PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NO EM 919 S. 190' +'!" - 111 TTT111MT111TTCAl\N _tbATT SUNDAY. NOVEMBE Y a# )R 4iV )1.V Z V r College Scores Across the Nation cM Downs Boilermakers, 20-12 By The Associated Press MIDWEST South Carolina 6, Marquette 3 Kentucky 21, Xavier (0.) 7 Cincinnati 34, Ohio University 13 Otterbein 46, Oberlin 26 Bowling Green 27, Kent State 6 Western Michigan 40, Butler 6 Kansas 27, Nebraska 13 Oklahoma 39, Kansas State 0 Tusa 13, Oklahoma A & M 13 (Tie) BILL CONNOLLY, Night Editor C, * EAST Army 35, Fordham 0 Brown 14, Yale 0 Holy Cross 35, Colgate 27 Boston University 28, Temple 7 Dartmouth 35, Columbia 14 Princeton 33, Harvard 13 Virginia 26, Pennsylvania 14 Penn State 34, West Virginia 14 Rutgers 14, Lafayette 0 Cornell 33, Syracuse 7 SOUTH Florida 28, Georgia 7 Georgia Tech 30, Tennessee 13 Wake Forest 27, Duke 7 Boston College 40, Clemson 27 Maryland 40, George Washing- ton 14 North Carolina 20, William & Mary 14 - Navy 21, Tulane 21 (Tie) Mississippi 47, Chattanooga 27 SOUTHWEST Rice 14, Arkansas 0 Southern Methodist 27, Texas A & M 27 (Tie) Texas 20, Baylor 0 FAR WEST Missouri 20, Colorado 13 Stanford 34, Southern Califor- r.ia 13 California 33, Washington St. 14 Conference Standings I I Second Quarter Splurge Seals Wolverine Victory Ortmann's 88-Yard Romp Paces Offense; Dufek, Peterson, Allis Score Touchdowns MICHIGAN .....3 1 Ohio State ......3 1 Illinois .........3 1 Wisconsin ......2 1 Minnesota ......3 2 Iowa ...........3 2 Northwestern . . .2 4 Purdue .........1 4 Indiana ........0 4 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 .750 .750 .700 .625 .600 .600 .333 .200 .000 A 6L (Continued from Page 1) the Wolverines a first down on the Purdue 20. * * * BOB VAN SUMMERN and Don Dufek combined to make the re- maining yardage through the Pur- due line. Harry Allis' first con- version was made from 15 yards out as the result of an off side penalty against Michigan. Coach Holcomb's team waited until the middle of the final period before collecting its final points. Once again Gorgal took to the air and consistently hit the wait- ing arms of Bob Whitmer for the majority of the 49 yards covered by the touchdown drive. * . * THE PASSING attack carried the Boilermakers to the Michigan 3 yard line and fullback John Kerestes plunged for the final distance. NOW ! MEN Are Wearing Them Everywhere s "y -Daily-Lmanian AERIAL DUET-The two Purdue players pictured above seem to be all up in the air about some- thing-the something being a Michigan pass which fell incomplete in Boilermaker territory. John Ghindia (23) is watching the dance steps, presumably in hopes of snatching the pigskin. His quest was unsuccessful as the theatrics of Purdue's backfield deflected the ball out of his reach. What a booster shot for jaded wardrobes .. . Dynamic Sport Coats! They give you the ener- getic styling, the vigorous colors to achieve an ex-fullback look! You wear them from office to dinner, conference to club, campus to classroom . . . smartly everywhere you go. Other Big Ten Grid Battles ,. s ,? . : , ! . :<=:< . .- .. , From $17.50 to $29.50 Third Quarter Spurt Hands Buckeyes Win PITTSBURGH-(P)-A fighting University of Pittsburgh football team yesterday held Ohio State scoreless for the first half but went down to defeat 14-10 under the Ohioans' greater power. Ohio State punched out two touchdowns in a thrilling second half to win the 14th meeting be- tween the teams in the past 20 years. THE PANTHERS grabbed the offensive early in the first quarter and only relinquished it mo- mentarily throughout the first half. Sparked by the brilliant Lou (Bombo) Cecconi, Pittsburgh thrust to the Ohio State 13 yard line in the opening period and tried a field goal which failed. After a scoreless first period, the Pitts went into the lead a 17-yard touchdown forward pass from fullback Carl Depasqua to end Earl Sumpter, over the OSU goal. Bolkovac kicked the extra point. The game was decided in an action-crammed third quarter. RABIDEAU.ONIER$ ARIS "Where the Good Clothes Come From" 119 SOUTH MAIN STREET, ANN ARBOR Gophers Erupt In Last Stanza For 55-7_Win MINNEAPOLIS - (AP) - Min- nesota, counted a dead duck so far as Big Ten title chances and Rose Bowl consideration go, proved a screaming fighting eagle yesterday by blasting Iowa, 55-7. The Gophers exhibited a far different brand of football from that against Purdue a week ago. They struck quickly with a tricky, hard-driving offense to get their first score in the first four min- utes of the game. * * * THEY dominated the game the rest of the way and held Iowa well away from scoring territory until late in the third period. The Hawkeyes couldn't quite make the goal in that quarter, but used a pass play, quarterback Glenn Drahn to Bob McKenzie, to go over, early in the fourth period. Fullback Bill Reichardt added the point. That brought the score .to 28-7. Econ._175 Purdue Mich. First Downs . 16 15 Net Yards Gained Rushing.........138 237 Forward Passes Attempted........ 21 14 Forward Passes 1 Completed........ 10 3 Yds. Forward Passing 162 67 Forwards Intercepted by ... 0 4 Yards Gained Runback Interception .......0 86 Punting Average ... 37 34.6 Total Yards, All Kicks Returned 94 130 Opponent Fumbles Recovered 2 3 Yards Lost By Penalties...... 15 70 "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Our 9 Tonsorial Artists welcome your tonsorial queries. The Dascola Barbers Liberty near State Illini Set New Rushing Mark, Stop Hoosiers CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Nov. 5-Illi- nois' Sophomore terrors, led by Johnny Karras, set a modern Western Conference ground-gain- ing record of 552 yards yesterday in trouncing Indiana 33-14. The output, which included 449 yards by rushing and 103 passing, shattered the old mark of 531 set by Michigan against Ohio State in 1943. * * * IN A GAME of sensational runs, which kept a "Dad's Day" crowd of 40,457 cheering, Illinois won its first home scrap of the season, Karras personally accounted for 155 yards in 12 carries for a 12.9- yard average. This boosted the rushing total for the former prep quarter- mile champion from Argo, Ill., to 624 yards in five games - only 45 shy of the record punch- ed by Ohio State's Les Horvath in six 1944 contests. Illinois still faces Ohio State and Northwestern. Karras may yet put the record out of sight. The Argo Express, derailing tacklers right and left, rumbled on runs of 65, 26, 25, 20 and 15 yards today as Illinois scored in every quarter and zoomed onto a record team pace. * * * COACH RAY ELIOT'S Sopho- more stampede now has a yardage average of 334.2 in its three wins, one loss and one tie in Big Ten competition. This is ahead of Michigan's 1943 full season offen- sive record average of 320 yards. Bad uers Knife Through NU; Teague Stars EVANSTON, Il.,-(P)-Wiscon- sin's brisk, business-like Badgers put on two long drives yesterday to defeat Northwestern, 14 to 6, before a homecoming crowd of 51,000. The Badger's sharp, efficient attack carried them 85 yards in eleven plays for a touchdown in the first period. They came back for an encore in the final quarter and moved 79 yards in 15 plays to score again. * * * THE OLD GRADS in the throng got one big thrill when Art Mura- kowski, Northwestern's 1948 All- America fullback, caught a punt on his 21-yard line and galloped down the west side for 79 yards and the only Wildcat marker. The defeat was the third in a row for the 1949 Rose Bowl champions. The triumph gave the Badgers a conference record of two victories one tie and a defeat. Bobby Teague, swift, twisting halfback, paced Wisconsin with a net gain of 165 yards in 25 car- ries. He shared the brilliant job of ball carrying with Gwynn Christ- ensen, who picked up 77 yards in 27 trips, and Lisle Blackbourn, the hard running fullback. But the final payoffs came I#n the accurate passing of quarter- back Bob Petruska. He pitched passes for both touchdowns. His first touchdown throw, good for 19 yards, was caught by Bob Wilson in the end zone early in the first period. Rudy Trbovich's attempt for the extra point was wide. Outside of the two minute per- iod of rapid scoring and the indi- vidual touchdowns, both teams were unable to find a scoring punch. The two elevens were in scoring position numerous times through- out the game, but bowed to the tightened defenses of the opposi- tion. MICHIGAN TOOK advantage of a Purdue fumble to move the ball to the Boilermaker 11 yard line earlyhin the game only to lose the ball on downs. The Wolverines also moved to Purdue's eight yard line in the opening part of the second quar- ter before failing to make the necessary yardage. On two other occasions the Michigan eleven found itself within the Boiler- maker 15, once having a first down on the Purdue nine in the last quarter. On both occasions fumbles hampered the Wolver- ine cause. Purdue lost two scoring oppor- tunities in a similar fashion reach- ing the Michigan eight and twenty yard lines. The Wolverines held the Boiler- makers deep in their own territory until the later stages of the first half. In the third period Purdue retaliated allowing the Wolverines possession of the ball for only one series of downs. ORTMANN, the "two Peter- sons" and Wally Teninga stood out for the Wolverines as they won teir third conference victory. Purdue found a pair of pass- ers in Bob Hartman and Ken Gorgal to offset the disappoint- ing performance of Harry Szul- borski, Boilermaker star half- back. The Wolverines had a large sta- tistical edge over the underdog Boilermakers in yardage gained by rushing. Michigan netted 237 yards to Purdue's 138. Purdue gained one more first down than Michigan, chalking up 16. * * * THE GAME WENT down as one of the roughest played by a Mich- igan team. The Wolverines were penalized 70 yards to the Boiler- makers' 15. Coach Holcomb repeated his statement of last year, claiming that the Wolverines were truly a great team. Bennie Oosterbaan preferred to look ahead to next week's game with Indiana, stating that the Michigan team plays each game as it comes. He praised Purdue for their effort to knock the Wol- verines out of their third straight Western Conference Champion- ship. 14 t' II 1; Lineups -I Here s a picture of a man who AP Sports Flashes MICHIGAN I Allis .......... Hollway Kelsey Wistert ...... Atchison McClelland ... Erben ....... Momsen enjoys Eating. 0. WEST POINT, N.Y. - Army's' Loaded Legions marched relent- lessly toward the conclusion of an all-victorious football season to- day, trampling previously-unbeat- en Fordham into the cold, wet turf of Mitchie Stadium, 35-0, as Ar- nold Galiff a uncorked four touch- down passes. * * * NEW YORK-Dartmouth tuned up for next week's clash with un- beaten Cornell by scalping Colum- bia today, 35-14 after a stutter- ing start that fanned false hopes among the 25,000 Baker Field cus- tomers. * * * LOS ANGELES-Stanford's alert Indians blasted the Rose Bowl dreams of the University of South- ern California today and kept their own hopes alive with a sur- prising 34 to 13 triumph before 70,041 astonished onlookers. A 20-point burst of scoring pow- er in the second quarter blotted the Trojans of USC out of the Rose Bowl picture, leaving Stan- ford with one lone loss in the Pa- cific Coast Conference play and a chance to knock off undefeated California. * * * NEW ORLEANS - Midshipman Bob Zastrow matched his bullet passes today against Eddie Price's long, swift runs in a brilliant foot- ball free-for-all today in which Navy rallied to tie Tulane 21-21. Pos. PURDUE .LE ........ bland Brewster Sugar .LT....... Karras Beletic Janosek . LG...... Murray Scallish Skibinski C ... Carnaghi Knitz Reed Crowe Myrice RG........ Smith Deem Weizer RT...... Kalapos Tate Trbovich .RE ...... Whitmer Bttchko 'Bringer . QB ........Gorgal 'A Heneveld, Powers Jackson Wahl .... Johnson .. .. A Wisniewski .. . Clark Popp Ghindia .. .. . . IMPORTANT NEW BOOKS H E EATS his meals at J. D. Miller's Cafeteria because food is served the way he likes it. Tasty, delicious meals that sharpen anyone's appetite. J. D. 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