PAGE S= THE a~.M TCTs a x a . a . 4.aD.. AI.a LY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 194+9 Ohio State . . 30 Notre Dame. . 42 Wisconsin . . '. 35 Army. . . . . 14 Oregon State . 25 Oklahoma . . 27 Tulane . Illinois . . . . 17 North Carolina 6 Iowa . . . . . 13 Pennsylvania . 13 Michigan State 20 Missouri . . . 7 Vanderbilt . 41 California . . 41 . 14 Oregon . . . . 14 oSU Clips Illini Bowl Bi ;re gon State Stuns M SC Irish Streak Jeopardized For One Half NEW YORK- (P)-The flood gates finally burst late yesterday and the mighty Irish of Notre Dame rolled up a crushing 42 to 6 score on North Carolina, but it was a hummer of a football game for a half. There probably never was a more astonished set of athletes in all history than were the glitter- ing lads from South Bend when they left the Yankee Stadium turf at the intermission deadlocked 6 to 6 with a Tar Heel team that had had the temerity to fight them to a frazzle for 30 breathtaking minutes. FLAYED BY coach Frank Leahy, the nation's No. 1 touchdown machine came back for the second half filled with fire and smashed the southern eleven all out of shape, piling on four touchdowns in the final period under the stadium lights. Calculated to lose by at least 30 points and playing without their greatest star, Charlie Justice, the sihgle-wing boys from Chapel Hill surprised the pants off everybody by whizzing over a touchdown in the opening minute of play and actually leading the Mid-West terrors at the end of the first quar- ter. - -I net DINING ROOM IS ALWAYS PROUD TO BE THE HOST FOR ALL FRATERNITY PARTIES Army Slides Past Quakers In Squeakeri PHILADELPHIA - (A) - Ar- my ran its unbeaten string to 19 games yesterday by edging under- dog Pennsylvania, 14-13, in a foot- ball melodrama that was settled by Jack Mackmull's unerring placement kicks. Pennsylvania, bcttling up Ar- my's great quarterback, Arnold Galiffa, twice came within bare yards of additional touchdowns. FEELINGS RAN so high on the final play that the Army and Penn teams almost started a free-for- all. Coaches and officials broke up the battle before it got too serious. Pennsylvania, expected to lose by three touchdowns to the na- tion's number two team, scored first on a 78-yard drive in the second period with Bob Deuber smashing one yard for the touchdown. Herb Agocs, the big Penn end who played a mighty defensive game, sent his try for extra point far wide of the goal posts and this proved to be the deciding factor. Army struck back immediately with a 64-yard march with Jim Cain carrying over from the five, then added its second touchdown in the third period with a 67-yard drive, Gil Stephenson counting on a two-yard buck. PENNSYLVANIA came back with a 77-yard push in the last period, and this time it was a nine-yard pass, Francis (Reds) Bagnell to Warren Horton that did it. It was Pensylvania's big line that took a lot of lustre off an Army team expected to run up a big score on the twice beaten Quakers. Form, however, never has run true with these two sharp rivals. State's Air Attack Stalls; Karras Sets Rush Mark PORTLAND, Ore. - (P - The chest and toe of Stan McGuire and the long legs of Ken Carpen- ter caried the underdog Oregon State Beavers to a spectacular 25-20 football victory yesterday over the mighty Spartans of Michigan State College. Oregon State was expected to provide no more than an interest- ing workout for the Spartans, who have been rated highly in the na- tional gridiron picture. For a lit- tle morethan a quarter, the crowd of 22.239 wondered only how high the invaders would care to run the count. i -Daily-Alex Lmanlan FOOTCUFFED-Star Indiana quarterback Nick S bek being pulled down from behindy ean uniden- tified Michigan player. Rushing up to aid him on the tackle are Captain Al Wistert (11) and Ozzie Clark (86) Wolverine tackle and end respectively. Indiana's line at times failed to give Sebek the adequate protection he needed to successfully engineer his plays. __APw-% Sports Flashes MICHIGAN STATE dominated the scoreless first period, and scored twice early in the second stanza. With the count at 13-0, against them, the Beavers had made just three yards from scrim- mage. Then they began to lose their jitters, stiffening to balk the Spartans' attack. Suddenly Coach Kip Taylor's Beavers busted out all over, lashing by land and air to cover 59 yards in eight plays and leave the score at 13-7 as the quarter closed. With the start of the second half, the Beavers smashed another 59 yards on seven plays to tie the score, and it remained at 13 all when Stan McGuire missed a placement try for the first time this season. McGUIRE MADE UP for his miss a few moments later, by kick- ing a field goal 42 airline yards to give the Beavers a 16-13 edge. The line of scrimmage was on the 22, but the kick actually traveled 20 additional yards. And McGuire refused to stay out of the Spartans' hair. Short- ly after Michigan State received the kickoff, he warmed down on Everett Grandelius to block a punt, the ball rolling beyond the end zone for a 2-point safety. BadgersWin MADISON - (A) - Bob Pe- truska's passing and punting, plus fine line play, gave Wisconsin a convincing 35-13 conquest over Iowa yesterday. The Badgers maintained better than a touchdown per period pace to snare their third Western Con- ference victory. A tie with Illinois and a loss to Ohio State completes the Badger record. * * * MORE THAN 45,000 homecom- ing celebrants sat in a. light drizzle to watch Coach Ivy Williamson's fired-up squad take a 28-0 lead. The Hawkeyes narrow it to 28-13 )efore Wisconsin wound it up with a last period touchdown. Petruska passed for one touchdown, ran for another, and figured in the rest with his tossing. Twice he punted out of bounds on the Iowa one yard stripe, -and his generalship was steady all the way. The Hawkeyes, trailing by four touchdowns, struck through the air in the third period for their first score. Gene Drahn passed 29 yards to Don Commack in the end zone. Passes also figured in the Hawkeyes's second touchdown. * * * JERRY NORMANN smashed over from the one in the final period to climax a 67 yard march. Drahn set a new conference record for passes in one game with 31 tosses. The Iowa total of 4,1 aerials also was a new league mark. Thirty-two of these came in the second half. * * * Bears "Blast.. BERKELEY, Calif. - (A') - California's Bears charged into the home stretch of a perfect foot- ball season and within eyesight of the Rose Bowl yesterday with a thumping 41 to 14 victory over the University of Oregon Ducks. One of the largest crowds of the season, 76,000 fans, saw Lynn Waldorf's Bears come from behind to rack up their ninth consecu- tive triumph of the year, and re- main the only undefeated, untied team insthecoasttconference. The Bears scored three touch- downs in two minutes of the third quarter to cinch it. ONLY THE high-scoring Stan- ford Indians now stand between California and a repeat engage- ment in the Rose Bowl, where it lost to Northwestern last January. California buried Oregon un- der a powerful attack both on offense and defense that saw "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Try us . . . for workmanship, service, sanitation. The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State the Northerners routed in the second and third periods, Oregon turned an intercepted pass into a first-period touch- down and held on to lead the sur- prised Bears going into the second quarter. * * * Washes Out... LOS ANGELES - (A') - The flashy Bruins of UCLA yesterday whacked a stubborn University of Washington eleven, 47 to 26, and remained a threat to throw the Pacific Coast Conference Rose Bowl race into a scramble. A UCLA win over Southern Cal- ifornia. next week, coupled with a Stanfordvictory over California, would throw the race into a three- way tie, with Cal., Stanford and UCLA each having one conference defeat against it. COLUMBUS-(IP)-Ohio State's battering Bucks, frustrated by a stalwart Illinois crew during the first half, exploded for 30 points in the late-going yesterday to snatch a 30-17 conquest before a crowd of 81,085. The Big Ten victory moved Coach Wes Fesler's versatile crew a bit nearer a Rose Bowl bid and the Western Conference title - only Michigan now standing in their path. THE UNDERDOG Illini fought of the first three Buckeye bids for touchdowns, throwing back three surges to the goalpost shad- ows while constructing a 10-point lead in the first half on a rugged 80-yard ground march and a 12- yard field goal by Sam Rebecca. Even in defeat, sophomore Johnny Karras was the game's "Merriwell in Moleskins" for the Illini. The fleet-footed hack carried 14 times for 48 yards via rushing, giving him 702 yards in that department for the season and a new Western Conference record. Les Horvath of Ohio State set the old mark of 699 in 1944-and Karras has a game to go. KARRAS ALSO came up with the game's most spectacular play. It was a 95-yard kickoff return which moved the Illini back out front 17-14 in the third session after the Bucks had grabbed a 14-10 edge with two fast touch- downs. On his long jaunt, after tak- ing a, handoff from Dick Raklo- vits who took the kick, Karras was hemmed in at least three times on the sidelines by Ohio tacklers. He shook them off, however, and was going away as he crossed the last stripe. A week ago Ohio was 10 points back of Pittsburgh's surprising Panthers but came on to win 14- 10. Yesterday they spotted the Illini 10 points, took the lead, lost it, and then rolled on to one of the most swashbuckling wins in Ohio history. Behind 17-14 in the fourth per- iod after Karras' mighty jaunt, the Bucks gambled on a fourth- down plunge for two yards in mid- field. They made good on it with a smash at tackle by fullback Curly Morrison, and went on in for the winning touchdown-a 34- yard pass from Pandel Savic to halfback Ray Hamilton which caught the invaders flat-footed. MORE Air Attack, Defense Stop. HoosierBid (Continued from Page 1) End Les Popp, who had seen only limited action up until yesterday's contest but definitely played an outstanding game for Michigan, recovered a fumble by Robertson on Indiana's 12 just before the first quarter ended. ON THE FOURTH play of the second session Wally Teninga rac- ed over the goal line standing up. Harry Allis, conversion attempt was good. After a punt exchange Indi- ana got under way and rolled 42 yards down the field to score. Sebek completed a pass to An- derson on Michigan's 26 and then another one on the Wolver- ines' 14 in a series of six plays. He then ran three ground plays and on the last one carried the ball across himself from Michi- gan's seven. Don Henkle split the uprights with his kick from place- ment to tie the ball game. IN THE SECOND half the Wol- verines operated like a much-im- proved organization. On their first march Sebek intercepted a Ten- inga pass, but the next time they got their hands on the ball they went all the way. The drive started on Michi- gan's 47 and was climaxed by a six-yard jaunt through tackle by Bob Van Summern. Allis again converted, and Michigan fans breathed a little easier. The Wolverines scored again the next time they got the ball to add a little insurance to the lead they had assumed a few minutes earlier. Halfback Don Peterson climaxed a 72 yard march by taking an Ort- mann pass on Indiana's three and driving over the goal with Sebek and Wayne Benner on his back. INDIANA NEVER threatened again in the ball game, but Michi- gan tossed another scoring oppor- tunity away late in the last quart- er. Ozzie Clark blocked an Indi- ana punt and Michigan took over on the twelve. In two plays the Wolverines moved down to the four, but two pass plays failed and the Hoosiers took over on downs. A series of passes filled the air in the waning minutes of the game, but neither team got close to pay dirt and the game ended, 20-7. Line-Ups: MICHIGAN Pos. INDIANA Allis ..........LE.....Anderson Popp Sutherland Wistert.......LT......Kovatch Johnson Georgakis Ohlenroth Talerico Hinton Jackson......LG.......Smith Powers Heneveld Erben ........ C........ Witucki Momsen Stebbins Farer Dolan Becket McClelland ... RG ...... Thomas Fitch Brooks OPEN FOOTBALL SATURDAYS! Temple Cafeteria Masonic Temple 9 327 S. Fourth Ave. WEEKDAY HOURS: 11 to 2, 5 to 7:30 P.M. SUNDAY HOURS: 11:30 A.M. to 3:30 P.M. ENJOY A REAL SUNDAY DINNER AT WEEKDAY PRICES DAILY STEAK SPECIAL . . . $1.00 Sirloin Steak - Mexican Slaw - French Fries Coffee - Roll - Pie STUDENTS: You Can Save on Our Specials 10% DISCOUNT MEAL TICKETS AVAILABLE Football Scores Penn State 28, Temple 7. Stanford 63, Idaho 0. Georgia 20, Auburn 20 (tie). Delaware 13, Wash. & Lee 7. N. Car. State 27, Wake For. 14. Duke 35, George Washington 0. Kentucky 35, Florida 0. Texas Christian 14, Texas 13. South. Method. 34, Arkansas 6. Rice 13, Texas A&M 0. Baylor 32, Wyoming 7. DO YON KNOW . . . that the first night football game under the lights was played on Novem- ber 25, 1905 in Los Angeles, Calif., between University of Arizona and Loyola (then known as St. Vin- cent's Colege). Loyola celebrated the occasion by winning 55-0. Fir Ne F. F. Ya Piskinned Ind. Mich. st Downs .........6 21 t Yards Rushing .. 10 202 Passes Attempted. . 17 25 Passes Completed.. 9 9 rds F. Passing . . .120 165 -Daily-wally Barth AH, PAY DIRT-Bob Van Summern goes over the last white line for what proved to be the winning touchdown against Indiana. J. Bartkiewicz (33) pulls up too late to stop the scoring play, while rifle-armed Nick Sebek (29), Indiana quarterback, looks on helplessly. In the background Jim Atchison (73) and Tom Johnson (76), stellar Wolverine tackles, watch Van Summern go over. Forwards Intercepted by................3 3 Yards.Gained Run Back Interception. . 44 0 Punting Average .... 34.4 41.5 Total Yards All Kicks Returned ... 87 61 Opponent Fumbles Recovered.........1 2 Yards, Lost By.......16 40 COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCORES Nebraska 7, Iowa State 0. LSU 34, Miss. St. 7. Ptinceton 21, Yale 13. Maryland 14, Boston Univ. 13. Boston College 20, Fordham 12. Syracuse 47, Holy Cross 13. Tennessee 35, Mississippi 7. Alabama 20, Geo. Tech 7. i What aI Tackle!! ,i <. . r .;r :. . Late Scores Toronto 4, Chicago 0 Montreal 5, New York 3 Detroit 7, Boston 5 Wolter Atchison.... T... Wahl McWilliams Hess Wisniewski ... RE... . Kelsey Clark Skala Ghindia.......B.... Putich Bartkiewicz Rawl Bird ... Craton 4 . ;::". ' .>: .. _ W hat Ye a rYearbook!! For the best tasting, most nutritious, and lowest priced meals in Ann Arbor, cat at J. D. Miller's Cafeteria. You choose your own meals because .... Sebek 1 r. V: / B.F Goodrich 1 *1 as eta llSp Boes Many coaches specify B. F. Goodrich "P-F" Basketball Shoes for their players be- cause they know fast games take fast footwork. "P-F" is Ortmann .....LH........ Davis Lentz Gomory Van Summern RH .... Robertson D. Peterson Huggett Kempthorn .. .FB..... Winston Dufek Bowman Straffon xHenkle DO YOU KNOW ... that prior to 1893 football scores were re- corded by the number of touch- downs, goals, and safeties instead of the total number of points as scores are kept today. 4 I (¢eP4 odha/Ije CHRISTMAS CARDS L I f I i