SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1948 THE MICHIGAN DAILY A III I PURDUE .....14 SMUo*. .... .21 N. CAROLINA14 MSC .. ......46' MINNESOTA. 30 N'WESTERN. iNDIANA. . .. 7 OS. .... . . MARQUETTE 91 TEXAS... ... 6 n7pf Notches TENNESSEE. 7 OREGON ST...21 Ira i ;lz t With wij .21 IOWA........19 NOTREDAME 41 7 WISCONSIN..13 NAVY ....... 7 Wolverines Take Gruelling Battle from Spirited Indians (Continued from Page 1) Bears, Ducks -- - ___--------. fowl Race LOS ANGELES-(AP)-California's unbeaten Golden Bears turned back the challenge of a surprisingly stubborn Southern California Trojan eleven yesterday, rolling on toward the Rose Bowl with a 13 to 7 victory. PLAYING BEFORE A TURNOUT of 90,890 fans, California's hard hitting eleven outclassed but never outfought the Trojans in 60 minutes of good football. Jack Jensen,livingup to his All-America fullback candidacy, led the Bears on scoring drives of 65 and 88 yards in the first and third quarters. He was the outstanding ball carrier of the day, and com- bined his work with terrific blocking and better than fair punting. THE FIRST, California quarterback Dick Erickson from the 15 fooled the Troys with a pass to reserve back Paul Keckley on the two. Jensen lugged it over. Again in the third Jensen and Jack Swaner carried the load up field. Jensen went across from the seven. Football Flashes PHILADELPHIA (IP) -' NEW BRU*~~NSWIK.N.J.OP V Powerful Pennsylvania, un and untied, warmed up acid test against Penn, Stat week by trouncing little Wa ton Lee 40-7 yesterday. .The Quakers scored at wrapping up this season's victory and extending the defeated string to 14. r3) -- - ~ 1Vl ..V -L41V 7- - l L, I- - t beaten -Brown handed Rutgers its first for its defeat at home since 1945 yes- te next shing- terday, decisively setting down the Queensmen 20-6 and leading will in all the day. s fifth Rutgers last was defeated at ir un- home by Swarthmore in the 1945 opener. SPOT B. S. BROWN, Night Editor Harvard Beats Purple 2 0-13* Army Romps CAMBRIDGE, Mass.-(P)-Fleet Hal Moffie rallied a slow-starting Harvard team into a 20-13 victory over Holy Cross by thrilling at 35,000 crowd with a 90-yard scor- ing punt runback yesterday at the stadium. * * * THAT outstanding performance started after he criss-crossed with Nick Athans, who took Johnny Reader's boot from the Crimson's 46-yard line late in the second period. After snatching Athans' handoff at top speed, Moffie cut over to the right sideline for a dash hat offset a 50-yard aerial thrust thut enabled 'Holy Cross to sce(l{' ii I the first three minutes of play. WEST POINT - (/P) - Army's rampaging backs had a field day for themselves yesterday, barging through a weak Virginia Tech eleven for their sixth straight vic- tory. The final count was 49-7. Wave .Trilrphs MT. PLEASANT, Mich.---)_ Wayne University's football forces made the most of their superior manpower yesterday as they roiled over Central Michigan 27 to 12 to spoil the Chippewas' Homecom- ing before 4,500 fans. EUGENE, Ore.-(/P)-The Oregon Webfoots finally shook off an old hex in the final three minutes yesterday and chalked up a 14-13 victciy over St. Mary's Gaels. * * * * THE GREENHORN GALES, whose teams of a decade ago virtually always beat Oregon,,couldn't quite manage another victory in their renewed warfare today. But they outdowned and outrushed the heavily-favored Web- foots; held them scoreless for one quarter; and were leading, 13-7, when Oregon's Norm Van Brocklin finally came to the rescue, just before the horn. * * * * WITH THREE MINUTES and 5 seconds to play, Van Brocklin tossed a pass good for 58 yards. Dick Wilkins caught the ball on St. Mary's 35 and ran to the 13. Once more the ace quarterback tossed the ball-13 yards straight down the middle---to Wilkins, who reached up from three surrounding St. Mary's players and caught it in the end zone. Chet Daniels kicked the point that proved the victory margin. -T o I N 14 3fbDA' GLUE FINGER-Potential All- American end Dick Rifenburg increased his stock yesterday by helping set up two scores and taking a pass from Tom Peter- son for another. Line-UIps- RENO, Nev.-(A)-Stan Heath, the University of Nevada's aerial wizard, broke the national collegiate passing record of 1,457 yards yes- terday. He passed more than 100 yards in the first half of the Wolf Pack's grid game with Oklahoma City University. Heath broke the record early in the second quarter with a 56- yard completed toss. By halftime he had completed 11 of 15 passes for 269 yards net and had a total of 1,587 yards in his sixth game this season. Ill. First downs........12 Yards gained rushing net..............40 Forward passes att. . 23 Forward passes comp 1'3 Yds. forward passing 256 For'ds intercepted by 2 Total yards runback- Intercepted ........ 1 Punting average. . . 41.1 Total yards all kicks returned .........78 Opponent fum. rec'd 1 Yds. lost by penalty. 72 Punts, Number.......6 Kickoffs, Average ... 41 Passes Intercepted by .2 Mich. 13 102 24 10 132 2 37 37.3 75 1 78 6 44.4 2 ILLINOIS Pos. Klimek ........LE.. Maechtle Smith Button .......LT.. Pry1t uski Gottfried .....LG.. artignago Cahill Levanti ....... C Vohaska Seliger Mas trangeli H. Siegert .. . RG.. Archer Tate .........RT.. Brown Kersulis ...... RE.. Valek Dimit Krueger ...... QB. . Stewart Gallagher Piazza ...... .LII.. Lazier Pierce Eddleman .... RI!.. Patterson Willis Malinsky M IC IGAN Rifenburg Clark .... Soboleski Wistert ..... ..Tomasi Heneveld 26 and Michigan recovered and had a golden opportunity to score, only to have a pass from Chuck Ortmann intercepted on the goal line. THE NEXT TIME the Wolver- ines got the ball, however, they scored. On a series of nine plays, via both the airsand ground route, the Maize and Blue picked up their first tally with an Elliott to McNeill pass play that went eight yards. Allis' perfect con- version put Michigan in the lead 7-0. But the Illini were not to be I broken. Without giving up posses- sion of the pigskin they drove 80 yards to score a minute before the end of the first half. IT LOOKED as if history was repeating itself as Paul Patterson eluded a half dozen Michigan tacklers and streaked into the end zone just as he had done two years ago. The tally on beautifully ex- cuted screen pass which had the entire Wolverine line fooled. The successful kick made it a seven- all ball game at the half. Probably the most spectacular play of the day cameon the open- ing kickoff of the second half when Dike Eddleman galloped 95 yards to pay dirt only to have the pla ycalled back because of an offside. 0- ,1 , AFTER THAT, it looked like the Maize and Blue were off on an- other of its familiar routes, when it roared to two quick touchdowns early in the period. The first of the pair came in five plays, four of which were aerials. The score was set up by a long pass from Ortmann to Rifenburg on the Illini 45, where he fumbled the pigskin only to have it recovered by teammate Dom Tomasi on the 39. Three plays later another pass to Michigan's potential All-Amer- ican end from fuUback Tom Pet- erson put the Wolverines one touchdown ahead. * * * ON THE NEXT series of plays Wolverine tackle Al Wahl recov- ered an Illini fumble on the 40. On third down, after Mich- igan had failed to gain via the ground route, Ortmann hurled a long aerial to~ Rifenburg on the goal line which fell to the ground, but was ruled complete because of interference. .aTwo downs later Walt Teninga raced around right end and went into the end zone standing up. Allis' conversion made it 21-7. BUT THE fighting Illini re- fused to accept the fate of Purdue and Northwestern and came roar- ing back to score their second touchdown before the end of the period. Finding their ground attack halted, the Illini took to the air just as the quarter ended on a twelve yard pass from Krueger to end Tony Klimek in the end zone. This time the Illini missed the attempt for the extra point and it was 21-13. * * * THE MIGHTY-WILLED men from Champaign weren't through yet. After the Wolverines lost the ball on downs following the en- suing kickoff, the Illini took the ball on their own 32. They took to the air again, as the amazing Kreuger literally threw a scare into the Michigan rooters as he completed four straight aerials, terminated by a tremendous 38 yard aerial to Kersules on the 1 foot line. Kreuger smashed over on the next play for the score. This time the kick was good and it was anybody's ball game, 21-20, Michigan. AFTERI A SERIES of punt ex- changes the Wolverines put the game on ice with the final tally of the af ternoon. Leo Koceski took an Eddle- man punt on the Illinois 45 and ran it back to the 34. After fail- ing on a long pass from Ort- mann which Koceski couldn't quite hold, the blond Wolverine sophomore threw another long one to Harry Allis that went 45 yards for a touchdown. Allis' kick made it 28-20 and the game, for all intents and pur- poses was over. f * * * - LAFAYETTE, Ind - (AP) - Pur- due was good enough early and late yesterday to win its second football victory of the year by de- feating Marquette, 14 to 9. In between the Hilltoppers were best and they once had a 9 to 7 lead that made Milwaukee fans forget four previous defeats, but they fumbled away the game in the last eight minutes. Seven minutes remained when Bob Hartman threw an 11-yard touchdown pass to Bob Heck and Rudy Trbavich place-kicked the extra point. b * * * COLLEGE STATION, Tex.-(P) -A bruising full back, Leon Campbell, anda rugged Arkansas line surged over Texas A and M, 28-6, here yesterday. A partisan crowd of 1G,000 watched the Aggies lose their seventh straight game'this year. Campbell smashed his way across the goal line twice and his terrific teammate, Olympics hur- dler Clyde Scott, passed to Ross Pritchard for two more touch- downs. CHUCK ORTMANN . . . M passing star Guerre, Glick Star as ยข1SC Downs Oregon State, 46-2] CORVALIS, Ore.-(ll) --A stout THE SPARTANS had two big Oregon State line gave the Mich- advantages over the losing Beavers igan State Spartans a score fo i -the breakaway threat of half- ... Erben Dworsky ..... Wilkins Sickels ........Kohl Wahl ...... McNeill Allis ........Elliott .... Ortmann Derricotte .... Koceski Teninga Peterson Kempthorn EY LEAGUE 1 Nation's Grid Results FOLLETT'S Reserve your copies of this Treat hoolz now - at the pre-publieation price of $4.50 (By The Associated Press) EAST Notre Dame 41, Navy 7. Army 49, Virginia Tech 7. Cornell 20, Columbia 13. Dartmouth 41, Yale 14. Harvard 20, Holy Cross 13. Brown 20, Rutgers 6. Boston U. 12, Syracuse 7. Penn 40, Wash. & Lee 7. Princeton 55, Virginia 14. Penn State 32, Colgate 13. Lafayette 33, Geo. Washington 14. Maine 21, Colby 0. Bowdoin 13, Bates 12. N.Y.U. 21, Lehigh 20. MIDWEST Michigan 28, Illinois 20. Ohio Univ. 14, Duquesne 13. Minnesota 30, Indiana 7. Iowa 19, Wisconsin 13. Northwestern 21, OSU 7. Purdue 14, Marquette 9. Kansas 13, Okla. A & M 7. Kentucky 28, Cincinnati 7. Mich. Tech. 47, Northland 0. Oklahoma 33, Iowa St. 6. Ohio Wesleyan 17, Mount Un- ion 14. <4) Missouri 49, Kansas St. 7. U.C.L.A. 27, Nebroska 15. Tulsa 14, Wichita 14. DePauw 7, Lake Forest 0. Butler 20, Wabash 7. Wayne (Mich.) 27, Cent. Mich. 12. Hope 33, Albion 6. SOUTH Georgia Tech. 19, Duke 7. Florida 39, Furman 14. No. Carolina 14, Tenn. 7. Missisippi 49, Louisiana State 19. West. Va. 35, S. Carolina 12. SMU 21, Texas 6. Georgia 35, Alabama 0. Tulane 9, Miss. State 0. SOUTHWEST Arkansas 28, Texas A & M 6. Rice 14, Texas Tech. 7. Baylor 6, TCU 3. Utah 14, Colorado 12. Oregon 14, St. Mary's 13. Wash. State 19, Idaho 14. Mich. State 46, Oregon St. 21. FAR WEST California 13, Southern Cal. 7. Stanford 20, Washington 0. Colorado 12, Utah 14. i i 7 :( i 25 minutes here yesterday but the visitors had too much football savvy for the Coast team and. pulled away 46-21. The teams met touchdown for touchdown each time they got their hands on the ball until just before the half. Then Gene Glick, Spartan quarterback, broke a 14- 14 deadlock by tossing two passes -good for 59 yards - and the Spartans were in front to stay, 21-14. They added two more touch- downs in the third period, two in the final quarter, and then coasted out with reserves. Glick's tie-breaking passes went first to end Hank Minarik for 46 yards, and then to end Ed Sobc- zak for 13 yards and a touchdown. for FORMAL RENTALS All New - All Sizes See RABI DEAU-HARRIS 119 So. Main St. Phone 6924 back George Guerre and the savvy that produced quick downfield blocking on any break of the game. Big Nine Standings W. L. PF. OP. Pet. MICHIGAN .. .4 0 123 34 1.000 Northwestern .3 1 61 51 .750 Indiana ......2 2 49 54 .500 Ohio State . . ..2 2 65 67 .500 Minnesota . . .2 2 66 53 .500 Iowa .........2 2 46 47 .500 Illinois .......1 3 46 60 .250 Wisconsin .....1 3 72 74 .250 Purdue .......1 3 26 34 .250 Steger . Schmidt .FB.. NATIONAL HOCK Toronto 2 Detroit1 I HERE IS THE NEWS you have been waiting for YOUR. 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