I PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1949 4 .,. Purdue Stuns Goplers, 13-7; osU- Trips ildcats TeagueStar As Badgers Rip Indiana BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - () -- Fullback Bobby Teague cut Curly- cues in Indiana's turf yesterday and they spelled a 30-14 victory for Wisconsin's football team. The homecoming crowd of 30,-1 000 watched the Indiana line take a beating in the 70 degree tempera- ture. It was the 14th time Indiana had been beaten in its 25 home- coming games. Teague, a shifty i704pounder, scored two touchdowns on long twisting runs and caught a 20- yard pass from Bob Petruska for another. That gave Wisconsin a 20-0 midway margin and the reserve-poor Indiana team's sec- ond half rally had too far to go. Teague went 46 yards on his first scoring dash, six plays and two minutes after Wisconsin took the opening kickoff. He. took Pe- truska's touchdown pass in the last two minutes of the period. The Wisconsin fullback's fan- ciest running was in a 43-yard touchdown sprint in the last two minutes of the second quarter. Is cleats cut shorthand symbols around three Indiana tacklers, after he took a pitchout from Petruskanear the sideline. Wisconsin twice went into a field goal formation in the second half after slowing down on long drives. The first was a fake and Jim Embach scooted eight yards for a touchdown. The second was authentic and Lisle Blackbourn kicked a goal from the 19-yard mark, with the line of scrimmage at the eleven., rGopher's Line Buckles; Szulborski, Adams Star Bucks Tie for Rose Bowl, Big Ten Lead; Morrison Plunges for Two Touchdowns 'i' F X -Daily-Alex Lmanian BUT NO GHOST-John Ghindia, Wolverine quarterback, is cer- tainly galloping in the above picture, but he's no apparition to the three Illini defenders. Ghindia's catch of Chuck Ortmann' s toss set up the second Michigan touchdown. Red Wngys Gain League Lead; Steve Black Tallies Only Goal MONTREAL-(P)-The Detroit Red Wings last night gained un- disputed possession of first place in the National Hockey League by blanking the Montreal Canadiens, 1-0. Steve Black's goal at 16:30 of the first period gave the Motor Hero Worshippers Disillusioned! Campus Celebrities Caught in Off-Guard Moments by Gargoyle's Candid Camera The Exposed... City crew its margin of victory. A crowd of 12,718 saw the Canadiens suffer their third straight shutout. Black's goal came on a pass from far to the left by Jim Mc- Fadden, and Black whipped the puck past Bill Durnan from close range. Play was close throughout, with the Wings holding an edge al- though outshot, 26-21. Both Durnan and Harry Lum- ley turned in brilliant perform- ances in the nets. The Detroit Goalie had his closest calls in the third period when the Cana- diens tossed everything into a desperate effort to score. The Montreal players were told before last night's game by Gen- eral Manager Frank Selke that practically all hands were on pro- bation and must produce results "or else." The game was comparatively free of penalties, only seven minors being handed out. The Wings drew four and the Canadiens three. Darkhorse Hawks Finally Win, 2-0 NEW YORK-R)-First period goals by Metro Prystai and Bill Mosienko gave the Chicago Black- hawks their first triumph of the National Hockey League season last night as they defeated the New York Rangers 2 to 0. A Madison Square Garden crowd of 14,140 saw the Blackhawks, picked as the darkhorse team in the league this year, strike quickly and then threw up a solid defense wall around veteran goalie, Frankie Brimsek. It was his first whitewash job of the season. MINNEAPOLIS-(I)-Minneso- ta's bubble really burst yesterday. Purdue furnished the needle with a 13-7 upset victory. It was a key-up Purdue squad that took the field. They were ex- pected to lose by two to four touchdowns. But the Boilermak- ers showed in the first period they didn't believe it. They tested the Gopher line and found it could be penetrat- ed. Then they tried passes and found that they worked. The combination produced a touch- down for Purdue in the second period and, but for a piece of bad luck, might have added an- I other score. To insure their victory, the Boil- ermakers intercepted a pass and BOB SANDELL, Night Editor added another score in the fourth period. It wasn't until the last period that the Gophers averted a shut- out by throwing two long passes to get within scoring range. Half- back Dick Lawrence did all the passing, with the ball going to end Bud Hausken for the lone Gopher tally. End Gordon Sol- tau added the point. Harry Szulborski, Purdue half- back who was reported in poor shape, wasn't slowed much as he went over the three-yard line in the second period.It was the cli- max of a drive that started on Purdue's 25-yard line. The passing of quarterback Ken Gorgal played a big part in the drive, with end Ron Bland doing the catching. Gorgal also tossed a pass to end Bob Whit- mer but Whitmer was beyond the end zone and the ball was ruled out of bounds. Guard Elmer Scallish set up the second Purdue touchdown early in the fourth period. He intercepted a Gopher pass on Minnesota's 47, and Purdue started down field. Szulborski and halfback Norb Adams plunged for short gains and then Gorgal threw a 17-yard pass to Adams to put the ball on the Gopher 20. Conference Standings COLUMBUS, O. - (A) - Ohio State's once-beaten Bucks kept their Rose Bowl and Western Con- ference title hopes alive yesterday by beating Northwestern, 24 to 7. The victory before 81,872 fans -fourth largest home crowd in Buckeye history-put the Ohioans even with Iowa in the race for the Pasadena classic. Ohio State and Iowa each have won three games and lost one in conference play. The Bucks must get by Illinois and Michigan in late-season frays, but rated off yesterday's perform- ance they must be given a good chance. Scoring in every period, the Bucks dominated play all the way. Northwestern failed to reach the middle of the field in the first half, and staged but one sustained drive all day. That was a 74-yard march in 17 plays with fullback Art Mura- kowski wheeling over from the three for the marker. That brought the Wildcats up to a 10-7 deficit in the early part of the third period, but the Bucks went in for two more touchdowns to make it convincing. Big Curly Morrison, Ohio's fullback, counted a pair of touchdowns on four and one- yard plunges. Halfback Jerry Krall got the other on a four- yard plunge in the closing min- utes, and Jimmy Hague contrib- uted three extra points and an eight-yard field goal. The Bucks had a 16-9 edge in first downs, rolled up 226 yards to Northwestern's 118 on the ground, and added 133 yards to 92 for the Wildcats through the air. Bears Wallop UCLA,_35-21 LOS ANGELES- (A) -Califor- nia's Golden Bears swept past the Bruins of UCLA yesterday, 35 to 21, and barged on undefeated in their march toward the Rose Bowl. The amazing Bruins, rank un- derdogs, held their vaunted Berk- eley brothers to a 14-14 whirlwind standstill for the first half but wilted before superior reserve strength. A crowd of 58,668 per- sons watched the Pacific Coast Conference struggle. The hard - hitting California team cashed in quickly on a pass interception and a UCLA fumble in the third period, converting both miscues into the touchdowns which won the bitterly fought con- test. Watson Tallies Three Goals Ini LeafVictory TORONTO-(A)-Harry Wat- son crashed three goals past rookie goalie Jack Gelineau .in the third period last night to lead the Toronto Maple Leafsf to an 8-1 National Hockey Leaguet victory over the Boston Bruins. The game _ was observed by 13,655 fans. The Leafs, who outshot their slower-footed rivals by 40 to 20, fashioned their victory in the second period when they scored three goals to Boston's one. Then in the third they poured home five more, two of them during a Boston penalty, to complete the route. Center Max Bentley came close to rivaling the husky Watson in the goal-getting department flicking home two close range shots on which Gelineau didn't have a chance. The game's first goal wasn't scored until almost the halfway mark-at 8:48 of the second per- iod-when center Cal Gardner fed Garth Boesch a breakaway pass from the Toronto end. Paul Ronty got that back for the Bruins in less than a minute. -Daily-Alex Lmanian PRESSURE PUNTER-Walter Teninga, Michigan's ace punter, is shown in the above picture punting far over the heads of the straining Illini forward wall from behind his own goal line. The kick traveled 63 yards and set back an Illinois threat which had carried to the Wolverine two-yard line. Teninga's punting was terrific all afternoon, and was a predominant factor in a game which placed prime importance on the skill of the teams' booters. Other Wolverines in the picture are Irv Wisniewski, (84), moving downfield, and Tom Peterson, (33), placing a key block on an Illinois defender. r IOWA CITY, Ia. - (P) -Iowa came up with its hottest football rally to overtake Oregon 34-31 yesterday in a scoring orgy that had 37,976 fans bug-eyed." It was a slashing offensive duel filled with sensational long runs the likes of which had never been seen by any other crowd in the 20-year-old Iowa Stadium. With exactly 15 minutes and 15 seconds left to play, Iowa appeared hopelessly behind 24- 6 under the pounding of an Ore- gon team that had dominated the sluggish Hawks. Then came the Iowa deluge last quarter with Oregon fighting which included 21 points in the backto the very last. With Iowa ahead 34-31 and only a minute left, the boys from the Far West penetrated to the Iowa four. There a fumble by Bob Sanders set Ore- gon back to the 18. Next came a five-yard penalty. As the gun sounded a pass elud- ed an Oregon receiver and the vic- tory was Iowa's. And Iowa got that victory, its first over a Pacific Coast confer- ence team in six games, by scor- ing 28 points in nine minutes and five seconds. 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