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.

October 24, 1948 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1948-10-24

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

PAGE SIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1949 1

L~AGR SI~ SU1~1)AY, OCTO~E~ 24, 194$

MSC,

Lions

Tie,

14-14;

lo
su

l ids

a rs,

34-32

M Debunks Gopher MottoI
(Continued from Page 1)
bother to take some strain off his shoeleather. The seat must have
been too hard, because as play resumed, he went back to his popo stick
routine.
Beaming, Benny looked like a proud father after his boys
withstood the not-so-gentle tactics of the "Big-'uns" from the
North country. "We didn't fold at any time," lie said. In fact Oos-
terbaan lauded his team's defense against Minnesota's passing
when it counted most.
Fritz Crisler pulled the remark of the afternoon when he clapped
Dick Rifenberg, who looked likedall-American material for the second
straight week, and called him down as a "double dribbler." Wonder
what new Minnesota cage coach Ozzie Cowles was thinking of Rife in
terms of basketball fundamentals.
BRILLIANT COPPER
in the Classic Mood
by Renoir of California
TO GO AND GLOW EVERYWHERE
A lovely complement to your
classic sweater - basic dress - beiwichin black
NECKLACE $4.95 BRACELET $4.95
EARRINGS $1.95
A *
717 NORTH UNIVERSITY
-<<-

State's Guerre sW id;
Conversions Pay eBucks
Illini Upsets Purdue, Gains First Win, I_0-6;
Dramatic Panthers Overcome Hoosiers, 21-1

LOADED FOR BEAR-Big Al
Wistert, key Wolverine defensive
tackle, helped put the game on
ice yesterday when he and Ed
McNeill powered through the
Minnesota line to block a Gopher
second period punt.
Line-Ups

MINNESOTA Pos.

MICHIGAN

Grant
Soltau
Nomellini
Jaszewski
Fritz ....
Baily
Kissel
Beson .. .
Tonnema'
Widseth.
Lundin

......LE.... Rifenburg
Clark
Sutherland
. .....LT..... Soboleski
Wistert
......LG....... Tomasi
Heneveld
........C........ Erben
ker Dworsky
Farrer
...... RG...... Wilkins
Sickels

"

HANDKER CHIEF SALE

STATE COLLEGE, Pa.-(I)-
Penn State preserved its unbeaten
record by a hair's breadth yester-
day, gaining a 14-14 tie with;
Michigan State before a banner
homecoming crowd of 23,000. It
was the Nittany Lions' 14th con-
secutive game without a loss.
The high spot was George
Guerre's 100-yard dash that didn't
score. Taking the ball in the last
minute of the first half, Penn
State ran and passed from its own
20 yards line to the Spartan six.
LITTLE ELWOOD Petchel, Penn
State's all-around backfield star,1
threw one final pass and the1
equally small Guerre grabbed it
right on the goal line. Aided by
fine downfield blocking, Guerre
went all the way.
But Field Judge Karl W. Boh-
ren detected an unidentified
Michigan State player clippingI
John Finley, Penn State tackle,
on the 20 yard line and the
touchdown was ruled out. Time
ran out for the half while
Guerre was running.
Guerre, a pint-sized player
among the 200-pounders in the}
two lines, and Petchel, slightly
taller and lighter, were the two
standout backs.
It was Guerre who scored Mich-
igan State's first touchdown, who
put the Nittany Lions in the hole
time after time with fine kicking
and who made the Spartan team
click.1
* * *
COLUMBUS, O.-(P)-In one of
the most hair-raising games ever
staged in Buckeye Stadium, Ohio1
State came from behind twice yes-
terday to nose out a "fired up"
Wisconsin eleven, 34 to 32, before
77,205 fans.
The Bucks, blocked on the
ground by the Badger forward
wall, took to the air lanes for
all five of their touchdowns. Wis-
consin stayed on the ground for
its five markers.
THE POINT - after-touchdown
department decided the issue, the
Bucks getting four of five while
the Badgers converted only two.
Determined to win this one for
harassed Coach Harry Stuhl-
dreher, and to turn those "good-
bye Harry" signs into "Good Boy
Harry," the invaders started ex-
plosively to shoving over two
touchdowns in the opening pe-
riod.
The first came on an eight-yard
run over tackle by halfback Bob
Petruska after tackle Harold Ot-
terback recovered Jimmy Clark's
fumble on the Ohio 22. The sec-
ond was the result of a 58-yard
drive, fullback Gene Evans taking

B. S. BROWN, Night Editor
a pitchout around right end for
25 yards.
WALLY DREYER fumbled both
passes from center on the extra
point attempts as the Badgers
built up their 12-0 edge.
* * *

1
J
L
L
i

H ard-Playlng
Harvard Hit
By Indians
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - (A) -
Dartmouth's speedy Indians de-
feated a greatly-improved Har-
vard team, 14-7, as expected in
their 52nd gridiron clash but the
hard-fighting Crimson kept a
46,000 crowd jumping from start
to finish yesterday at the sta-
dium.
Harvard opened a cleverly
masked aerial attack that ended
with Charley Roche tossing 26
yards to Captain Kenny O'Donnell
in the enemy end-zone.
Dartmouth evened matters with
an 80-yard drive in the second
period, climaxed by Bill Dey's
buck from the four yard line.
Dartmouth won in the finale on
Joe Sullivan's eight-yard touch-
down romp. That capped a 65-
yard parade.
Big Nine
Standings

EAST
Army 27, Cornell 6.
Princeton 16, Columbia 14.
Colgate 14, HolyCross 13.
Dartmouth 14, Harvard 7.
Michigan State 14, Penn State
14.
Pennsylvania 20, Navy 14.
Vanderbilt 35, Yale 0.
Lafayette 19, Bucknell 7.
Pittsburgh 21, Indiana 14.,
Rutgers 20, Lehigh 6.
MIDWEST
Ohio State 34, Wisconsin 32.
Michigan Tech 44, Northern
Michigan 13.
Colorado 51, Kansas State 7.
Oklahoma A. & M. 41, Temple
7.
Notre Dame 27, Iowa 12.
Michigan 27, Minnesota 14.
Illinois 10, Purdue 6.
Northwestern 48, Syracuse 0.
Kentucky 25, Marquette 0.
Miami (O.) 21, Ohio U. 0.

:>
" °:;
^ ;"^
' ::
/ V V
;:'.
0 o s . 0 8 ,..,.
c " .r
m ' o a L vy M1l
:.
J {tea

Prints and plain colors
now 50c and 25c
formerly $1.00 and 65c
also
It's time to shop early for
monogrammed men's and wo-
men's White Linen Hankies
for Christmas.

Ekberg .......RT ....
Carroll
Mealey
Hein ......... RE ....
Bierman
Gagne
Malosky...... QB....
Thiele
Anonsen
Faunce....... LH ...
Bye
Lawrence
Studevant
H. Elliott
McAlisterH.....lH...
Warner
Hausken
Gagne
Pullens
Kuzma .......FB...
Bill Elliott
Beiersdorf

.Kohl
Wahl
.... McNeill
Allis
..... Elliott
Ortmann
Derricotte
Lentz
Koceski
Teninga

Illini Nips Purdue
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-(AP)-An alert
and scrappy Illinois team upset
luckless Purdue 10-6 yesterday to
win its first Big Nine football tri-
umph in three starts this season.
A home throng of 56,451 fans
roared approval as the underdog
Illini snapped a three-game losingP
streak by taking advantage of twor
breaks.
* * *
IN THE SECOND quarter, Pur-
due gambled on a first down nearT
its own goal but failed to pick,
up the required four feet on the
last try. Illinois took over on the1
Boilermakers' 20. A pair of five
yard infractions nullified efforts
to shove over a touchdown and,
Don Maechtle eventually booted a
21-yard field goal.-
In the third period, trackman
Jack Pierce darted 34 and 11
yards during a 78 yard push
which Purdue stopped on the 2.
Then the Illini capitalized on
another break.
George Punzelt, attempting to
punt from the end zone, fizzled
the kick out of bounds on the 17.
Illinois ate up that yardage in
three plays with Bernie Krueger
doing a four yard wriggle into the
touchdown zone. Maechtle added
the point.
Pitt Sts Indiana
PITTSBURGH - (P) - Little
Louis (Bimbo) Cecconi, a 165-
pound Pitt halfback with a pen-
chant for the dramatic, did it
again yesterday.
He pitched the Panthers to a
21-14 victory over Indiana Uni-
versity in a movie ending to de-
light 17,118 amazed fans. Cecconi
waited until the last minute and
13 seconds for a Herculean heave
to halfback Jimmy Joe Robinson
of Connellsville, Pa., for a touch-
down play which covered 65 yards.

Nation's Grid Results

Cincinnati 16, Butler 7.
Missouri 49, Iowa State 7.
Kansas 27, Nebraska 7.
SOUTH
Duke 7, Virginia Tech 0.
Georgia Tech 42, Florida 7.
North Carolina 34, Louisiana
State 7.
North Carolina State 7, Chat-
tanooga 0.
Alabama 10, Mississippi State 7.
Tulane 21, Auburn 6.
Mississippi 32, Boston College
13.
SOUTHWEST
Texas 20, Rice 7.
Baylor 20, Texas A. & M. 14.
Nevada 65, Tulsa 14.
FAR WEST
Southern California 7, Stan-
ford 6.
Oregon State 28, U.C.L.A. 0.
California, 21, Washington 0.
Oregon 33, Washington State 7.
St. Mary's 33, Denver 22.

r

Do You Know That ... Former
Wolverine great, Tom Harmon,
now has his own sports radio pro-
gram in Los Angeles.

MICHIGAN..
Northwestern
Indiana ......
Ohio State.
Wisconsin ....
Minnesota ...
Iowa.........
Illinois......
Purdue.......

W. L.
.3 0
.2 1
.2 1
.2 1
.1 2
.1 2
.1 2
.1 2
.1 3

PF. OP.
95 14
40 44
42 24
58 46
59 85
36 46
27 34
26 32
26 84

Pct.
1.000
.667
.667
.667
.333
.333
.333
.333
.250

I

t

The GAGE LINEN SHOP
11 NICKELS ARCADE
Always Reasonably Priced

U

.1

.. Peterson
Kempthorn

o 0 00
-
~Z,
: ,
u /e
_ a Un
a ,
, ar
f a t

Penn eats Navy
PHILADELPHIA-(R')-A brow-
beaten Navy team gave Penn a
genuine scare yesterday, but tired
toward the end and permitted the
big Quakers to smash across two
touchdowns and retain their un-
beaten status with 20-14 victory.
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Detroit 0 Montreal 0
Toronto 6 Chicago 1

I

designed
in
tailored by

The combinations provided by the sweater,
skirt, and blouse have long been of great value
to the practical and money-wise coed. On or
off campus, no other ensemble will give YOU
the stylishness, smartness and variedness of
these all-time favorites.

:
v4
j f F 'i' :.:bG' ' ...
C: F
,% ,i
,, F'
. 9 ,4
:
C
5

/ ' "
7

'i
>j:
,3°
o ,:
,
.
//,
or.
Y ':

... _.

Y. -<, ~
..r.

inmncnelorr1A
Designed in Paris ... tailored in America ...
for you. Adjustable Coachm9n collar ... roomy
pockets. . . Sunburst back. Of Stevens all wool
covert. Lined with famous Skinner Rayon Satin.
Sizes 7 to 15 . . . in a selection of beautiful
colors. Ours exclusively.
$4500

SKIRTS

All wool.
$8.95 -

Checks and plaids.
$10.95

fl

TAILORED BLOUSES
Short and long sleeved in cotton or crepe.
White, plaids, and solid colors.
$3.95 - $7.95
SWEATERS
Short and long sleeved in wool, angora,
nylon, and cashmere. All colors.
$5.00 - $16.95

.-. ~. I
S..,.-

I

................:.....::........................................

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan