SEC THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1949 Notre Dame T hree Juniors Feature Final'A' Grid Statistics Final statistics for this year's football season reveal that Chuck Ortmann, fleet-footed junior halfback, took down top honors in the passing division, and was a close second tofullback Don Dufek for net yards gained rushing this season. Dufek, also a junior, scored 30 points this year on five touchdown plays to lead the Wolverine scorers. Harry Allis, star varsity end, another junior, set the RUSHING Att. Don Dufek, fb 122 C. Ortmann, lh 165 Leo Koceski, rh 54 Dick Kempthorn, fb 42 Don Peterson, rh 29 Wally Teninga, lh 32 Van Summern, rh,, 27 Tom Peterson, fb 29 PASSING Att. Comp: Ortmann, lh 126 45 Teninga, lh 32 8 Putich, qb 8 5 PASS RECEIVIN pace for pass receivers. Net A 392. 329 247 157 152 131 113 72 .Yds.I 627 62 45 Yards 338 126 77 55 Conv. 0 15 0. Avg. 3.2 3.1 4.6 3.7 5.2 4.1 4.2. 2.5 ntc. 3 4 0 yTD 2 1 0 1 Pts. 30, 27 18 No. Harry Allis, e 23 Irv Wisniewski, e 11 John Ghindia, qb 8 Leo Koceski, rh 5 SCORING TD Don Dufek, fb 5 Harry Allis, e 2 Leo Koceski, rh 3 * * * I 29 pressed Dufek and Ortmann for rushing honors. Bill Putich, third highest passer, is presently a sophomore. Dufek, Allis and Koceski, the three top scorers, will all be back next year. Third PeriodA Splurg~eEnds Detroit Skein BULLETIN Montreal 5, New York 1 * * * DETROIT -(P) - The Chicago Black Hawks broke loose for five goals in the final period as they beat the Detroit Red Wings, 7-2, last night before 12,702 fans. The defeat was Detroit's first in 11 games. * * * TORONTO - Veteran Milt Schmidt's goal midway in the third period earned the Boston Bruins a 3-3 deadlock with the Toronto Maple Leafs last night in a National Hockey League game before 13,067 fans. Stays 'M' Sailors Earn Sixth InRegatta. Michigan's Sailing Club finish- ed sixth in Northwestern Univer- sity's annual fall intercollegiate dinghy regatta held this weekend in Chicago's Belmont Harbor. Georgetown was setting the pace with 214 points yesterday morning, but three foot waves and icy winds forced pcstponement of nine of the ten races scheduled for Saturday. * * * BAD LUCK seemed to plague wolverine skippers Jim Rukin and Bill Morgan. They were disquali- fied twice. Later Rukin and Christina Lawrence, who served as his crew, were capsized in frigid Lake Michigan. It was quite a come-down for the Michigan team which was barely edged out of first place in last year's competition by a strong Yale squad. Fourteen schools participated in the annual event. Northwestern and Ohio State were tied for sec- ond with 193 points. OTHER SCHOOLS competing, in order of their finish, were Deni- son, Dartmouth, Notre Dame, Illi- nois Tech, Michigan, Bowling Green, Purdue, Cincinnati, Michi- gan State, Wisconsin and Min- nesota. By PRES HOLMES (Special to The Daily) NOTRE DAME. Ind. -Mighty Notre Dame took no chances with Southern California yesterday and scored twice in the first quarter and added another tally in each session after that to drub the Tro- jans, 32-0. An Irish bobble early in the first period gave the Trojans the ball on the Notre Dame 25, but USC couldn't get any closer than the 12 , yard line and the Irish took over. That was as close as they got all day. * * * LEON HART, who played a ter- rific ball game all day long, both in the Green backfieldand at end, was responsible for stopping the Trojans' early threat. He rushed passer Dean Schneider and knock- ed the ball out of his hands and it was recovered by Notre Dame on their own 22. The Irish' couldn't quite get up steam enough to sustain a drive at this stage of the game and were forced to punt. A Southern California pass on fourth down failed and Notre Dame took over on the USC 40. On the third play of the series Bob Williams shot a pass to Hart on the' Trojan seven and he lugged the ball over with three minutes left in the quarter. Less than two minutes later the Irish scored again when John Pet- itbon intercepted a Trojan pass on the USC 43 and scampered down the far sideline. Steve Or- acko's conversion attempt was blocked this time and Notre Dame led, 13-0. * ~* * THE IRISH capitalized on a Southern California miscue for their next score late in the first half. Williams punted over Jay Roundy's head, and Roundy made a grab for the ball. He touched it but it rolled away and Bill Barrett recovered for Notre Dame on the Trojans' 25. Barrett smashed through \the line to the 12. Hart, playing in the Notre Dame backfield on this play, crashed through to the five. Then the fleet-footed full- back, Emil.Sitko, raced around end and dove over the goal line. Oracko's kick was wide this time, and the Irish led at halftime, 19-0' Notre Dame got its first sus- tained drive underway early in the third quarter. Starting from their own 40 the Irish moved the ball downfield in 13 plays to make the score 25-0. The conversion attempt was again blocked. SOUTHERN California muffed another scoring opportunity the next time they got the ball. Jim Powers, standing on his own 25, flipped a pass to end Bob Stillwell on the Irish 35 yard line. He was completely behind the Notre Dame defenders but cut back for a mo- ment to set himself after the catch. He was downed on the 22 yard line, and after another series of passes Notre Dame took over. Notre Dame's last touchdown climaxed a drive which begain on their own 46. Williams passed 32 yards to Barrett. Hart made it a first down on the Trojan 15, Ernie Zalejski powered to the six, and then in two tries Bar- rett carried it over the goal. Oracko's kick was good this time and Notre Dame stood on the long end of the 32-0 score. In the remaining nine minutes in the ball game Coach Frank Leahy emptied the Notre Dame bench, giving. the seniors on the club a chance to play, their last game in the Notre Dame stadium. Sn eaten, m*thers USC, * * * * * * Irish Cop Ninth Victory Before Crowd of 57,214 Leahy's Men Tally Twice in First Period; Entire Squad Plays in Final Home Contest 32-0 -AP wire GIMME MORE ROOM-Halfback Pat Duff (36) of USC runs for a short gain against Notre Dame in the first period before he is brought down by Jim Martin. Groom (50) and Bob Lally (60) of Notre Dame are closing in for the kill while Jess Swope (79) and Bill Martin (44) of USC attempt to clear the path for the runner. The Trojans failed to capitalize on the opportunities handed to them in the first quarter as the Irish defense proved too much of a hurdle. The Notre Dame offense operated at peak efficiency also as the Irish rolled to two touchdowns in the first quarter and added another one in each succeeding period. FOR WOLVERINE fans the most encouraging feature of the 1949 statistics is that not only the leaders, but also most of the top men in the rushing, passing, pass receiving and scoring fields will be wearing Maize and Blue uniforms again next year. Leo Koceski, junior, with a 4.6' average for 54 attempts, and Don Peterson, sophomore, with 5.2 for AP GRID ROUNDUP: LSU Stuns Tulane, 21-0, as Rice whips Baylor, 21-7 4)~ B By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS -- Louisiana State University's Tigers fought with fire in their veins to crack Tulane's running attack and win a frenzied football game over their arch rivals, 21-0, yesterday. LSU's victory possibly sent Tu-I lane's confident hopes of a Sugar Bowl bid spinning into space. THE VICTORY gave the Bayou Bengals wins over the champions of three conferences - Tulane of the Southeastern; Rice of the Southwest and the University of North Carolina of the Southern Conference. About 80,000 fans were kept screaming on their feet as LSU completely outplayed the favor- ed Tulane Green Wave., Coach Gaynell Tinsley's super- charged team was also vastly su- perior on defense. A dull-edged Tulane eleven couldn't find run- ning space. Rice in Bowl HOUSTON, Tex.-Rices Owls used a powerful ground attack and I a break yesterday to defeat Baylor 21 to 7 and take the Southwest Conference championship and be- come host to North Carolina in the Cotton Bowl. A standing room crowd of 31,000 saw the Owls stop the effective- ness of the strong Baylor passing attack, overcome a touchdown def- icit and move to their first undis- puted title since 1937. Immediately after the game,f Dan Rogers, head of the Cotton Bowl, announced in Fort Worth that North Carolina had accept- ed an invitation to meet the Southwest Champions January 2 in Dallas. Baylor had entered yesterday's' tilt a game behind the Owls and needed a victory to clinch a tie in final standings and the automatic bid as. the Cotton Bowl classic host. The victory gave Rice its first undefeated Conference campaign record in history. An early season 55-12 trouncing Holy Cross handed them back in 1942. * * * , IN ADDITION to his four touch- downs, Petela made good on 10 of 11 extra point trys for a total of 34 points. It was a sad finish for the most futile team in Holy Cross' 53-year old gridiron history. Never before have the Crusaders been beaten nine out of 10 times. And never before have they suffer- ed such humiliation. Boston College head coach Den- ny Myers performed something of a miracle to prevent his eager fourth and fifth stringers from piling the score even higher during the fourth period. Football Scores Tarheels Whip Virginia, 14-7; To Meet Rice in Cotton Bowl {4 AAC Ends Regular Schedule; Eagles Meet Steelers in NFL NEW YORK -(A)- The All- America Football Conference winds up its regular schedule today, while the Philadelphia Eagles can nail down their third straight Eastern Division crown in the Na- tional League by defeating the Pitssburgh Steelers. Only two games are scheduled in the AAC, the contest between the New York Yankees and 49er's at San Francisco, and one between the Buffalo Bills and Colts at Bal- timore. "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Our 9 Tonsorial Artists welcome your tonsorial queries. The Dascola Barbers Liberty near State THE YANKEE-49er tilt is most second place and willmeet in the first playoff round Dec. 4 at the home city of the club winning to- day's game. All Buffalo has to do is show up against Baltimore. Win or lose, the fourth place Bills meet the first place Cleveland Browns, at Cleveland, Dec. 4. The cham- pionship game will be played Dec. 11 at the city ranking high- est in the standings. Philadelphia, the 1948 NFL champ, has won eight of nine games, and a victory over the Steelers - second in the Eastern Division - will clinch a playoff berth for the Eagles against the Western Division winner. Earlier this fall, the Eagles trimmed Pitts- burgh, 38-7. 14 to 7 loss to Louisiana State is EAST the only blemish on the Owls' reg- Army 38, Navy 0 ular season record. North Carolina Boston College 76, Holy Cross 0 has lost to Louisiana State, Ten- Fordham 34, New York Univ. 6 nessee and Notre Dame. MIDWEST *j* T*Oklahoma 41, Oklahoma A&M 0 South. Illinois 41, Indiana State 14 Pete la Romnps . . . Notre Dame 32, Southern Cal 0 SOUTH BOSTON-Shifty Ed Petela, a Alabama 35, Florida 13 late season discovery, and reliable North Carolina 14, Virginia 7 Al Cannava, romped for four Georgia Tech 7, Georgia 6 touchdowns apiece yesterday as Wm. and Mary 33, N. Car. State 7 Boston College slaughtered Holy Tennessee 26, Vanderbilt 20 Cross, 76-0. Auburn 20, Clemson 20 (tie) A frost-bitten crowd of 38,751 Louisiana State 21, Tulane 0 in Braves Field saw the B. C. Mississippi 26, Mississippi State 0 Eagles more than make up for the South. University 39, Prairieview 0 DANCE[ PROGRAMS ROAC PRINTING Tickets, Posters 24H Christmas Cards C , , 24 Hr. es~ CHAPEL HILL, N.C.- (P)-All- America halfback Charlie Justice teamed with end Art Weiner yes- terday to lead North Carolina to a 14-7 football victory over Vir- ginia, and a Cotton Bowl trip. Word that the Tar Heels would accept an invitation to fill a Jan. 2 date in the Dallas bowl came from Jake Wade, North Carolina's sports publicist at the end of the game. * * * NORTH CAROLINA'S opponent was to emerge from a Rice-Bay- lor clash-for the Southwest Con- ference championship-which was in progress when the game here wound up. A record crowd of 48,000 in Kenan Stadium - 3,500 more than the field's rated capacity- saw Coach Carl Snavely's club drive its way to its third post- season bowl bid in four seasons. The Cotton Bowl invitation was the first for a Tar Heel team. On New Year's Day in 1947, North Carolina dropped a 20-10 decision to Georgia in the Sugar Bowl. Last New Year's Day, North Caro- lina went back to the New Or- leans bowl and bowed to Okla- homa by 14-6. THE RESULT left North Caro- lina with a record of seven wins and three losses for the season. The Tar Heels stopped North Carolina State, Georgia, South Carolina, Wake Forest, William and Mary, Duke, and Virginia. They lost to Notre Dame, Tennes- see, and Louisiana State. It was a near thing for the Tar Heels yesterday. Virginia, trailing by 14-0 at halftime, came back to dominate the sec- ond half and had the Tar Heels practically on the ropes at the finish. After quarterback Whitey Mi- chaels sneaked over from the one- foot line with a minute to play and end Carlton Elliott converted to cut the deficit to 14-7, the Cavaliers recovered the ball on an onside .kickoff and smashed to North Carolina's seven before the Tar Heels could find the stopper. Justice and Weiner, playing their last game before the home fans, pulled out all the stops on their specialties in running up the North Carolina touchdowns. Louis Signs For Exhibition DETROIT-(IP)-Former heavy- weight champion Joe Louis signed yesterday for a 10-round exhibi- tion bout with Bernie Reynolds of Fairfield, Conn., here Dec. 14. It will be Louis' second post- war appearance in his home town. The previous one was a six-round exhibition against Vern Mitchell of Detroit last November. The Reynolds-Louis bout will be a no decision affair. DO YOU KNOW . . . . that No- tre Dame will engage in its 61st year of football during 1949? l Beanm " s " and. .. Make $1. 0 for EVERY TEN ENSIANS You Sell! -q*#A % 1 -- I a s® I HILL AUDITORIUM MONDAY, NOV.28 8:30 P.M. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION presents Unte RALPHJ. BUNCHE United Nations Mediator in Palestine Chief of the Trusteeship Division of the United Nations , .:. . : .:: 5': ..: ::,, : ':: I