OCTOBER 23, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 10 ...... .. . . . .. ... _. .._ ..,.. , "I W olverurt s Now Bach 1i ,, 0.--- ak :!: T, vw * * * S * * Ironclad Defense Retains Brown Jug for Michigan (Continued from Page 1) HARRY ALLIS converted and the Wolverines led 7-0 as the partisan crowd, watching Michigan perform as underdogs for the first time, in three years became mildly delirious. Minnesota took the kickoff and picked up only 15 yards in three tries through the inspired Wolverine defenses before kicking. Then Teninga brought the G- crowd to its feet again as he took the Gopher punt on the Michigan 45 and raced to Min- nesota's 38. Another Ortmann to Allis pass put the ball on the 26. Dufek was trapped for a four yard loss on an end run but Ortmann lugged the ball to the 19 after he failed to find a receiver on an in- tended pass. The Wolverine drive fizzled however as Minesota in- tercepted a fourth down jump pass on their 18. * * * MINNESOTA threatened for the first time when halfback Bob Thompson intercepted a Michigan pass on the Wolverine 34 mid-way through the second period. Four plays brought the Gophers to Michigan 17 but Billy Bye, the work horse of the Minnesota at- tack, fumbled back to the 32. Bye then completed a pass to Grant on the 23 but Michigan took over on downs to end the threat. Set back to their eight yard line by 15-yd. penalty for illegal use of the hands, Michigan kicked out to the Wolverine 45 and with time running out in the ha1f Minnesota took to the air. BYE COMPLETED a short pass to Grant. on first down but his next pass was pulled down by Dufek on the Wolverine 40 and brought back to Minnesota's 45. Ortmann was smeared for an eight yard loss on an attempted pass putting the ball back on the Michigan 47 and then the Wolverines started a race against the clock for their sec- ond touchdown. Ortmann got off a long pass to Allis on the 24 after first faking an end run and three new backs went in for Michigan. BILL PUTICH in at quarter- back collaborated with Don Pet- erson, who had come in at right half for Van Summern, on the ancient Statue of Liberty play and Peterson raced to the 13 before he was hauled down. The Wolverines hurriedly called time with only 13 seconds remain- ing and then sent Teninga around right end on a pitchout. He was knocked out of bounds on the 1- foot line but the clock showed 10 seconds left to play and it was all the time that Teninga needed to plunge over. ALLIS SPLIT the uprights and Michigan led 14-0 with time only for the kickoff before the half time gun. Minnesota came roaring back in the second half to recover a Michigan fumble on the Wolver- ine 45 after only six plays. From there the Gophers rolled to the 13 in five plays but the Michi- gandefense tightened and the Maize and Blue took over oni downs on their own 5. The Wolverines moved nine yards in three plays and then sent Ortmann back to kick. Ortmann, however first fumbled the ball and then kicked it into the end zone where Art Edling fell on it for a Minnesota touchdown. Illinois Takes B3ig 10 Lead.# Rips Purdue LAFAYETTE, Ind.-(M)-Illinois won its first victory at Purdue in 30 years yesterday, 19-0, as line- smashing performances of burly Burt Schmidt and John Karras boosted the Illini on top of the Western Conference. Twice-tied but undefeated in the Big Ten, Illinois got a big assist from Michigan's 14-7 vic- tory over Minnesota, last perfect record team in the Conference. Purdue was looking for its first Conference victory and held Illinois scoreless in the first half. Then it crumbled. A couple of timely pass interceptions by Dick Raklovits helped ruin the occasion for 48,000 Purdue Homecoming fans. Illinois elected to play power football and needed nothing else. The 191-pound Schmidt banged into the Purdue line 12 times from his fullback spot and accumulated 121 yards. * * * RIGHT HALFBACK Karras, ten )ounds lighter but no easier to stop, carried 19 times for 111 yards. The combined Schmidt- Karras total was only 37 yards short of Purdue's total gain by rushing. I! Bly The Associated Press EAST Pennsylvania 28, Navy 7. Cornell 14, Princeton 12. Dartmouth 27, Harvard 13. Yale 14. Holy Cross 7. Rutgers 35, Colgate 13. Villanova 20, Duquesne 0. Boston 38, NYU 0. Brown 48, Lehigh 0. Bucknell 62, Wash. & Jeff. 0. Fordham 47, Syracuse 21. Delaware 7, Lafayette 0. Amherst 14. Wesleyan 7. MIDWEST Ohio State 21, Wisconsin 0. Cincinnati 21, West Reserve Miami (0.) 26, Ohio U. 0. Denison 53, Oberlin 7. Case 38, Carnegie Tech 0. Albion 12, Olivet 6. Hillsdale 13, Hope 9. Indiana 48, Pittsburgh 14. Missouri 32, Iowa State 0. Oklahoma 48, Nebraska 0. SOUTH Duke 55, VPI 7. -Daily-=Alex Lmanian WHOA-Minnesota's offensive workhorse, Billy Bye, comes to an abrupt halt in a try at the left side of the Michigan defense during yesterday's game. Don Dufek blocks the little halfback's path while Tony Momsen is moving over from his line-backing position to aid in the tackle. The Wol- verines were highly successful in bottling Bye all af ternoon. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 6) Mu Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Iota will present a joint musicale on Thurs., Oct. 27, 8, Hussey Room, League. All women of the School of Music are invited. ..AIEE-IRE: Meeting, Tue. Oct. 25, 8, Kellogg Auditorium. Mr. Cyril N. Hoyler of R.C.A. Labora- tories at Princeton, N.J. will speak about Electronic Arithmetic and wil demonstrate some of the de- vices. Hillel-I.Z.F.A.: Beginning He- brew group will meet Mon., 8 p.m., League. Everyone welcome. League Exhibition Dance Group: Meeting of all those who were members last semester, Mon., Oct. 24, 8 p.m., League Ballroom. American Society for Public Ad- ministration: First social seminar, Oct. 24, 7:30, West Conference Room, Rackham. Prof. James K. Pollock will speak on "The Ad- ministration of Overseas Affairs". All members- and interested per- sons welcome. La p'tite causette: Mon., 3:30 p.m., Grill Room, League. NSA-UWF: Planning meeting for mock UN Council meeting: All those interested invited. 4:30 p.m., Mon., Oct. 24, Union. Purdue Club: Organizational, meeting for all Purdue graduates, 8 p.m., Mon., Oct. 24, Kalamazoo Room, League. Sociedad Hispanica: Social hour, Mon., 4-6 p.m., Interna- tional Center. Refreshments. "Servant of Two Masters." Box office opens tomorrow at 10 for "Servant of Two Masters," the hi- larious farce of the 18th century, presented by the Department of Speech. 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