SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1949 six THE MICHIGAN DAILY. Losing Tigers Defeat Illini, 27-20; Gloriosco Stars for Victors ~trea Extended to Second Stra ight I 1 1 ine-Ups Dufek,Kepthorn Register THIGAN Pos. NORTHW' Touchdowns for Wolverines Clark Thomas - --------- Johnson ...... LT........ Sawle (Continued from Page 1) lighted by Gasper Perricone's 30 Wistert Panter --- -__ lihe y apr ercoes3 H Furd2yard dash down to the maize and Hess Ford they moved down to the Wildcats, blue 27. Iowa Comes Spartans Roll Over Indians From Rear In Intersectional Grid Battle W7* " - - r n--- CHAMPAIGN - (P) -- Missouri slammed 65 yards to a winning touchdown in the final quarter yesterday repulsing an Illinois rally inspired by Dick Raklovits' 75-yard scoring dash and snatch- ing a 27-20 intersectional football victory. Missouri's split-T formation ex- ploded for two markers the first eight minutes of the opening quar- ter and another in the second. THEN Bernie Krueger's wobbly 22-yard pass was snagged by TYPEWRITERS Office and Pnrtable Models of a ll makes Sold, Bought, .. V Repaired, Rented: STATIONERY & SUPPLIES G. !. Requisitions Accepted MORRILL'S 314 South State St. Johnny Karras for a touchdown to push Illinois' drive to a tie in the third period. The Illini made it 20-20 when Rakovits took Phil Klein's punt and sprinted 75 yards to score. Lou Levanti converted twice. Missouri's 65 yard push at the start of the finale was set up on Dick Braznell's 30-yard toss to Gene Ackermann. Winfard Car- ter eventually shot across from the three and John Glorioso added the point for the 27-20 tab. Illinois twice threatened before the fourth period was over. Russ Steger's line-knifing and Krueger's pitches escorted the Illini to the 15 where a 15-yard roughness in- fraction stalled the thrust. * * * LATER KARRAS and Sam Piazza drilled to the 30 and Krue- ger hit Slip Kersulis for 15 more. Krueger, who added 91 yards on nine out of 18 tosses then elected to pass on first down. It was in- tercepted in the end zone by Glor- ioso. Jackson ......LG., Heneveld Powers Erban ........ CC.. Momsen Farrer McClelland ...RG. Wolter Atchison.....RT. Wahl Wisniewski ... RE.. Holloway . . . . Parsegian Daniel Nemeth Wietecha Petter Price Macrea F. Day Cernoch Forman Keddie Baggott Steeb Burson Ghindia ......Q. Ortmann.....LI........ Miller Teninga Alban Lentz Koceski ...... R H .... Tunniclif f VanSummern Worthington Athan Kempthorn . .FB... Murakowski Dufek Perricone Peterson Sundheim DO YOU KNOW . . . The father of Michigan's 25-game winning streak, Fritz Crisler, saw his first football game at Dyche Stadium when he was a high school student. 41. Then Rudy Cernoch recovered Chuck Ortmann's fumble to stop the Wolverines first drive. Four plays later, Northwest- ern returned the favor, and Dick Kempthorn fell on Gene Miller's bobble on the maize and blue 39. After an exchange of punts the first quarter ended with Michigan making its first serious attempt to score. The Wolverines moved the ball down to Northwestern's 14, but the Wildcats held and took over on downs. Burson had to kick four plays later, however, as Michigan was stubborn about letting North- western make any yardage. HIS KICK went out on the 50 yard line and that's where the Wolverines started their first march to paydirt. In ten plays,with Don Dufek finally climaxing the drive by div- ing over the Northwestern line for the score, Michigan moved into the lead. The advantage was short lived, however, when less than four minutes later Burson's deadly passing arm pitched the ball to Tunnicliff who scored on the spectacular 66 yard touch- down play. The first half ended with the score tied at 7-7. Michigan kicked off to start the second quarter and Northwestern took the ball on their own 27. They looked like an inspired ball club as they drove down to the Wolverines 23 yard line, high- Ili l - ---_________________ - - - - --- - - - .__________________-__ ____l_____ -Ili l PIANO LES SSONS radar and lassical RABIDEAU-HARRIS Pop C JA Irl BEGINNERS A SPECIALTY HAZEL WOLFE BROSS Phone 2-6227 I Uk -~~ ' ~ 1W vi f - ,.j F $' "I C i _ . A #a ijer4/ < Drop, into our store today ... thumb through a College Outline covering any of your courses .. . note its meaty compactnes ... its telling paragraphs ... its newspaper- like efficiency in highlighting essentials and putting the d story over. You'll be amazed that so much can be got into so little space. College Outlines are the best high-marks insurance obtainable. Prepare with them for exams now! COLLEGE OUTLINE -SERIES *To Be Published in 14 * * * THE Wolve ines put up a wall here, though, and took possession of the ball on the 23. They couldn't move with the ball and Koceski punted out of bounds on the Northwestern 36.r Perricone broke loose again, on the first play from scrim- mage, and was finally forced out of bounds on Michigans 29. Four plays later Burson again hit the bullseye and Stonesifer slid over the goal line for the Wildcats' second score.; Eddie Nemeth made good onl his second attempt at conversion, the score that put Northwestern] out in front, never to be headed. Michigan took over on North- western's 49 after Burson was1 tackled behind the line attempt- ing to punt. IT TOOK the Wolverines only nine plays this time to cross the last yard stripe. Dick Kempthorn blasted the ball over from the four yard line to set up the play of th'e day. The teams lined up for the] extra point and Allis stepped back to try the conversion. The ball sailed just to the right of the goal posts to leave Mich- igan trailing 14-13 with one minute and 10 seconds left to play in the third quarter. Michigan was set back to its own 12 when they were penalized for clipping on a Northwestern punt early in the fourth period. On fourth and one Koceski got of a high punt against a stiff wind. Worthington took it, slid through a host of Michigan players and was in the clear at the Wolverines 30. Nemeth split the uprights with his third attempt of the day and put Michigan eight points behind with only 12 minutes playing time remaining. * * * THE Wolverines started moving up the field after taking North- western's kickoff, but on the third play of this series Ortmann in- jured his left leg. He left the game and didn't see action again against the Wildcats. The Michigan drive then bogged down and Wally Teninga punted into Northwestern's end zone. With five minutes left to play Michigan put the ball in play on their own 29, after Burson had punted out of bounds. On an intended pass five plays later Teninga couldn't find a re- ceiver so he lugged the ball 32 yards to Northwestern's 26. Dufek again powered the ball across, this time from the two, after a pass to end Bob Hollway and two runs by Koceski had set up the score. Allis made good on his attempt, but Michigan trailed 21-20. As the clock was rapidly running out, Northwestern took Michigan's kick off with less than two min- utes to go and stalled till the final gun went off. * * * NORTHWESTERN'S c oa c4, Bob Voights, said that he thought Michigan's team was as good as it was last year, but his "kids just played inspired football. They wanted to win, and they did." He went on to comment about Michigan's game next week with Minnesota. "They have an even chance against the Gophers. They have just as much of a chance of winning as losing." Bennie Oosterbaan, the Wolver- ines' coach, stated that "two well- executed plays beat us, the boys played well." There were no serious injuries on either team. Ortmann's leg in- jury turned out to be only minor and he should be ready for next week's game with the Gophers. t ns 35-9 IOWA CITY - (P) - Outplayed for better than a half by an un- derdog Indiana team, Iowa went on a fourth quarter scoring spree to wallop tpe Hoosiers 35 to 9 in a Big Ten Football game yester- day. Behind 7-9 at halftime, the Hawkeyes sent a homecoming crowd of 44,081 home happy by scoring once in the third and three times in the final period. * * * IT WAS THE reserves who got a stalled Iowa machine rolling. Quarterback Fred Ruck put the Hawks back in front 14-9 with passes of 35 and 42 yards to end Jack Dittmer, the latter good for a score near the end of the third period. All Iowa's final period scor- ing was by reserves. Bob (Chug) Wilson, playing his first colle- giate game, galloped 32 yards around his left end for Iowa's last touchdown. Don Riley had punched over from the three early in the fourth period after Iowa recovered an Indiana fumble on the Hoosier 20. Six minutes later reserve Jerry Faske scored from the one-foot marker after earlier runs of 17 and 13 yards. Iowa's first score came on a 15-yard gallop by Bill Reichardt around his right end with three seconds left of the first quarter. Foiled Mich. N.U. First Downs ........ 17 8 Net Yards Gained Rushing .........215 159 Forward Passes Attempted ........21 8 Forward Passes Completed.........8 5 Yards Forward Passing .......... 66 124 Forwards Intercepted by ............... 0 0 Yards Gained Runback Interceptions.......0 0 Punting Average .... 33.5 36.9 Total Yards All Kicks Returned ........115 143 Opponent Fumbles Recovered .........1 1 Yards Lost by by Penalties ......30 20 EAST LANSING-(P)-Michigan State rolled over William & Mary 42-13 in an intersectional football fight witnessed by 32,655 fans here yesterday. The battle was tighter than the score indicated, however, for the Southern pass attack caused MSC considerable trouble. William & Mary also did not compare too badly in the statistics, particularly in the second half. * * * IT WAS THE second successive Saturday that MSC has fought off a Southern conference bid for glory. Last week Michigan State downed Maryland 14-7. Lynn Chandnois, the lanky right-half from Flint, Mich., was the offensive sparkplug of the MSC backfield. Chandnois carried for three of his team's touchdowns. Quarterback Gene Glick was the backbone of the MSC passing attack until he was taken out of the game by another knock on the injured knee that plagued him early this season. Left half Buddy Lex was the big gun for William & Mary. Both Southern touchdowns came from his pass plays. The visitors sorely missed the services of Jack Cloud, unable to see duty because of an old knee injury. LEX COMPLETED 14 of his 27 pass tries for 222 yards as the Michigan State pass defense was very spotty. The statistics showed tie score was misleading as Michigan State made 156 yards rushing to 115 for William and Mary. MSC made only 168 yards through the air compared to 222 for William and Mary, all by Lex. Michigan State exploded with a bang in the first quarter. A 34- yard punt runback by Horace Smith put MSC on the William and Mary 26. Two plays later Chandnois cut inside left end and went all the way. * * * A 37-YARD GLICK PASS to Bob Carey was good for the sec- ond score, ending a Michigan State drive from their own 43. Horace Smith went over from the two yard line for the third score of the period after a William and Mary fumble on their own 33 put MSC in position. In the first period the South- erners were unable to get be- yond their own 31. William and Mary came to life in the second period, driving 92 yards for a score. A Lex pass to Vito Ragazzo, good for 26 yards was the scoring play. Ragazzo, the top William and Mary receiver, caught seven for a 148 yard total. Both teams scored in the third frame. Michigan State went from the William and Mary 34 in the nine plays with Chandnois diving over from the two foot line for the marker. The Southern Indians started on their own 20 for their final score. A Lex-to-Ragazzo pass ate up 49 yards of the distance. Lex tossed one to George Heflin for the final visitor score after the drive reached the four yard line. Football Results Rice 41, S.M.U. 27. 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