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THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SUNDAY, OCTOBER" 22, 195 0"
Army . . . . 49 Illinois . . . . 20 Ohio State . . 48 Indiana . . . 20 Iowa . . . . 33 Northwestern . 28 UCLA . . . 21
Harvard . . . 0 Washington. . 13 Minnesota . . 0 Notre Dame. . 7 Purdue . . . . 21 Pittsburgh . . .23 Stanford . . .7
L Tennessee . . 14
Alabama . . . 9
Ohio
State
Rocks
Go phers,
48-0;
Irish
Lose,
20-7
G
Balanced Attack Allows
Bucks To Score Freely
By The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS - Ohio State's
Buckeyes used everything in their
book to overwhelm Minnesota's
hapless and badly outclassed
Gophers, 48 to 0, in a Western
Conference football game yester-
day.
The defeat, the fourth in a row'
for Minnesota, was one of the
worst drubbings ever absorbed by
a Gopher squad. It was the third
victory in four starts for Ohio
State, which has lost only .to
Southern Methodist thus far this
year.
PASSES AND pass interception
were used by Ohio State to set up
and score their first four touch-
downs. Then, just to prove they
had the power on the ground as
well, they sent ball carriers over
for the last three scores in the
fourth period. Another touchdown
was called back because of a clip-
ping penalty.
Striking swiftly the first time
they took the ball, last year's
Rose Bowl victors and Confer-
ence Co-Champions, scored just
three minutes and 19 seconds
Maple Leafs,
Montreal, Win
Toronto and Montreal both
scored impressive shut outs in
beating their National Hockey
League opponents, last night.
The Maple Leafs scored in every
period to beat the New York
Rangers, 5-0, on Toronto ice. The
win enabled the Maple Leafs to
move into second place in the
standings.
Montreal blanked Detroit, 2-0,
on two first period goals, and re-
tained their hold on first place. It
was the second consecutive shut-
out for Montreal goalie, Gerry Mc-
Neil..
after the game started. From
then on it was just a question of
how high they wanted to run
the score.
The Buckeyes put two touch-
downs across in the second peri-
od, another in the third and three
more, two of them within six min-
utes of each other, in the fourth
period.
OHIO STATE'S quarterbacks
kept the Gophers off balance all
during, the game, using involved
and smooth-working laterals as
well as aerials to confuse and keep
the Minnesotans from getting an
attack under way.
It wasn't until the third period
that Minnesota even attempted a
passing attack. But they dropped
that quickly when quarterback
Dick Widdoes, end Ralph Arm-
strong and halfback Ray Hamil-
ton snared the ball for Ohio
State.
-Daily-Burt Sapowitch
ON THE GROUND AND IN THE AIR, ORTMANN GAINS YARDAGE
BIG TEN. ROUNDUP:
IowaSpoils Purdue's Ambitions, 33-21
By The Associated Press
IOWA CITY-(A')-Iowa shock-
ed favored Purdue 33-21 yesterday
in a Big Ten football thriller that
had a homecoming crowd of 51,521
in a tizzy from start to finish.
It was a sizzling duel for which
Iowa came out swinging with aven-
gence. All week the Hawks had
been reminded of a remark by
Purdue coach Stu Holcomb that
"I promise you we'll beat Iowa if
it is the last thing we do."
* * *
THAT WAS a version of a state-
ment made by Holcomb in a flush
of Purdue's victory over Notre
Dame. He made it at a pep session
while discussing Purdue's opening
Conference game.
But ,owa was ready to con-
radict the Purdue head man
and his boys. The Hawks shot
into a 7-0 lead on Glenn Drahn's
33-yard fourth down pass to Don
Commack with only four min-
utes gone.
Purdue roared back on the ex-
pert arm of sophomore Dale Sam-
uels who completed six straight
passes in the remainder of the
period. One, a nine-yarder to
Darrell Brewster, was good for the
first Boilermaker score. Then a
six-yard toss to Leo Sugar accom-
plished another touchdown. Sam-
uels' second conversion made it
14-7 Purdue.
THAT TURNED OUT to be Pur-
due's only time in the lead. Iowa
picked up two touchdowns in the
second period on a 23-yard pass
play, Drahn to sophomore Bernie
Bennett, and a 10-yard dash by
Commack to climax an 80-yard
Iowa drive. Bennett made his score
on the first play after entering the
game. He tucked the ball :n on
the three, pivoted and was over.
Iowa's attack, poorly coordinated
in losses to Indiana and Wiscon-
sin, was so versatile today that
tackle Hubert Johnson made a
touchdown, made eligible by a
shift, the 240-pounder grabbed a1
short pass on the four and rum-
bled over. That performance had
Iowa out in front 27-14 at the
third quarter mark.
Illinois Wins
CHAMPAIGN - (P) - Hard-
running Illinois gave hurrying
Hugh McElhenny a lesson in rush-
ing, coming from behind in the
final' half to club Washington's
Huskies from the unbeaten ranks,
20-13, before 36,743 at Memorial
Stadium yesterday.
Dick Raklovits, who scored two
Illinois touchdowns, and Johnny
Karras, who tallied the other, key-
ed a pulverizing ground attack
that crumbled the Hsukies, win-
ners of four straight.
* * *
MCELHENNY, r a n k e d high
among the nation's ball carriers,
did his yeoman's best, including
spearing of a third period touch-
down pass from Don Henrich to
give Washington a 13-6 lead.
But Hugh's best,1along with
Heinrich's two-touchdown pass-
ing, wasn't enough before the re-
lentless Mlini attack, which had
to overcome deficits of 7-0, 7-6
and-13-6 and break a 13-13 tie
in thefinal period.
Spartans 'Rol
EAST LANSING - Michigan
State's Spartans honed up a two-
edge offense yesterday for Notre
Dame, scoring a sparkling 34-6
victory over a rugged Marquette
Hilltopper eleven.
The Spartans, who promise more
woe for the Irish next week, lashed
out by ground and by air They
scored in all but the last period,
when Coach Biggie Munn poured
in some solid reserves. A crowd of
29,029 attended.
THE STANDOUTS in the Michj-
gan State attack were the re-
liable Everett Grandelius,. who
reeled off several long runs, in-
cluding a 35-yard touchdown
sprint, end Dorne Dibble and soph-
omore fullback Dick Panrin.
Dibble had two touchdowns,
both on passes, and Panin, a re-
serve, twice dodged over from
about 15 yards out.cBob Carey
booted four of five conversions.
- The Hilltoppers' only score was
set up by a pass interference pen-
alty by Jesse Thomas on the Mich-
igan State 5-yard line. S'tan Woj-
cik dived over from the one for
the tally.
* * *
TWO MARQUETTE pass inter-
ceptions, however, spoiled other
Michigan State touchdown drives.
One was by Bill Bittman on the
Marquette 6, and the other by Art
Lastokfa behind the goal line.
* * *
'Cats .Beat Pitt
EVANSTON - (P) - Undefeat-
ed Northwestern yesterday grabbed
its fourth straight football vic-
-tory 28-23, over Pittsburgh, which
exploded for all its points in the
last quarter.
The Panthers, who upset the
Big Ten Wildcats last year, were
so helpless and beset by penalties
through the first three periods that
the band began playing "Oh, dear,
what can the matter be?" The
crowd of 35,000 in Dyche Stadium
laughed.
* * *
THEY SAT astonished by Pitt
in the 23 point fourth period.
Before the finale began, Pitt
had been a team in reverse. It
was set back 124 yards on in-
fractions while gaining only 101
rushing.
Northwestern lost 104 yards on
penalties. The whistle blowers had
a picnic.
ALL OF Northwestern's touch-
downs came through the air. Dick
Flowers passed for three,' two of
them going to end Don Stonesifer.
Cadets Crush
Harvard Bid
In 49-0_Win
Navy Wins, 21-14
Over Trojans
CAMBRIDGE-(AP)-Mighty Ar-
my, the Nation's' No. 1 college
eleven, overwhelmed Harvard, 49-
0, to add another blotted page
to the ' Crimson's 77-year-old
football history yesterday before
a 26,000 crowd at the Stadium.
It was the third straight set-
back for the Crimson of the sea-
son and the first time that it ever
had been shut out by such a one-
sided margin.
LAST YEAR Army ran up a
high score against Harvard with
a 54-15 decision.
The Cadets, here for the first
time without their thunderous
cheering corps, lost little time
clinching their 13th straight tri-
umph and their 24th without a
reversal.
Less than 10 minutes after the
opening kickoff, Army had scor-
ed thrice on, a 36-yard romp, by
veteran fullback Gil Stephenson,
a six-yard payoff pass from Bob
Blaik to winer Dan Foldberg and
a three-yard slam by Jack Mar-
tin.
* * *
BALTIMORE-(R)-A crew of
hard-hitting Navy backs ran rings
around a hulking Southern Cali-
fornia football team yesterday to
score the Middies' first triumph
of the season 27-14.
Navy pulled away to a 20-0
third period lead before an esti-
mated 24,300 sun-warmed fans in
Memorial Stadium. The West
Coast invaders came to life with
two last quarter touchdowns, but
the Middies rebounded for another
of their own to clinch their ini-
tial triumph in four games under
coach Eddie Eraelatz.
Quarterback Bob Zastrow, show-
ing the form that earned him
third team All-America last year,
skippered the Middies in the third
defeat in four games for Southern
Cal.
The 200-pounder ran over for
two himself after getting Navy in-
to position with comparatively
sparse, but effective, use of his
passes, with a strong running at-
tack.
Rote Sparks S.M.U.
To One-Sided Win
HOUSTON, Tex. - ( ) - Unde-
feated, untied Southern Methodist,
powered by 'hard-charging Kyle
Rote and protected by an iron-clad
pass defense, knocked Rice from
the unbeaten, 42-21, last night be-
fore a crowd of 70,000.
SMU struck for touchdowns the
first two times it had the ball,
then beat qff a Rice comeback
and rolled along easily as two pass-
interceptions got a pair of quick
scores.
The victory was the fifth straight
for the Methodists, the Nation's
third-ranking team this week.
For Rice, starting defense of its
1949 Southwest Conference Cham-
pionship, it was the first defeat in
13 games, its first conference loss
since October, 1948.
U Smashes
Once-Proud
Notre Dame
BLOOMINGTON - () - A
stoked-up Indiana University team
burned big holes through Notre
Dame's line yesterday for a 20 to 7
victory that guaranteed the Ir;iers
their worst season since 1945.
Bobby Robertson, stocky Indiana
halfback, scored two of the touch-
downs with the help of some of
the crispest blocks ever thrown
by an I.U. football teafli.
* * *
NOTRE DAME, looking sluggish
in comparison with Indiana's
prancing Hoosiers, was three
touchdowns behind before it show-
ed any of the resilience generally
expected of scored-on Irish teams.
It was the first time Indiana
had beaten Notre Dame since
1906 and the sellout crowd frol-
icked on the gridiron long after
the final gun. It was the first
time Notre Dame had lost two
games in one season since 1945.
Its previous loss this year was
to Purdue, another Hoosier state
rival, 28 to 14.
A BIT OF 3RONY was rioted in
Notre Dame's inability to stop the
high knee drives of Robertson,
whose home is only a few miles
from the Notre Dame campus. He
ripped off 185 yards in 18 carries
and scored Indiana's third touch-
down with an 83-yard run down
the sidelines.
He turned a complete somer-
sault scoring the second from
the four-yard mark.
A 60 yard punt return by Eugene
Gedman set up Indiana's first
touchdown in the first six min-
utes of the game. Indiana scored
in seven plays, from the Notre
Dame 19, with the left handed Lou
D'Achille passing seven yards to
end Don Lust for the marker.
- * * *
NOTRE DAME perked up for its
lone touchdown after quarterback
Williams was hurt in the third
quarter. John Mazur replaced him
C ~
I
J
l
-Daily-Malcolm Shatz
DON DUFEK SHOWN ABOUT TO HALT WISCONSIN BACK
FOOTBALL ROUNDUP
BIG TEN
Michigan 26 Wisconsin 13
Iowa 33 Purdue 21
Illinois 20 Washington 13
Ohio State 48 Minnesota 0
Indiana 20 Notre Dame 7
Northwestern 28 Pittsburgh 23
* * *
EAST
Pennsylvania 34 Columbia 0
Cornell 7 Yale 0
Army 49 Harvard 0
Navy 27 Southern California 14
Maine 16 Connecticut 7
Lehigh 16 Dartmouth 14
Princeton 34 Brown 0
Colgate 23 Bucknell 12
Kentucky 34 Villanova 7
Rutgers 42 New York University
0
Fordham. 27 West Virginia 23
Rochester 25 Vermont 12
Western Maryland 29, Dickinson
13
Carnegie Tech 14 Allegheny 13,
Ithaca 7 Cortland State Teach-
ers 6
Tufts 19 Middlebury 0 t
Syracuse 34 Holy Cross 27
* * *
MIDWEST
Oberlin 52 Hamilton 0
Cincinnati 48 Western Reserve 6
Temple 26 Wayne 0
Nebraska 19 Penn State 0
Wichita 17 Drake 14
Missouri 20 Iowa State 20
Kansas 40 Oklahoma A & M 7
Detroit 13 Tulsa 13 (tie)
Bowling Green 34 Baldwin Wal-
lace 34 (tie)
Miami (O.) 42 Butler 7
Ohio Wesleyan 33 Denison 13
Michigan Central 33 Depauw 20
Kent State 35 Ohio University 13
Indiana State 27 Indiana Cen-
tral 7
Wilmington (O.) 52 Rose Poly 0
Michigan Normal 13 Ball State
(Indiana) 0
Mount Vernon 34, Akron Uni-
versity 19
Hanover 34 Manchester 13
Centre 9 Wabash 7
Toledo 32 Bradley 20
Canterbury 38 .Anderson 25
SOUTH
Washington Lee 47 Davidson 12
Tennessee 14 Alabama 9
Virginia 26 VM.I. 13
Wake Forest 13 George Wash-
ington 0
North Carolina State 16 Mary-
land 13
Duke 41 Richmond 0
Furman 21 Citadel 7
Georgia Tech 20 Auburn 0
Tulane 27 Mississippi 20
Florida 31 Vanderbilt 27
Florida A & M 14 North Caro-'
lina A & T 9
SOUTHWEST
Georgia 13, L.S.U. 13
S.M.U. 42, Rice 21
Baylor 26 Texas Tech 12
Oklahoma 58 Kansas State 0
Texas 19 Arkansas 14
(Okla) 21'
Southwest (Okla) 34 Central
East Texas State Midwestern 27
West Texas State 39 Sam Hous-
ton 18
FAR WEST
Colorado 'College 13 Colorado
State 0
Denver 42 Brigham Young 3
Wyoming 53 Utah 13
UCLA 21 Stanford 7
California 27 Oregon State 0
Big Ten
Standings
W L T Pet. PF OP
Ohio State 2 0 0 1.000 74 14
MICHIGAN 1 0 0 1.000 26 13
Northwestern 1 0 0 1.000 13 6
Wisconsin 2 10 .667 34 32
Indiana 1 1 0 .500 34 33
Iowa 1 2 0 .333 40 55
Illinois 0 1 0 .0060'6 7,
Purdue 0 1 0 .000 21 33
Minnesota 0 2 0 .000 6 71
HALLE RS
JEWELRY
717 North University
NearrHill Auditorium
and passed 21 yards to end Jim
Mutscheller on the Indiana 18.
Williams came back and sneaked
to a first down.
Gidel Gander scored from the
eight yard stripe.
Two Indiana fumbles set off be-
lated Notre Dame drives in the
final period. The first died in a
flurry of passes, short of midfield.
The second ended on the next to
last play of the game with the In-
diana's George Byers intercepting
a Williams pass on' the Indiana
one-yard line.
fin
catches
1. 11
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