THE MICiTIGAN DAILY 2~, 19~S Jnderrated S to 1-21 Tie LMOST UPSE T: Detroi Brel Defeats Downtodden Tul 26-2,2 C lemson, Ge rgia, T! alne Get y ~t Hurd les in uestif orCoveledB B iTULSA Okla.-GP)-A Univer- won ahgame in nine starts rose out scare the daylights out of a heav- ily-favored Detroit football eleven before bowing, 26 to 22. * * * AFTER YIELDING fur touh downs to the hard-running visi- tors in the first half and trailing 26-7 at the intermission, the steamed-up Hurricane came back with a defensive and offensive dis- play that kept play in Detroit territory throughout the last two periods. So hard pressed were the Ti- tans in the closing minutes that quarterback John O'Connor ran back from his own 9-yard line to down the ball for a safety and gain precious time from the surging Tulsans. But it was mqre Detroit than Tulsa in the first half. And there was where the game was won, principally on the brilliant run- ber and Jack KurowskiayGr- O'LEARY ran 20 yard or then Gruber rambled 28 for another in the second and Kurkowski plung- ed for 13. The fourth Detroit touchdown was engineered on a 14-yard pass play from O'Connor to Joe Wright. Tulsa matched its foes' first touchdown with a startling 60- yard pass play, Jim Finks to S. J. Tickets will go on sale at 8:30 tomorrow morning at the Ath- letic Building for the Michigan- Detroit Red Wing exhibition hockey game December 2. Stu- dents can obtain tickets for 60 cents by presenting their I.D. cards or coupon books. Admis- sion to the general public will be $1.50. Whiteman, on the first play of the second quarter, but then wilted befor the of~pposition's drives be- By The Associated Press _____ MOBILE, Ala.-Clemson's un- ade td Tige s al id to tri Au- B w. Te y wil D layy Missouri in Selection of the two teams was announced a few hours after Clemson edged out a narrow de- cision on a muddy gridiron for its MERI ninth straight victory this season. A crowd of 14,110 saw the Tigers register their twelfth win in a row Th over a two-year period, battle al TRAILING 0-6 with less than aen seven minutes to play, Clemson games. hit pay dirt for the first time after Georgia an 80-yard sustained d rive, game 1 Speedster Ray Mathews went off marred tackle from the one-yard line for Carolina the score after setting up the touchdown with a 39-yard pass to scou Oscar Thompson. were in Jack Miller provided the vic- was exp tory margin by booting the extra vincer point from placement. It was Miller's 26th conversion in 33 at- temnpts this year. . Geor Auburn went for its touchdown IBowl 1 shortly ,after thsecond quare I over after a 12-yard sweep around hampic left end. Langer's try for the ex- the bri tn point was low. muddtle orgiaW Wins, 2-13 bestCd ATHEN, Ga. - The Georgiafota Bulldogs, beaten only once, scent- wrecke ed an invitation to the Orange or dogs g sug ar Bowl yesterday and pound- to only ed Georgia Tech in a convincing Georg 21-13 victory on Sanford Field. both onr AS GOOD AS A WIN-: LE LEVIN, Night Editor Southeastern Conference lso won the league chain- )rtn in Bsixdconference About 52,000 fans saw win its eighth stragiht to climax a campaign only by a loss to North 1. TS FROM various bowls the stands. The victory 'ectecd to be a great con- that the Southeastern BULLETIN 'gia received an Orange bid late last evening. )nship team was among ghtest of several Dixie hining in the heretofore d bowl picture. re today Tech had the efensive record in college I but Georgia may have d that record. The Bull- ained 259 yards rushing 62 for T ech. ia was of fensive master the ground and in the air. All-America quarterback didate Johnny Rauch was pasing a andstocky Joe Con a aoni The sports staff of The Mich- itheartiest-congratutis and sincerest best wishes to Sports Editor Murray Grant who announced his engagement last evening to Miss Marilyn Weismnan of Detroit. Black Takes Distanee Title H ighly Favored Spar tans Narrowly E scape De feat can- the Geri GEORGIA'S first touchdown was set up by a Rauch-Gene Lo- rendo pass good for 46 yards. Lo- d-- ma a divin .atc f the ball and jerked away from three Tech men before being brought DETROIT - (1P) - Bob Black, down 10 yards further down field. Rhode Island State College's 120- Within three minutes Georgia scored again in a near repeat performance of the first quar- ter drive. Rauch and Lorendo opened Tech's defense with passes and then the same power smashers were sent into the Tech line for consistent gains. The touchdown was bucked across by Johnny Tiiliitski on a four-yard run. Tulane 46 S peurnd National Collegiate cross ountry champion, won the Na- the unbelievable margin of two inches over Curt Stone, defending champion from Philadelphia. A last stride lunge at the tape brought Black from behind to win hi third m a jort distan c t le i mate ftone one-hundredh of a .SAN FRANCISCO -(/P)-Mich- igan State's Spartans, tremendous Santa Clar football team here The Spaans, wh2ohad held mighty Michigan to a 13-7 win, had to come from behind twice The visitors had been iavored to win by 22 points * * THEY STARTED out impres- sively, scorint a first period touch- down when fullback Le Roy Crane pounded through the Santa Clara line for the last four yards. It cli- mxda 48yar drv. Throughout the second quar- ter, however, the Broncos held control of the game and crissed the Michigan State goal line twice. Santa Clara tied the count at 7- 7 after putting the ball into play on the Spartans' 33. The Spartans had punted from behind their own goal. Quarterback Billy Sheridan passed to left end Ellery Williams, who ran 38 yards behind goodi blocking to score. * * * JUST BEFORE the half, the Broncos made it 14-7 after inter- cepting a pass on the Spartans' 41. After moving up to the 29, Quar- terback Al Martin passed to left halfback Hall Hasnes, who ran 21 yards for the touchdown. A scoreless third quarter saw Santa Clara outplay its formid- soed on Santa Cara lst h ball on downs on the sixth. .Right halfback Lynn Chandnois intercepted a Santa Clara pass and returned 19 yards to his own 35-yard marker late in the third quarter. The Spartahs went from there all the way to a touchdown, scoring early in the final period. THE MARCH was highlighted by ea 6-ard runtbyaChandnoi halfback George Guerre. It put the ball two yards from the goal. Fullback James Blenkhorn bucked over. Placekicker G-. Smith added the extra point to tie the count. The Broncos then put to- gether a 70-yard drive in five 22-ard line to Wlliams in te end zone. Moe Chavez place- kicked his third extra point and Santa Clara was out in front, 21 to 14. Michigan State tied it up late in the last few minutes, taking the ball on its own 19 and scoring in three plays. Quarterback Eugene Glick passed to left end Ed Sob- ezak, who ran 40 yards to score. Smith made the extra point to deadlock the contest. BOWL SITE -fEAMS Rose, Pasadena, Calif.,. .. .. .. . ... .. .Northwestern Vs. California Shrine, San Francisco ... . .. . ..East All-Stars vs. West All-Stars Sugar, New Orleans . .. ... .. . ... .. .North Carolina vs. Oklahoma Cotton, Dallas.. . .. .. .. . ... . ... .Southern Methodist vs. Oregon Delta, Memphis. .. . .. .. . Oklahoma A.&M. vs. William and Mary 'Gator, Jacksonville, Fla.. .. .. . . ... .. ... .Clemson vs. Missouri Dixie, Birmingham, Ala.. .. .. . .. ... . . .. Wake Forest vs. Baylor Sun, El Paso, Texas .. . .... .. . . .Iest Virginia vs. Texas Mines Harbor, San Diego, Calif. .. .. . .. ... ...Nevada (no opponent yet) Ra isin FresnoF Cai . . .).. .... Colorado A .& M. vs. cciental Vulcan, Birmingham, Ala.Greensboro (N.C.) A.&T. vs. Kentucky St. DEC. 29 Oleander, Galveston, Tex.. . Wharton Jr. College vs. Paris (Trex.) DEC. 25 North-South, Miami, Fla. (N.) . .... .. .. .. .. .. (All-Star T eams) Blue-Gray, Montgomery, Ala.. .. . .. . .... .. .. .(All-Star Teams) DEC. 11 Little Bose, Pasadena, Calif. . . Comnton Jr. Coll. vs. Dujuth Jr. Coll. DEC. 5 Great Lakes, Cleveland . .. ... .. .. . ... .. .John Carrol vs. Can isius DEC. 4 Glass, Toledo, Ohio.. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .Oklahoma City U. vs. Toledo Refrigerator, Evansville, Ind.....Missouri Valley vs. Evansville tBalt, Hutchinson, Kas. ... . .. .. . .. .. .. ... .. (No teams chosen) Orange Blossom, Miami, Fla. (N.) ......Florida A.&M. vs. Union (Richmond, Va.) Fish, Norfolk, Va. . .. .... . .. .. ... ..Hampton Inst. vs. Wilberforce BATON ROUGE, La. -- Bowl.. naiboro, Mvass., war veteran nada conscious Tulane ran all over the yielded the lead for the first time soggy Louisiana State University in the last half mile of the gruell- Stadium field today to overwhelm ing run. its traditional L.S.U. foe, 46 to 0. Stone. former Penn State track- It was the worst beating either man who now is circulation man- one of these twvo old rivals had ager of a State college, Pa., news- ever given the other in a 45-game paper, ran stride for stride with series. The most cne-sided previ- Black throughout the approximate ous score was the a 41-0 victory 6%-mile course laid out across for LSU in 1935. the Warren Valley golf course. He Tulane outgained LSUJ 346 to never was more than two or three 108 yards rushing, and 78 to 0 in yards behind. yards passing. A capacity crowd of 45,00 saw the Wave roll over the LSU Ben -1 F o b l gal Tigers a fter a scoreless first period.IRe u t '\' Middies Celebrate Tie in Annual Classie PHILADELPHIA -- (IP) - The Army-Navy football game ended in a 21-21 tie yesterday but you never would have guessed it fr om the bedlam that broke loose in the Middies dressing room. It was 42nd and Broadwvay on New Year's Eve, V-E Day and the Fourth of July all rolled into one as the shouting, back slapping Navy players rushed into the room. Behind them, also pushing and shouting, came Navy Brass led by John L. Sullivan, Snedntary f_ Navy. Tey too, oine intefs tivities. . . SCOTT EMERSON, 215-pound tackle and co-captain, from Su- sanville, Calif., picked up head coac George Sauer asu ifhee were his first year at Annapolis, was being tossed from shoulder to shoulder among his shouting play- ers. I honestl sthoughthwe could touchdown," said Sauer after sme of the nois had subsided. the fightingestegang bof men I've eer known. I'm really proud of Sullivan told the Middies it was the fluest football game he ever had seen. * * * "IF YOU BOYS make as good officers as football players, the Navy need have no worries," the Navy Secretary added. Elmerson yelled a spech which few heard and then, as the players went about undress- in, ,e added reverently:t. That fellow upstairs sure was on our side too." The only sour grapes came from a substitute who led the shouting mob into the dressing room. "Congratulations," yelled a by- staHell," the sub retorted, "we didn't win did we?" S * * IN CONTRAST the Army dress- ing room was like a morgue. Big husky players broke out in tears. Hardly a word was said before and te coach Fnal one of the players eased the tension with:' a m rg .R - member we play them again next year." "We have no alibis," said Blaik. "They were up and w e were down. The Midshipmen had the game coming to them after such a bad sesson." BLAIK OD adii, I icw ci, that the Army sadly missed Bob- by Jack Stuart, Gil Stephenson and Bill Yeoman. Stuart, whon had not practiced for ten days, aggravated an old groin injury in the first play and saw the remainder of the game from the bench. Stephenson, with a bad leg, played not much more than a quarter. Yeoman also saw only limited action because of a leg injury. "It was fortunate that we had just enough class to hold them to a tie," declared the West Point Blaik refused to single out any paiticular Navy player who spoiled hArmy'sh perfect record.~m victory,)alt ou i Bil dI-Lawkins E AST MIDWEST Oklahoma 19, Oklahoma A & M 15. SOUTH Villanova 21, North Car olina State 7. . Alabama 34, Florida 28. Mississippi 34, Mississippi State 7., Vanderbilt 28, Tennessee 6. FAR WEST Penn State 7, Washington State 0. William S& MaryWEArkansas 0. Rice 7, Baylor 7 (tie).- Texas Tech 28, Hardin-Sim- inons 20. GIVE BOOKS for. , 'U CHRISTMAS VERY N[AI HAIRCUTS FOR CHAMPIONS We'll do our best to shape and blend your hair to your facial features-it's the Per- sonality Style, for you alone. Queries invited! rhe DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty nea state Theatre BOOKS are so inexpensive and so easy on your holiday *ugt Ma ke you r selIec tions now f rom ou r ca ref ully selected stock which features a wide variety of books f rom a ll the lead ing publ ishers. Remem- ber . . . nothing . . . makes a more pleasant, wortiwh ile Christmas g ift than a good book in a gay Christmas wrapping. . from... BOOKSTORE Dial 6363 322 5. State dl ~."' 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