over e Boston Yanks a week ago, the etroit Lions still held undisputed ssession of their familiar under- g role today as they headed lo their National League Foot- 11l League home opener here tnday against the Los Angeles ams. troit Stimulated While the Lions' second win in o seasons wasn't fashioned in ch a manner as to indicate ouble for the Rams, who are vored to down the Lions for e fourth straight time, the vic- ry served as a shot in the arm Detroit's box-office, bringing 1 advance sale indicative of a so'd of 40,000 or more for the ,son's first NFL collision in iggs Stadium. With good weath- the attendance may go well er that figure. Detroit, beaten twice in three arts this year on the road, will ly heavily on the running of llet Bill Dudley, mainspring of ieir ground machine, and the ssing of"quarterbacks Roy Zim- erman and Clyde Leforce to ep within upset distance of the ams. tent Offense Biggest weapon of the Rams, 1d possibly the one that had as uch to do with the heavy ad- nce sale as anythin ,is that urderous Bob Waterfield-to-Jim enton passing combination. Ii o games, including a 48 to 7 ut of the Pittsburgh Steelers, aterfield completed 19 of 41 sses for 348 yards and Benton ught 11 for 150 yards. We print 'em all No job too large or small. Programs - Tickets Stationery - Announcements ROACH PRINTING 209 E. Washington Ph. 8132 "Home of 3-dour Odorless Dry Cleaning" C LEAN ERS 630 South Ashley Phone 4700 Dame quarterback, led an other- wise mediocre Irish team to a 22- 7 victory over stubborn Purdue. His passing was the difference as he completed 14 out of 23 tosses for 176 yards. He passed for one' touchdown and ran for another. GEORGE GUERRE... Michi- gan State halfback. This little scatback ran and passed the Spartans to a convincing 21-7 vic- tory over Washington State. JIM FARRAR ... Northwestern quarterback, threw two jump passes for touchdowns, set up another and kicked three extra points, to personally account for all of his team's points in a losing cause. AL DIMARCO .. . Iowa quar- terback flung three touchdown passes and completed 10 of 14 passing attempts for 198 yards to lead his teammates to an upset victory over Indiana. TONY MINISI ... Pennsylvan- ia halfback sped to two touch- downs and played a bangup de- fensive game to spark the Qualk- ers 32-0 victory over Dartmouth. GENE DERRICOTTE...... Michigan halfback scored his third touchdown in two games on an 80-yard run and spent the rest of the afternoon intercepting passes and sparking touchdown drives. GEORGE MATTHEWS Georgia Tech back who finally broke through a stubborn Vir- ginia Military Institute eleven de- that 'Tech3 set. Gridiron Heroes JOHNNY LUJACK . . . Notretfense by flinging two long passes ARNOLD TUCKER . . . Ran- dolph Field Ramblers quarterback who came back from the oblivion sport pages had sent him to. To- day, Tucker passed for two touch- downs as of old, sneaked over for a third marker incidentally inter- cepting thiee Corpus Christie passes and getting off repeateo long boots that set the Navy team back on its heels time after time. SHORTY ACWILLIAMS . . . Mississippi State halfback who re- verted to the form that made him one of the most feared runners in intercollegiate football as he sparked a late rally with magni- ficent defensive and offensive work as 'Ole Miss rang up a 21-14 upset over previously undefeated University of San Francisco, 21- 14. RUTGERS .. . A salute to a game football team that scored one of the top upsets of the day as they triumphed over highly fa- vored Princeton 13-7 for their third victory in the past 78 years. There were no real standouts for Rutgers, it was truely a team vic- tory. FERRY FIELD BARBERS NOW 3 BARBERS WAITING TO SERVE YOU 806 South State Street WM. A. MILLER, Prop. M M M w , F RON T IER PA NTS JODP H UR BR EEC HES -i NI 907 South State 711 North University "=g::.. Y :'..:2 2 t resulted in touchdownsa narrowly averted a real up- mII J/ R THE LATEST IN FI AND NON-FICT waA UNIVERSITY BOC 10 A Hard-to-beat Rugged Shoe STALWART , . 40, Make FOLLETT'S Your Browsing Headquarters! Don't Miss These New Titles! Here's a shoe that gives a relaxed, easy country stride. Rugged and husky.... the Stalwart has built-in comfort for your walking pleasure. The multiple THE MONEYMAN Thomas B. Costain ........... THE MERRY INNOCENTS Nolan Miller ................ f i Oc eci p.] Bl wi ed 7:, Bl de Ms Bo da tea ar 14 io ce in st Fr Fo stl be tai sp: ta( ko Ph Oc Al. th tea ial eft to lel Al Phi Kappa S ct. 20, Rm. 32 Flying Club: utive Board,' m., Rm. 13C 2g. Members shing to join to attend. Quarterdeck 30 p.m., Rm. dg. Open m mts in Nava .rine Engine aier will spea Conversation d Hispanica, rnational Ce e invited. Le Cercle Fr , 8 p.m., Rm. n. Presentati rs, social gam g. New meml udent with ench or the e reign stude udents are c come membe Cooperatives: nt wishing t .nce to cool ring semeste ct Jean Kin vvsky at Mu hone 2-4914. Hillel Social et. 14, 4 p.m., 1 those intere e committee nd this meet Michigan Ch; to Zionist Fe Jewish st "ll speak on tre" at 8 p.m. Foundation 1 invited. TIMELY TOPICS of INTEREST Oct. 23- WALTER DURANTY and H. R. KNICKERBOCKER Debate: "Can Russia Be Part of One World? University of Michigan Oratorical Association 1947-48 Lecture Course PLATFORM PERSONALITIES OF DISTINCTION POLONIA PRANCE Polonia Club Open House for Students Place-International Center Date-Saturday, Oct. 18 Time-8:30 P.M. What To Wear-Jeans DANCING GAMES REFRESHMENTS NO CHARGE TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Bought, Rented, Repaired, STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0. D.MORRILL 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted ~ PROUD DESTINY Lion Feuchtwanger ........... BENCHLEY-OR ELSE! Robert Benchley ............. A STORY OF HISTORY 3.00 2.50 3.50 2.75 Ii v4:: Season Tickets Now On Sale Nov. 3 Jan. 13 JACQUES CARTIER JULIEN BRYAN "Theatre Cavalcade" "Inside Russia" with motion pictures COMPLETE COURSE - $6.60, 5.50, 4.20 (tax inc.) Nov. 20 Jan. 22 REAR-ADM. JOHN MASON BROWN RICHARD BYRD "Broadway in "Discovery" with Review" II g A = ,* '-. .' .,,.---...--M*: ,;, -. r"., '' - I