PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 20. 1949' ,, ::: ! aTHE MTrHT CAN V11\LL3TT F.TTv I csa s NfVV a;&,V PAUW A 1Q&QW Trojans Defeat UCLA Penn State Loses, 19-0 onference DeadlockedRose Bowl Set ____ _ LOS ANGELES-(P)--Southern California's Trojans, riding on the gifted southpaw pitching of a fourth string quarterback named Dean Schneider, defeated the Bruins of UCLA yesterday, 21 to 7,-in their annual crosstown duel. The Trojans broke a 7-7 deadlock in the last four min- utes of the game and added another touchdown in the final seconds, cashing in on a gift opportunity. Troy went ahead in the second quarter as Schneider sent the team 77 yards in 11 plays. Schneider completed six out of ten passes. Office and Portable Models TYPEWRITERS of all makes Sold, Bought, Repaired, Rented CHRISTMAS CARDS MORRILL'S 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted PITTSBURGH- (A')-Lou (Bim- be) Cecconi, Pitt halfback, wound up his college football career in a blaze of glory yesterday as he led the Panthers to a 19-0 conquest of traditional rival Penn State. Cecconi scored twice and pitch- ed a pass for the third touchdown. A chilled crowd of 44,571 hud- dled under blankets as intermit- tent snow squalls and freezing rains alternately pelted them. I uck-TxiedI First Downs .........14 Net Yards Rushing ..147 Forward Passes Att. .. 21 Forward Passes Com. . 5 Yards Passing ....... 84 Forwards Int. By .... 1 Yards Run Back Int. 0 Punting Aver.........38.1 Total all kicks ret. .. .51 Fumbles............. 2 Oppon.Fumbles Rec2 Yards Lost Penalties . 15 10 187 32 9 101 2 26 46.1 47 3 1 26 GopbersDump__adgers MINNEAPOLIS-(AP)-Minnesota put on a second-half surge to defeat Wisconsin, 14-6, in the final game of the year for both teams. The Gophers had to come from behind to turn the trick. Wis- consin exhibited a fighting spirit that enabled them to outplay .the Gophers and enjoy a 6-0 lead at the end of the first half. FULLBACK GENE EVANS was Wisconsin's offensive star. He contributed several important gains to the Badger attack in the first half besides making a spectacular 62-yard gallop down the side- lines on a punt return for Wisconsin's lone score. Minnesota full- back Dave Skrein blocked Lisle Blackbourn's kick. Midway in the third period the Gophers caught up with the tiring Badgers. They worked the ball into Wisconsin terri- tory and then halfback Walt Hausken raced into the end zone to score on George Hudak's 25-yard pass. That tied the score and Gordy Soltau's kick put the Gophers ahead. The fourth period opened with MinnesotaonWisconsin's 35- yard line. Power plays moved the ball down to the seven, from where halfback Dick Gregory went over, standing up. Soltau again con- verted. urdue Trips Hosrs BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-(IP)-A couple of short runs by full- back John Kerestes at the end of 95-yard marches brought Purdue University a 14-6 victory over Indiana yesterday and kept the Old Oaken Bucket in Lafayette. Indiana finished the season without a Western Conference vic- tory but end Clifton Anderson set two league records. Anderson caught a pair of passes from Nick Sebek that un- officially gave him 21 and 322 yards for six conference games. Old records were -18 catches by Purdue's Bill Canfield in 1945 and 313 yards by Michigan's Dick Rifenburg in 1948. WIlNdeatsUp -sert llini, 9-7 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-(/)-The first field goal ever attempted by senior quarterback Don Burson etched a thrilling 9-7 Northwestern victory over favored Illinois before 67,872 Illini homecoming fans yesterday. Burson's 22-yard payoff boot, folowing a 57-yard punt return by halfback Tom Worthington, came with only three minutes left in the season finale for both Big Ten teams. BURSON WAS a shining Northwestern hero in his last collegiate game, also firing a second period touchdown pass to end Joe Zurav- leff to give the Wildcats a 6-0 halftime lead. ("SU 1Mees- (Continued from Page 1) and it was his pass to Leo Ko- ceski midway in the first period which gave Michigan its only score. All-American candidate Dick Kempthorn was a dynamo on de- fense forMichigan. If one effort could be considered better than any other yesterday it was his tackle of Ohio State's Jerry Krall in the opening minutes of the sec- ond half. 01H10 STATE had come on the field looking like a new team. The Buckeyes ripped through the Mich- igan defense almost at will for the FINAL STANDINGS - California PALO ALTO, Calif. -- () -- California's Bears thundered into 1949 football history and clinched the right to represent the coast conference in the Rose Bowl Janu- ary 2 with a 33-14 victory yester- day over the game but outclassed Stanford Indians. The 52nd annual gridiron battle between the west's oldest college rivals was witnessed by an overflow crowd of more than 90,000. The victory was thoroughly convincing. California hd the power straight down -the middle, with its clever quarterback, Bob Celeri, at the helm. The California line shattered the Stanford forward wall and made gaping holes for the back- field men to tear through. For the first time this season, however, California was behind at halftime. After scoring on a 55-yard touchdown pass to take a 6-0 lead in the opening period, the Bears suddenly found them- selves behind by a point early in the second quarter. Stanford scored after recover- ing a free ball on the California 16-yard line. Quarterback Gary Kerkorian added the extra point, which California's Jim Cullom had been unable to do in the pre- I DO YOU KNOW . . . that 'Illi- noi , broke the All-Conference scoring record in Basketball dur- ing the 1948-49 season. W MICHIGAN......4 Ohio State.......4 Minnesota .......4 Wisconsin .......3 Illinois ..........3 Iowa ............3 Northwestern ... .3 Purdue..........2 Indiana..........0 L 1 1 2 2 3- 3 4 4 6 T 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 PCT. .750, .750 .667 .600 .500 .500 .429 .333 I " ' i .: ROACH PRINTING, DANCE PROGRAMS Tickets, Posters Christmas Cards 24 Hr. Service j .