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November 06, 1949 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1949-11-06

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1949

'THEt MICHIGAN AI A

PAGE, SEVEN

Army . .
'Fordham

. . . 35 Notre Dame
. . . 0 Mich. State

. . 34 Oklahoma . . 39 Ohio State
. . 21 Kansas State . 0 Pittsburgh

. . 14 Minnesota
. .10Iowa . . .

. . 55 Wisconsin ..
. . 7 Northwestern .

14 Illinois .
6 Indiana .

. . . 33 California
. . . 14 Wash. State

. .33

14

. .

Irish

Fir

Too Strong for State;

Triumph 34-21

a

%1

Williams Paces Victory
Over InspiredSpartans
Star Quarterback Completes 13 Out of 16;
State Unable To Cope with Versatile Attack

By The Associated Press
EAST LANSING - Unbeaten
Notre Dame got its stiffest argu-
ment of the season, but unleashed
the versatility of quarter back Bob
Williams for a 34-21 triumph over,
Michigan State here yesterday be-f
fore 51,277 upset-hopeful fans.
In a game that was expected to
menace seriously the Notre Dame
string of 33 straight games with-
out defeat, the Irish nonchalantly
punched across two touchdowns
in the second period, another in
the third and two more in the
fourth for their sixth win of the
season.
MICHIGAN STATE, an inspired
but outplayed team today, pushed
across two touchdowns on des-
peration passes in the closing min-

V OF THE-Daily-Lmanian
OFF TO THE RACES--Walt Teninga, Michigan's ace defensive back, strains to evade Purdue line
backer Clinton Knitz (52), after intercepting a Boilermaker pass. Coming up to aid and assist the
versatile Wolverine senior are Bob Hollway (86), and Charlie Lentz (40).

utes to score the most points Notre
Dame has yielded in a single after-
noon since the 28-27 squeak past
Purdue in the 1948 season opener.
Williams, a daring performer
j with 13 of 16 passes completed
in a perfect football afternoon,
ran 40 yards to one touchdown
and passed to two others as the
Irish hammered another crisp
triumph into their bid for an
unsullied season.
The rough, tough Spartans
played to the hilt, but the Irish
had a brilliant all around attack
which could not be denied.
Michigan State was an inspired
team. But after playing a score-
less first quarter and failing to
tally from the one-yard line, the
Spartans just couldn't cope with
the knifing sharpness of the Irish
attack.
IT WAS THE first defeat for
the Spartans since they bowed,
7-3 to Michigan in their first gamej
of the season. Since then they
had won five straight games, beat-
ing Marquette, Maryland, William
and Mary, Penn State and Temple.
Williams was a bold quarter-
back for Notre Dame today from
start to finish. His 19 yard
touchdown shot to Ernie Zalejski
for a touchdown in the second
period gave the Irish a 7-0 lead
and sounded the tempo for the
attack.
Michigan State rallied to tie
the score at 7-7 when Sonny
Grandelius plunged one foot for
a touchdown in the second period,
but that only served to goad the
Irish on to their telling clean-up.
8 p.m. Tues., Nov. 8, Union. Vi-
sitors welcome.
Sigma Alpho Iota: Mon., Nov.
7, Mrs. Lotte Hutzel, Province
President, will be here with board
members. Business meeting ;With
actives, 4:30 p.m., League; For-
mal musicale, 8 p.m., at the home
of Mrs. Fred Matthaei.

Bowl Hungry
Golden Bears
CrushCougars
BERKELEY, Calif. - (P) - The
unbeaten California Golden Bears
reeled off victory No. 8 in their
drive to the Rose Bowl yesterday,
winning 33 to 14 over a fighting
Washington State football team.
A crowd of 33,000 saw Lynn
Waldorf's Bears protect an un-
blemished record by scoring two
touchdowns in the opening and
final quarters and another in the
third.
* * *
CALIFORNIA, favored to win
by 33 or more points, found itself
in a battle that ended with the
Cougars in possession six yards
from the Bears' goal. It was 13-7
at the half with the underated
Cougars definitely in the game.
The Bears drove 62 yards in
the third period on four ground
plays to score.
The Northerners scored early in
the final period on the most spec-
tacular play of the game. From
the California 18, Frank Mataya
went back to pass and found him-
self trapped. He lobbed under-
handed to right half Don Paul
who made a leaping catch on the
dead run. Paul raced 11 yards for
the score.
California followed with touch-
down marches of 52 and 46 yards
respectively.
Washington State 0 7 4 7-14
California 13 0 7 13-33

FAR AWAY PLACES-Charlie
Ortmann, sparkplug for the
Wolverine eleven, cuts for the
sidelines as he returns a Purdue
kickoff for 88 yards.
Irv Wisniewski (84) lends a
hand by blocking would-be
tackler Clement Crowe (60), as
Tom Johnson (76) Michigan
left tackle comes racing over for
downfield blocking. Ortmann
paced the ofensive attack which
saw Michigan score 13 points in
90 seconds.

-Daly-Lmanlan
TYPEWRITERS
Office and Portable Models
of all makes
Sold,
Bought,
Repaired,
Rented
CHRISTMAS CARDS
MORRILL'S
314 South State St.
G. 1. Requisitions Accepted

Ki z?44
bowI
1t4Y

1
t \ ,
i a ,,
,

Whether Here Or There
With All Wool
order....

. -- I

WIDE OPEN SPACES-Charley Ortmann speeds through a hole the size of a good-sized tunnel as he cuts off left tackle in yester-
day's Michigan-Purdue conference battle. Michigan men who have helped to open that hole include (left to right), Bob Van Sum-
mern (16), Allen Jackson (64), Harry Allis (on ground), Don McClelland (67), and James Atchison (73).

DAILY
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(Continued from Page 4)

tional Assembly." Visitors wel- Willys-Overland." Visitors invit-
come. ed.

La
Grill

p'tite causette: 3:30
Room, League.

p.m.,

I.Z.F.A.: Hebrew Circle, meeting,
11 a.m., Union.
U. of M. Hot Record Society:
Jelly-Roll Morton Documentaries
from the Library of Congress, 8
p.m., League Ballroom. Everyone
invited.
UWF Seminar: Study Group, 8
p.m., 530 Thompson Rd. Topic:
"Approaches to World Govern-
ment; People's World Constitu-

Inter-Arts Union: Meeting, 4
p.m., meet at the entrance to Bur-
ton Memorial Tower.
Scalp and Blade: Buffalo and
Erie County students are invited
to attend an organizational meet-
ing of the Michigan Chapter of
Scalp and Blade Fraternity, 7:30
p.m., Rm. 3A, Union.
Graduate Outing Club: Meeting,
2:15 p.m., Northwest entrance,
Rackham Bldg. Paper chase, and
supper.
Cowing Events
Meeting of the Michigan Society
for Quality Control: 7:30 p.m.,
Mon., Nov. 7, Union. Speaker: Mr.
N. R. Meagley, Manager, Statisti-
cal Quality Control, Willys-Over-
land Motors, Inc., Toledo. Subject:
"Statistical Quality Control at

Journalism Society: 7:45 p.m.
Mon., Nov. 7, Newsroom, Haven
Hall. Prof. Emeritus John L.
Brumm will speak on "The Com-
munist Trial and Its Effects on
Civil Liberties." All journalism
students invited.
UWF: Open meeting 7:30 p.m.,
Tues., Nov. 8, Union. A Delegate
report from UWF National Con-
vention.
Cercle Francais: 8 p.m. Tues.,
Nov. 8, League. Prof. Paul M.
Spurlin will present an informal

dises divertissantes." Faculty and
members invited.
Sigma Rho Tau, Engineering
speech society: Meeting, 7 p.m.,
Tues., Nov. 8, E. Engineering Bldg.
Prof. Heady, Political Science
Dept. "The General Expansion of
the Government."
Zetalethian: Meeting, Tues.,
Nov. 8, 7:30 p.m., League. Room
will be posted in lobby.
Phi Sigma: Movie, "Trappers
Along the Dog Trail," Nov. 7, 8
p.m., Rackham Ampitheatre. Im-
portant business meeting at 7:30
p.m. Movie open to public.
IZ.F.A.: Song and Dance group,

WAGNER'S
Open 24 hrs. daily
$1.00
SUNDAY DINNERS
Ashley and Washington

MVOE Sport Shops

711 North University, Phone 6915

All Wool, 60x72,
Light Gold Felt B

talk entitled

902 South State, Phone 7296

"Quelques balour-

ii

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Are you thinking of giving HER a diamond?
NATURALLY, you will want to obtain a fine diamond ... one that will
reflect your pride and happiness in one another. Most of you will ask the
" ~question, "How can I be sure that the engagement ring I buy is of fine quality 4
and properly priced?" It is important to seek the counsel of a jeweler you can4
trust. We suggest you talk to your jeweler, visit with him, let him show you
his diamonds and explain some of the facts about the diamond . . . Then
evaluate his "know-how" and his integrity, just as you would seek the counsel
of a lawyer or physician.
We won't try to tell you that we can sell you a $100.00 diamond for
$50.00 . . . that is positively ridiculous. We can, for instance, show you a
% carat (25 points) diamond of fine quality to sell for $125.00 tax included.
&4
This past few weeks we have mailed to many of you, copies of a booklet
entitled "DIAMONDS-Their purchase and their care." It would be too
great a task for us to reach all of you. To those of you whom we have
missed, we invite you to stop in and obtain a free copy. We are confident it
will be well worth your time.

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