THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1949 " __ __ _____ __.._ __ __ _.. ___ _ III_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Navy . . . . . 28 Ohio State . . 4 Princeton . . . 7 Indiania . . olv~ens [6 Iowa . . . . . 21 Pittsburgh. 7 Purdue . . . . 7 Northwestern a-N Down . . 16 Notre Dame . . 7 Washington ! 27 Minnesota . 7 Nebraska . . . 26 Illinois . . . . 13 Army 13 Penn Stl . . .o 42 ate . . .7 . Wisconsi. . in With BigTir I Full Team Sees Action ,,, As 88,000 Fans Watch Period Kreuger Sparks Illinois; Gophers Chew Nebraska OSU Crushes Hoosiers; Pitt Trips NU; Army W 11 T-- * - CHAMPAIGN, ILL.-('P)-Ber- nie Krueger's sharp passes-one of them good for 42 yards-set up a fourth quarter Illinois touch- down yesterday which rallied the outplayed Illini into a 13-13 Big 10 football tie with scrappy Wiscon- sin. After Wisconsin had hoisted a 13-7 halftime margin, Krueger's fancy aerial work shot life into Illinois about midway in the third period. The Hammond, Ind., senio1 set 38,332 home fans yelling with a 54-yard toss to sopho- more Ronnie Clark of East Chi- cago, Ind.; from the Badger 20, Illinois moved to a first down on the 8, then failed to score. Krueger kept up his overhead shots in the finale, only to have alert Jim Embach swipe two of them deep in Wisconsin territory. Finally the 172-pound quart- erback connected with Sam Piazza for 42 yards to the Wis- consin 15 and three plays later hit end Slip Kersulis for eight yards to the 5. Illinois gained only one yard in three line smashes, then Piazza broke over center for a touchdown. Lou Levanti's important place- ment, with only three minutes and 45 seconds of the game to go, sailed wide. It was the Illini's second tie in whipped Nebraska 28 to 6 yester- day. The crowd of some 37,000 fans saw Nebraska shackle the vaunted Minnesota ground attack in the first half. Even the Minnesota fans praised the work of the Ne- braska forwards. But Nebraska fell victim to the Minnesota air attack engineered by Billy Bye and, trailed at the half, 14 to 0. At the -start of the third quarter, it was Nebraska's Fran Nagle who took over the aerial spotlight, passing Nebraska to a quick score, Ralph Damkroger receiving. But Minnesota's line ace, Leo Nomellini, blocked the try for point and Nebraska still needed more than a touchdown to get even. Before the quarter ended, Ne- braska had been hit for two Min- nesota scores and the game was in the Gopher bag. MINNESOTA ... .0 14 14 0-28 NEBRASKA .....0 0 6 0- 6 Minnesota scoring: Touchdowns -Soltau, Warner, Skrien 2. Points after touchdown-Soltau 4. Nebraska scoring: Touchdown -Damkroger. V (Continued from Page 1) 1 COLUMBUS, O. - (P) - Ohio State staged a crushing land and air attack against Indiana's un- der-manned and youthful Hoos- iers yesterday for an easy 46-7 victory before 70,568 fans in the Western Conference inaugural for each team. Coach Wesley Fesler used an even half-hundred players in the one-sided fray. He turned the con- test over to his third and fourth stringers after the Hoosiers ran out of gas following a stubborn and spirited first half which found the Bucks leading only 12-7. THREE BUCKEYE sophomores were among the Ohio sextet cross- ing the goal line. The newcomers put on a flashy exhibition in the late going when the Hoosiers-still feeling the effects of last week's 49-6 loss to Notre Dame-couldn't move fast enough to halt them. Indiana got only four first downs to Ohio's 25, three of the Hoovier advances coming in the first quarter. Ohio gained 282 yards on the ground to Indiana's 26, and through the air Ohio had a 226 to 70-yard advantage. AP Sports Roundup as many games this State held them to a still a week ago.. WISCONSIN ... 7 ILLINOIS .......7 Wisconsin scoring: Emback, Strahlow. season. Iowa 20-20 stand- 6 0 0-13 0 0 6-13 Touchdowns, Point after touchdown-Blackbourn. Illinois scoring: Touchdowns, Karras, Piazza. Point after touch- down-Levanti. LINCOLN, NEB.-(1P)-Striking through the air in the first half and by ground in the second, Min- nesota's big football team BARBERING IS AN ART Try our 9 tonsorial artists for a well-groom.ed appearance. Today!! The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State By The Associated Press NEW ORLEANS - Tulane's Greenies bulled their way to an 18-0 victory over a game but out- manned Georgia Tech team yes- terday. An estimated 50,000 spec- tators saw the Southeastern Con- ference game. A 42-yard pass play from quart- erback Joe Ernst to left half George Kinek put the Green Wave ahead in the first quarter. The drive was the most impres- sive the Greenies could manage. Tulane's big line was outcharged on numerous occasions for three quarters by the lighter Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets, but the Jackets gave way to. superior manpower in the fourth, when the Greenies scored twice. ITHACA, N. Y.-Cornell Uni- versity's Big Red eleven powered its way to a 39-27 win over a stub- born Colgate Red Raider team yesterday. Cornell marched 56 yards for the first touchdown after taking the opening kickoff, with Frank (Moose) Miller of Atlanta, Ga., crashing over from three yards out. Miller scored again in the fourth period on a 17-yard run around left end. Walt Bruska of Mohawk nabbed Lynn (Pete) Dorset's pass and raced for 17 yards, and fullback Jeff Fleisch- mann of Plainfield, N. J., bulled over from the one for two more scores in the second period. KALAMAZOO, Mich. - Ohio University's Bobcats became the team to beat in the Mid-American Conference yesterday after a 16-6 victory over Westm Michigan College here. It was the second straight win for Ohio, which nosed out Mis- souri's Tigers 35-34 a week ago. * * * FUMBLES hurt the Indiana cause, the visitors muffing the ball four times in the first quarter. A miscue by Indiana's quarterback, Nick Sebek, with sophomore Vic Janowicz falling on thetball on the Hoosier "17, set up the first Ohio touchdown. Jerry Krall passed 15 yards to quarterback Pandel Savic, and then Krall plunged two yards for the first of his two touchdowns. Ohio needed only six plays to cover 47 yards for its second marker. A Savic to Dick Schnittker pass for 12 yards was the pay-off punch. Indiana scored late in the sec- ond quarter. Fullback Arnold Bow- man snatched one of "Skip" Doyle's Ohio passes on the Buck- eye 43 and reached the 19. Nick Sebek lost 10 on an attempted pass, then raced to Ohio's six when he was "caught" a second time. The play was nullified, however, by a holding penalty. OHIO TOOK OVER but Mor- rison's fumble on the six was grabbed by Indiana's Milan Sell- ers. In three plays, quarterback Albert Tutsie rolled over, and Er- nest Huggett kicked the point. After that it was all Ohio. * * * Wildcats Tamed-... EVANSTON - ()-Pittsburgh's snarling Panthers turned in their customary role as punching bag for Big Ten football powers and upset Northwestern's three-touch- down favorite Wildcats, 16-7, at Dyche Stadium today. It was a calamitous first grid- iron introduction for Northwestern which had been boomed as a bris- tling Big Ten title favorite. The Rose Bowl Champions gained a net of only 66 yards by rushing and were smothered for 76-yards in losses by the slashing Pitt de- fenders. FROM THE TIME the Panthers marched 64 yards in five plays for a first period touchdown until they struck for their second touch- down at the outset of the fourth' period, Pitt was a grinding ag- gressive machine. A crowd of 41,000 saw Jimmy Joe Robinson, 185-pound thun- derbolt, score both Pitt touch- downs. The first came on a 14- yard pass from another brilliant performer, halfback Lou Cecconi. The second on a 12-yard sprint, after a great feint around Northwestern's right end. In between was a second-quarter field goal from Northwestern's 23 by tackle Nick Bolovac, who also connected on one of his two con- version tries. When Northwestern scored, there was only a minute left in the game. The touchdown came on an 11-yard sprint around Pitt's left end by halfback Johnny Mil- ler.. Guard Ed Nemeth point. Cadets Scare ...' WEST POINT, N.Y. - (R) - Army's football might and the weight of numbers routed Penn State 42 to 7 today after the Huskiesfrom the NittanyMoun- tains had played the Cadets to a standstill through the first half. The two halves were like two different games. Penn State won the first, 7 to 0, in a bruising ground battle. Then Army loosened up Penn State with Arnold Ga- liffa's sharpshooting passes and romped through a weakened de- f ense. * * * AND DESPITE THE score, Army had a battle on its hands. It wasn't until the middle of the last quarter that Coach Earl Blaik re- lieved his first string offensive lineup with any appreciable num- ber of substitutes. By that time the Penn State starters, who played on both offense and defense through the greater part of the game, had given way to subs, too. The crowd of 27,000 jamming Michie Stadium to, capacity, got a surprise when State scored first in the middle of the sec- ond quarter. The teams had been slugging it out in mid- field when a penalty to Army for roughing a kicker kept alive a drive that had begun on Penn State's 36. The Lions went on from there to score on a six yard pass from Bill Luther to Owen Dougherty. That was the only time Penn State passed successively. The lack of an air attack was their greatest offensive weakness. Four of seven other aerials were inter- cepted. Slick Fingers Enable Iowa To Nip Purdue LAFAYETTE, Ind.-(RP)-Iowa's Hawkeyes grabbed seven Purdue fumbles today and won their Western Conference Football open- er, 21 to 7. Purdue had the statistical edge in everything but passing and loose ball snatching. It drove in- side the Iowa 12-yard line three times without scoring. * * * , QUARTERBACK Glenn Drahn's passing arm produced two of the Hawks' touchdowns - both fol- lowing Purdue fumbles-and rug- ged fullback Don Riley set up the other for Fred Ruck with a 25-yard run. Drahn's first scoring pitch was for 28 yards to left end Bob Mc- Kenzie and the second was for 24 yards to right end Jack Dittmer. Both were into the end zone with- out a hand laid on the receivers. booted the Stanford received the kickoff on their 21. Three plays neted seven yards and the Indians' Em- ery Mitchell, who turned in a 40- yd. punting average despite one very short out-of-bounds kick, got . . * Line-Ups MICHIGAN Allis ...... Clark Hollaway Kelsey Wistert .... Johnson Hess Heneveld .. Jackson Cerecke Erben ..... Momsen Farrer Kreager McCleland. Heneveld Fitch Wahl ..... Atchison Ohlenroth McWilliams Wisniewski Grenkowski Po s. STANFORD LEO KOCESKI ... gets daily dozen ...LE.......McColl Rye .LT.....G. White Alker ...LG........Cook Co"e D. Lucas .Center.. Castagnoli Abraham Rice Barnes ...RG.........Fix Pomeroy ...RT.......... Rau Poulson ...RE...... .. Rose Van Alstyne Enberg off a long boot which Teninga returned to the Michigan 35. ON THE FIRST play from scrimmage, Koceski hit off tackle, picked up some beautiful block- ing and went to the Stanford 45 before he was hauled down. Kempthorn picked up eight yards and Koceski went for sev- en more to the 30 but Van Sum- mern then fumbled and Stan- ford recovered on their own 25 as the quarter ended. The Wolverines threatened in the second quarter but they were stopped by downs and the clock. STANFORD quarterback Gary Kerkorian's pass was intercepted by Ortmann on the third play of the quarter and returned to the' Indian 31, but the Wolverine threat fizzled when a fourth down Ortmann to Winiewski pass was incomplete from the twelve yard line. After an exchange of punts Stanford began to roll for the first time in the game. Starting on their own 29, the Indians, spear - headed by Kerkorian's passing, drove to a first down on the Wolverine 17, but Mitchell fumbled and Dick Kempthorn took the ball out of the hands of a red-shirted defender to end the drive. Once again Michigan began to move as time became precious. A long pass from Tom Peterson to Wisniewski was good for 29 yards and runs by Van Summern, Peter- son, and Teninga brought the ball to the Stanford 11. * * * A TENINGA PASS was incom- plete and with six seconds left to play, Bill (one play) Putich made his entrance to throw a fourth down pass. For a moment it looked as though history was going to re- peat itself as Putich, who had participated in only one play-- (a touchdown pass to Irv Wis- niewski - against Michigan State) tossed another one to Wisniewski who appeared to fall across the goal line as the gun went off. However officials ruled that 'Wiz' had touched the ground a foot short of the goal and the halftime score was still Michigan 7, Stanford 0. *' * * THE MAIZE AND BLUE attack went into high gear in the third quarter. Stanford received the kickoff on their 14 yard line and found themselves on the 15 three plays later. Mitchell's kick was taken by Ortmann on the 50 and returned to the Stanford 37. Seven plays later Dufek som- ersaulted over the goal line from three yards out, Allis converted the extra point and the Wolver- ines led 14-0 after five minutes of play in the half. The next time the Wolverines got their hands on the ball, they scored again. Kempthorn tore the Stanford line to pieces and Harry Allis and Ortmann collaborated on a beautiful jump pass play to spark a 52-yard drive which ended with Kempthorn going over stand- ing up from the 2-yard line. * *k *M ALLIS ONCE AGAIN converted and the Wolverines led 21-0. Mich. Stan. First Downs........... 23 13 Yards Gained Rushing 264 95 (net) Forward Passes Attempted...........25 30 Ugh!! 1 Sitko Paces Notre Dame To 27-7 Win SEATTLE - (IP-The grinding power of a Notre Dame footbalT machine driven by the piston legs of squat Emil Sitko wore dow-OL the University of Washington t(- day and earned the Irish a 27 to 17 victory. Stunning a crowd of 41,500, a Washington team that was uni-n- pressed by the reputation of 'the green-clad Notre Dame giants pitched a touchdown pass in the first quarter and held the score to a 7-7 deadlock at halftime, BUT THE VICIOUS drive of the Irish forward wall took its toll of Washington players in the second half. The invaders from South Bend, Ind., playing for the first time in the northwest, capitalized on two fumbles and a blocked kick to score twice in the third quarter and once in the fourth to wrap up the game. Time and again the Notre Dame attack was bogged by 15-yard penalties for holding, clipping and unnecessary roughness. Two of them came on successive plays in the final quarter. The 135 yards they lost from penalties did more to check the Irish than the cour- ageous stand of the hometown Huskies. k 4 ForardPase Completed ...........6 Yds. by Forward Passes 98 Forward Passes Intercepted by.....3 Yards Gained: Runback of In. Passes.. 35 Punting Average.......31 (from scrimmage) Total Yards All Kicks Returned ............49, Opponents' Fumbles Recovered..y........3 Yards Lost by Penalties 5 9 110 2 8 40 ,. 57 2 42 h. /2-u' Ghindia ...... QB........ Shaw Putich Kerkorian Bartlett Koceski ...... R H .... . Van Summern Lentz D. Peterson Ortmann ..... L H.... . 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