SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1850 THE MICHIGtAN DlAILY PAGE TTMEE Illinois . . . . 20 Wisconsin. . . 14!Mich. State . . 36 Ohio State . . 83 UCLA . . . . 20 Army . .'. . 34 Oklahoma . . 20 Indiana . . . . 0 Northwestern . 13 Notre Dame . . 33 Iowa . . . . . 21 Purdue. . . . 6 Columbia . . . 0 Iowa State . . 7 Princeton . 27 Cornell . .. 0 Oio State Exploes; Northwestern .Snuffed. Out Janowicz Leads Buckeyes. To 83-21 Win Over Iowa Dufek Scores Only 'M''Touchdown O~ All COLUMBUS, O.-(P)-Touched offhby the sparkling Vic Janowicz, Ohio State's Rose Bowl Cham- pions exploded for 12 touchdowns yesterday to smother Iowa's Hawk- eyes' under an 83-21 score, largest since 1939 in Western Conference play. A crowd of 82,174, third largest ever to fill the Buckeye Stadium, sat stunned as Janowicz, a junior from Elyria, Ohio, piloted the Bucks to three touchdowns in the first five minutes. IN THAT history-making per- iod, Janowicz romped 11 yards over tackle for the first touchdown after he had recovered a fumble Detroit Trips Blackhawks; IndThird Spot DETROIT-(P)-T h e Detroit Red Wings took over third place in the National Hockey League race last night as they edged their Chicago Blackhawk "cousins," 3-1, before 11,954 fans. In Montreal the Montreal Ca- nadiens soundly trounced the New York Rangers, 5-1, and left the hapless New Yorkers still seeking their second victory of the National Hockey League sea- son. * * * IN TORONTO, the first place place Toronto Maple Leafs scored their fifth successive National Hockey League victory with a 4-2 triumph over the Boston Bruins before 13,310 fans. The victory ran Toronto's undefeated string to six straight games. Rookie Danny Lewicki and vete- ran Ted Kennedy led the Leafs in their second victory over the win- less Bruins. by Jerry Faske on the Iowa 24; returned a punt by Glenn Drahn 61 yards for the second touchdownf and then passed 12 yards to Tony' Curcillo for a T-D after picking up a fumble by Bill Reichardt on the Iowa 2 - From then on, it was all Ohio, the Hawkeyes showing none of the form they displayed a week. ago in defeating Purdue 33-21. The Bucks, who picked up four Iowa fumbles in the first period, rolled an astounding five-touch-} down lead in that session and- picked up three more touchdownsf in the second period before Iowa made an offensive move. ON THE THIRD play of the second quarter, Janowicz passed 39 yards to end Bob Grimes for first touchdown of that session. On the ground and through the air the Buckeyes piled up the as- tronomical total of 21 first downs to 13 for the Hawkeyes.I Ohio State's aerial attack was successful on 13 of 36 throws good for 249 yards. Rushing, the Buck--x eyes rolled for 183syards. Iowa completed 11 passes in 31 at- tempts for a total of 177 yards but was held to only 74 yards on: the ground.0 DON DUFEK ... bull on offense Illinois Downs Indiana; Karras SparksOffense CHAMPAIGN, ILL.--(IP)-John- ny Karras' 67-yard touchdown romp stampeded Illinois to a 20 to 0 homecoming victory over pass- minded Indiana in a Big Ten football game yesterday. After teaming with Ronnie Clark to lead the Illini's crushing ground assault to a 7-0 halftime edge, Karras cracked through the mid- dle, drove into the secondary and streaked 67 yards in the third per- iod. I Football Scores -III EAST Syracuse 13 Boston 7 Fordham 21 San Francisco 14 Army 34 Columbia 0 Bowdoin 26 Colby 13 Dartmouth 27 Harvard 7 Maine 19 Bates 6 Pennsylvania 30 Navy 7 Miami (Fla.) 28 Pitt 0 Princeton 27 Cornell 0 Yale 14 Holy Cross 13 Temple 7 Penn St. 7 (tie) Lehigh 21 Rutgers 18 Villanova 20 Georgetown 14 Maryland St. 66 Cheyney (Pa) State 0 Colgate 35 Brown 34 Bucknell 32 Lafayette 0 Kings Point 18 Hofstra 6 Buffalo 33 Rhode Island State 12 Connecticut 14 NYU 7 Hampton Institute 14, Lin- coln University 12 RPI '7, Rochester 0 Baldwin Wallace 49, Upsala 7 Hobart 35, Union 0 Susquehanna 7, City College - New Hampshire 47, Vermont 0 SOUTH Alabama 14 Miss. St. 7 Vanderbilt 14 Arkansas 13 Florida 19 Furman 7 Carnegie Tech 36 Case 27 Trinity 35 Middlebury 19 Massachusetts 27 Northeastern 6 Tulane 28 Auburn 0 Maryland 21 Duke 14 Kentucky 28 Georgia Tech 14 Tennessee 27 Wash. & Lee 20 N. Carolina 40 William & Mary 7 Clemson 1'3 Wake Forest 12 Virginia 28 West' Virginia 21 Florida State 14, Sewanee 8 Catawba 14, V.M.T. 13 Virginia Union 10, Virginia State 0 Franklin & Marshall 41, Swartmore 0 MIDWEST Michigan Tech 48 Northland (Wis.) 0 Ohio Wesleyan 26 Oberlin 7 Miami (Ohio) U 28 Ohio U 20 Nebraska 35 Kansas 26 Missouri 27 Oklahoma A & M 0 Oklahoma 20 Iowa State 7, Butler 25 Western Reserve 14 Valparaiso 21 Ball State 7 Omaha 32 Wayne 13 FAR WEST Wyoming 44 New Mexico 0 Colorado 20 Utah' 20 (tie) Oregon State 20 Montana 0 Colorado A & M 33 Utah State 13 Idaho 7 Washington State 7 (tie) Colorado State 20 Idaho State 18 California 40 St. Mary's 25 Washington 21 Stanford 7 Southern California 30 Oregon 21 Los Angeles Loyola 34 Nevada 7' SOUTHWEST Texas 35 Rice 7 Mississippi 19 Texas Christian 7 Baylor 27 Texas A & M 20 11 IT WAS THE longest and most1 thrilling dash of the game and as- sured ,Illinois of its first home-1 coming triumph in four years - much to the pleasure of 65,000 cheering fans. Shortly after his run, however, halfback Karras was helped, off the field with a sprained left ankle. The All-America prospect was being doctored on the bench when Illinois scored its third and final touchdown. The thrust carried 77 yards in 11 plays in the final minutes of the third quarter. Fred Major's passes to third- stringer Joe Vernasco, a Misha- waka, Ind., junior end who shot into stardom, with his catching ability, supported the drive which Dick Raklovits capped with a six1 yard blast. THE VICTORY was Illinois' first in two Conference starts and{ the sixteenth in 26 contests with the Hoosiers. Indiana absorbed its second Big Ten defeat in three games. ItsZ runner, Bobby Robertson, was shackled, and sophomore passer. Lou D'Achille failed to connect when it would have counted most. Statistics MICH. MINN. First Downs 16 11 Rushing Yardage 139 46 Passing Yardage 208 74 Passes Attempted 37 16 Passes Completed 16 6 Passes Intercepted 4 1 Punts 5 9 Punting Averages 35 29.75 Fumbles Lost 1 2 Yards Penalized 10 48 (Continued from Page 1) Despite abooming 70-yard kick- off by Gopher Ed Johnson, Michi- gan opened the game with the same smoothness that earned last week's win. The Wolverines gained three, 21 and seven yards; then shook, Don Oldham, starting his first game, loose for a 25-yard twisting run. Oldham fumbled when tackled to halt the march. - * * * THE Michiganders' first burst seemed to inject life into a Gopher team that was getting accustomed to being kicked around, bu didn't like it'at all. Later in the game they did something about it. Michigan got a second drive going largely due to a great play by sophomore Lowell Perry. Chuck Ortmann, whose day's miseries were mostly not getting enough time to throw, passed to Harry Allis for one first 'down, then hit Perry on the Wolverine 45. The Ypsilanti flash shook off one man and was finally stopped on the Gopher 43. But here Michigan was stopped. Ortmann intercepted a Larry Esser pass and returned to the Northlanders 27 to start still an- other opening period scoring try. The blonde Milwaukean passed to Dufek on the 18, but the next Wolverine aerial was picked off by Esser in the flat, the Minnesota left half-back finally hauled down by Tom Johnson at midfield. , * * THE MAIZE AND BLUE was through threatening for a while and it took a Gopher fumble and the end of the half to deny a p a i r of persistent Minnesota thrusts. Michigan kicked off to open the second stanza, but Minne- sota was held and the visitors started another march after the Gopher punt. Dufek's great run and a Bill Putich pass brought the ball to the Minnesota 40- yard line. Here Dufek took a screen pass and two timely blocks sent him to seven yards from pay dirt. But Skrien threw Ortmann for a seven-yard lss and the Gophers held. The Wolverines began to amble again a few minutes later as Ort- mann's, passes to Allis and Perry along with Dufek's bull-like runs moved the pill to the Minnesota three. Again, the Gophers stiffen- ed and Harry Coates intercepted a fourth down pass to finish an- other threat. ORTMANN thread-needled the sidelines to get Don Roedel's punt back to the home team's 29. Ort- mann passed to Allis, then pitched to Perry, who shook off a pair of TYPEWRITERS Rented Sold Bought Repaired G.I. Requisitions Accepted on Supplies only MORRI LL'.S 314 S. State Ph. 7177 fountain pens repaired Line-Ups MICHIGAN Pos. MINNESOTA Perry ....... LE......French Pickard Mitchell Green Hendrickson J. Johnson Hess ........ LT .... Markert Johnson Canakes Krueger Kinyon ..... LG ..... Carlson McWilliams Coates, Mertes Padjen ...... C ... Robinson Zatkoff Hammnel Momsen Kreager Kelsey ..... RG ...... Holm Jackson Stolen Wolter Christensen Stribe ...... RT ..... Ekberg Wahl Ryan Strozewski Allis ........ RE ... Johansen Clark Edling Durda Putich ..... QB ....... Gelle Palmer Wheaton Ortmann.... LH ....... Esser Peterson Klefsaas Udak Roedel Oldham.... RH ..:. Gregory Witherspoon Thompson Bradford Cochran Dufek ...... FB ......Engel LeClaire Skrien tacklers to reach the Gopher three. Dufek was smothered, but leaped high to score on the next attempt. The Wolverines backpedalled to the Gopher seven-yard line before stopping a fourth quarter Ski-U-Mah threat. But it was far from over. Hudak passed to Cochrane for a first down on the Michigan 20, and Engel hit the line for another on the Wolverine 10. The Maize and Blue line stiffened until Hu-, dak passed to Cochrane on fourth down for the tying tally. Coch- rane, little right halfback, made a two-handed catch in the end zone after Tom Witherspoon and Ortmann had leaped for the pill and missed. Michigan tried a few despera- tion passes but Minnesota inter- cepted, and the Wolverines headed for their long ride home. Tom Johnson and Tony Momsen stood out of defense for the Wol- verines. Momsen's bone-crunching tackles from the line backer's po- sition and Johnson's defensive play cheered the' Wolverines on an otherwise gloomy day. Wisconsin Overcomes Early NUAdvantage; Wins,1443 MADISON, Wis. -(P)- Johnny ly mhiving in passes, had the bet- Coatta, a reserve quarterback mov- ter of the going in the first half. ed up to the regular spot today to They scored late in the first pass and kick Wisconsin to a 14 quarter after Jack Springer recov- 13 Big Ten conference victory over ered a fumble by Wisconsin's Bob Northwestern. Radcliffe on the Wisconsin 19. Coatta passed for both of Wis- John Miller and Athan moved the consin's touchdowns and kicked ball to the eight and from that the Badgers' extra points to hand point Athan bulled over for a Northwestern its first defeat of touchdown. Bob Burson added the the year. point with a kick.. * * * It was shortly after that point - TRAILING 7 to 4 at the end of that Coatta went in to replace the first half, the Badgers smgash- Bob Petruska who had been get- ed back behind Coatta's fine lead- ting the call in most of Wiscon- ership to come through in one of sin's previous games. the hardest, but cleanest games of The Badgers completed 15 of the year. A capacity crowd of the 22 passes they attempted for 45,000 witnessed the battle. a total of 216 yards. Northwestern passed 17 times but clicked on only Northwestern, with biL Rich 9 good for 84 yards. Athan showing the way on the On 'the ground the Wildcats ground and Dick Flowers clever- more than doubled Wisconsin's I i 1 r. t ' . t w x r X :.' r: . AMES, Ia. -OP)- Oklahoma's rugged Sooners pushed their win- ning streak to 26 games yesterday to equal the modern football re- cord. Oklahoma, third.ranked team in the country in the Associated Press poll, did it with a 20-7 victory over stubborn Iowa State in a Big Sev- en contest before 17,000 fans. . THE SOONERS' win, coupled with Kansas' loss to Nebraska, put Oklahoma on top of the Big Sev- en Conference standings with two wins and no losses. The Sooners haven't known what it is to lose since Santa Clara upset them 20-17 in the first game of the 1948 season. Their unchecked pace tied the mark made by Cornell in 1921- 24. The all-time record, how- ever, is held by the University of Washington with 39 straight far back in 1907-1914. Oklahoma conquered Iowa State with a rugged, deceptive ground attack combinedwith just enough passing to befuddle the Cyclones at the opportune times. KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR 9-Hairstylists - No Waiting The Dascola Barbers Liberty near State r. TONY MOMSEN ... same on defense Oklahoma Ties Modern SWinning Streak Record gxgitn as a touchdown ,Rugged as the team that made it!I output gaining 212 yards to their opponent's 101. Big Ten1 Standings ' THE SOONERS, top-rated pass defense team, lowered an almost "ceiling zero" curtain against Wingin' Willie Weeks, the Iowa State passer who went into the contest as the leading tosser in the nation. Weeks sneaked out from under that curtain long enough to throw a 30-yard touchdown pass to Jim Doran, ace Iowa State receiver, with five minutes left Ohio State Wisconsin Michigan Northwestern Illinois Indiana Iowa Minnesota Purdue W 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 L 0 1 0 1 1 2 3 2 1 (Ties count half game game lost). 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