THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 194 TH MIHG N AL S_ ,OTOE 1,14 TI CAL ........13 GA. TECH..... 19 GEORGIA....35 HOLY CROSS.20 CORNELL....20 TULANE.... .9 DARTMOUTH USC......... 7 DUKE........ 7 ALABAMA.... 0 HARVARD...13 COLUMBIA...13 MISS.STATE..0 YALE....... TarHeels, otreDameemainin Undefeater [41 ARKANSAS...28 14 TEX.A&M... 6 P enn State's ..a L oCs Lions Crush MMR Red Raiders HAMILTON, N.Y. - (P) - Penn State's high powered football team, undefeated since the start of the 1947 season but twice tied, romped to a 32-13 triumph yester- day over a battling Colgate eleven to run its unbeaten streak to 15 games. A Homecoming day crowd of 10,000, enjoying the warmth of an Indian summer day, saw the Nit- tany Lions uncork relentless at- tack on the ground and through the, air. STATE'S FIVE touchdowns were scored by as many players. Scoring were Bill Luther, Wallace Triplett, Sam Tamburo, Fran Ro- gel and Bob Hicks. Carl Sturges had trouble finding the range on his placements for extra point, converting only twice in five tries. ARMAND ALLAIRE, flying Frenchman, was ing for the Red Raiders. Colgate's -outstand- WHO'S GOT IT?-Chasing a Wolverine pass in Illinois territory are Dick Rifenburg and Dike Eddleman, while an Illini lineman shouts encouragement to his teammate. However, neither player was able to reach the ball and it fell to the ground, incomplete. $ ,~ I Tomorrow 8:30 P.M. I No. Carolina Wins, 14-7; Irish SinkSailors, 41-7 Bowl-Bound Wildcats Jump OSU, 21-7 Gopher Power Throttles Hoosiers, 30-7 KNOXVILLE, Tenn.-(AP)-Charlie Justice's two first quarter touchdown passes kept North Carolina in the list of major undefeated college. football teams yesterday by defeating Tennessee, 14 to 7. It was North Carolina's thirteeneth consecutive victory over two seasons. Tennesse, starting slowly, came back savagely to score in the third period on J. B. Proctor's pass to J. W. Sherill. The Vols challenged all the rest of the way. THE MOST BRILLIANT RUN-For 90 yards-was cancelled by a clipping penalty. Near the end of the first half, Hal Littleford of Tennessee took Justice's punt on his 10 and ran the length of the field. The officials ruled, however, that Ermal Howard clipped Hosea Rodgers, the mighty North Carolina fullback. The ball was called back to the Tennessee nine yard line to a mighty chorus of boos from the record crowd of 50,000.' Until the last period Tennessee kept Choo-Choo Justice's running fairly well under control, but Rodgers, the other half of North Carolina's offensive punch, took over on behalf of his shifty teammate. Midies Take I 1h Straiight Loss BALTIMORE-()-Notre Dame's dazzling football forces rocked shell-shocked Navy 41 to 7 yesterday as the undefeated Irish scored in each quarter as they have done in every game this season. THE SOUTH BEND MAULERS ripped to a touchdown in the first two minutes and 55 seconds. That gave the sellout crowd of 63,314 jammed into Babe Ruth Stadium a quick idea of what was going to happen. Led by right halfback Emil Sitko, who tallied one touchdown and set. up a pair of others with slashing runs, the fighting Irish handed Navy its:11th conscu-tive defeat. This is record low for the Midshipmen-five losses to ued the 1917 season and six in a row this year. Navy did manage a touchdown early in the fourth after Notre Dame had run up 35 points. It was the first time the Sailors had been able to score on the Irish since the 1945 game ended in a 6-6 tie. Substitute Scores Twice for NU EVANSTON, Ill.-(A)-Sophomore Johnny Miller, a goose-step- ping Wildcat substitute, scored two touchdowns as Northwestern fanned its Rose Bowl hopes to blazing brightness with a 21-7 triumph1 over Ohio State yesterday.1 THRILLING A 47,000 Homecoming throng, the 20-year-old Miller broke up the game with a 22-yard twisting, squirming payoff run midway in the third period after the teams battled to a 7-7 halftime tie. Then, the deceptive-gaited 175 pounder bewildered the Buck- eyes with his jabbing, slashing ball-toting and iced the decision with a one-yard scoring smash on the first play of the fourth quarter. Fleet Jerry Krall streaked 57 yards for the lone Buckeye score late in the second quarter after Northwestern had taken a 7-0 lead on Don Burson's scoring pass to Ed Tunnicliff, covering 42 yards. Indiana No Match for Minnesota MINNEAPOLIS-R)-Minnesota's football team came to life in the second period yesterday and went on to defeat an under- manned Indiana team, 30 to 7. THE GOPHERS SPOTTED Indiana a first-period touchdown and then came back to roll up four touchdowns and two points on a safety before a Homecoming crowd of 64,926. The Hoosiers were handicapped in the second half by the loss of their ace halfback, George Taliaferro. Taliaferro suffered injury to his left leg in the second period and from then on was used only for punting. Minnesota's power and reserves proved too much for the Hoosiers. In all, Coach Bernie Bierman used 41 men. Thirty Indianans saw ac- tion. A PASS,/rALIAFERRO to halfback John McDonnell, was good for 30 yards and Indiana's lone touchdown midway in the first period George Parker converted. That was the only time Indiana could get near the Gopher goal. Passes set up Minnesota's first tally in the second period. Halfback Ev Faunce tossed 20 yards to halfback Bud Hausken to put the ball on the one-yard line. Faunce plunged for the touch- down.. End Gordon Soltau kicked the point, the first of four to his credit in the game. Power plays sent Minnesota ahead a short time later. Halfbacks Bill Bye and Hauskens, quarterback Jim Malosky and fullback Ken Beiersdorf combined to work the ball to the one-yard line, with Bye going over. NOT QUITE-Everyone seems to be standing around watching to see if Dike Eddleman will make it across the goal line. But the important man i i the play is the unseen man who is bringing Eddleman down. Al Wahl (72) is crouching in frrnt of the ballcarrier, and Dan Dworsky (59) is coming up from behind. Late I.wa Rally Beats Badgers, 19-13 IOWA CITY, IA - (AP) - A consin fans from the crowd of fighting band of Iowa Hawks 38,400. bounded back from apparent de- * * * feat yesterday to humble Wiscon- A "YEA HARRY" sign fluttered sin 19-13 in a Big Nine Football for Coach- Harry Stuhldreher as thriller. he led his Badgers to the dressing The steamed up Badgers, who room. like Iowa had won only one Con- But those Badger supporters ference game in three starts, rush- had little chance to cheer in the ed into a 13-0 half-time lead that second half as Iowa rallied for looked good as gold to the Wis- three touchdowns and choked off F i r' I i I a Badger threat on the seven.yard line with less than a minute to play. * * * WISCONSIN, dominating the first half in the same manner Iowa controlled the last, scored twice in the second period when Gene Evans rambled 32 yards for a touchdown and Jim Embach went nine yards for another. 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