SUNDAY, NOVEMBER '5, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1950 PAGE SEVEN Defeat Bruins End Husky Bowl Bid Dreams Richter Sparks Bear Defensive SEATTLE - ()) - A meaty, . mighty California Bear crushed Don Heinrich and the Rose Bowl hopes of Washington yesterday, flashing unexpected passing power u to earn a 14 to 7 Pacific Coast Conference football victory before a record crowd of 55,000.> It was Washington's first con- - ference loss this year. TWO GRINDING touchdown drives by California in the second " and third quarters each stretching just under 65 yards sapped the Washington strength and got the Bears over their toughest hurdle to date in the march toward the conference crown and the Rose Bowl. Rocked into grogginess, Wash- ington still had enough left for a late game, 89-yard march that finally ended when Pete Groger SQ stol the ball out of Heinrich's hand on the California two yard Co line. fie It was the second key play by the big California center who hadin' intercepted a Heinrich pass to check a second quarter drive. Huge, loose-limbed Les Richter, 225-pound California guard, spent 1 the afternoon rushing and crush- ing Heinrich. With the Washing- ton passing ace bottled, California unveiled a pitching star of its own t in quarterback Jim Marinos. His Mict tosses to Bob Minahen and John Mic Olszewsk picked up long chunks baan of yardage in the California drives. the1 wors Lions Rall;Oost y lines Nort p Cornell they the By One Point *W fact NEW YORK - (P) - Underdog cove: Columbia upset Cornell's defending for s Ivy League Champs yesterday, 20- baan 19 on a dramatic last period touch- cont down by fullback Howie Hansen into and Al Ward's conversion, soak Supposed to lose by 14 points, I Columbia came from behind to tha snatch this, tingling rain-swept contest from fornell's grasp with less than fiveminutes to go. « . a F TRAILING'19-13, with time run- ining out, Bob Ott squirmed atop Rocco Calvo's fumble to give Co- Pr lumbia its, big break, on the Cor- no nell 36. M After a Mitch Price-Don Mc- Bu Lean pass was good for a first sity down on the 18, Hansen took B over. Hammering the line five Le times in six plays, the stocky Te line-buster smashed over from D one foot out at 10:32. A Most of the 20,000 Baker Field leya customers went slightly off base Ca as Al Ward trotted out to add and the all-important winning point R by placement. Pe Price was red hot with his pass- Pi ing in the first half with two touchdown throws but Cor- nell's Bill Scazzero, a sub for ail- K ing Bob Engel, scampered for two Ce scores that evened matters. Illin After a scoreless third period, Bu Jeff Fleischmarm jarred over from Cii the 1, the eighth play in a 65- Oh yard drive, and Cornell was on ion9 top. It looked like the ball game. M Then came Calvo's fumble and Tech Columbia went to town. Ne IoN PRO HOCKEY Dr Boston 3, Montreal 2 So Toronto 2, New York 2 Al Dims Michigan Bowl H oes 'M'm- Illini Statistics * * * * ! * * * * Elliot's Gridders Sniff Roses After 7-0 Victory In Snow Lone Illini Pass Completion Nets Only TD; Raklovits-Led Ground Attack Baffles 'M' MICHIGAN First Downs ............. 8 Rushing Yardage .......119 Passing Yardage ......... 12 Passes Attempted ........ 11 Passes Completed .. ,...... 1 Passes Intercepted ....... 0 Punts................... 14 Punting Average ......... 34.4 Fumbles Lost ......... 2 Yards Penalized .......... 40 - ILLINOIS First Downs............. 9 Rushing Yardage .........220 Passing Yardage.......... 6 Passes Attempted ........ 2 Passes Completed ,....1 Passes Intercepted ....... 0 Punts ...... ........ 11 Punting Average..... 38.0 Fumbles Lost ............ 2 Mards Penalized......... 30 (Continued from page 1) ines might pull one of their goal line stands. But here a defensive boner cost Michigan a possible tie. THE WOLVERINES had stopped the first two goal line thrusts with a six man line and five backers ".:close up. All Illinois quarterback " #: C: Fred Major had to do was send . :a pair of ends 10 yards out and ? ~ lob a pass. He did just that-Tony Klimek grabbed it, Sam Rebecca kicked the point and the day's scoring was over. Only a 33 yard scamper by Stevens kept the play before the touchdown from being complete boredom. Laz and Tony Mom- sen matched punts until Dick Raklovits notched the game's ;initial first down on two quick- «:;::;;;.openers. The game was 14 min- utes old. Apparently inspired, Stevens cut --Daily-Roger Reinke over guard and got fine blocking stopped after a short gain by Joe to re. hn Peteson thrne l2a ma yer. The slush which covered the between Stevens and the goal line ng down the Michigan backfield. made the tackle. Peterson stayed down and never returned to the line-up. The Illini drive stalled and Michigan notched their opening first down with the second period 1925 G afour minutes old. They reached the 47, but Ortmann quick kicked into the end zone. Illinois took Charlie Ortmann. That doesn't the slippery oval and roared the take anything away from the tre- length of the field in 12 plays. mendous defensive performance The winners made one more first that the Illini put on though. down, but the half ended three plays later. rolled dead on the Illinois 11 yard line to give Michigan its first real break midway through the third period. Roger Zatkoff paritally blocked Laz' punt and Michigan had the pill on the visitors 35. A holding penalty halted this Michigan drive, but Wes Bradford, running his first play of collegiate football, raced 21 yards a few min- utes later to tee off another Michi- gan drive. The Wolverine ground attack again failed and Ortmann quick kicked. A sliced punt gave the Wolver- ines their last chance at the start of the final stanza. Once again three running plays failed, and Momsen dropped back to punt. * * * HERE IT was that the distance of one foot gave Illinois the ball- game and cost Michigan a tie. Momsen toed the oval on a high spiral inside the Illinois 10; the ball landed and skipped for cof- fin corner, but the English so su- sceptive to a pigskin took the pill inside the endzone after it had just missed the red flag. Illinois continued their tactics of first, second and third down punting and Michigan responded with a weak running attack. The Ilini recovered an Ortmann fumble deep in Michigansterri- tory to give the fans a last min- ute warmer, but Raklovits gave the ball right back. Michigan couldn't move, and the game ended a few plays later. PAID ADVERTISEMENT IT'S A FACT! It RAINS in Ann Arbor Be Ready for it with JUEEZE PLAY-Don Peterson, Wolverine right halfback, being le (56) Illinois center and an unidentified Orange and Blue play ld and shown all too clearly here, was a major factor in slowin VO# FOOLING: Cold Brings Memories of These RAINWEAR Items By BOB SANDELL Associate Sports Editor was no picnic in snow swept higan Stadium yesterday, but verine Coach Bennie Ooster- can recall of a game when playing conditions were even e. was way back in 1925 when erbaan was making the head- as an All-American end. hwestern was in town and managed a 3-2 triumph over Michiganders in a complete npour. * * * THAT MADE it worse was the that the field had not been red and it hd been raining several days previous. Ooster- remembers that after the est the players walked straight the showers with their mud- ed uniforms still on. t may not have been quite t bad yesterday, but anybody that shivered through the full 60 minutes will readily agree that the day was a bit unusual for a gridiron spectacle. Other than the above story Oosterbaan didn't have much to ELIOT THOUGHT of the game say after the game. The loss just as a genuine team victory and about knocks the Wolverines out naturally was pleased with the of contention for the Rose Bowl, way Don Stevens replaced the not to mention the Big Ten title. injured All-American candidate Johnny Karras. BUT WHAT could anybody say about it? You couldn't blame the team with conditions like that. Michigan is admittedly a passing team and the visibility and damp- ness made that impossible. Bennie wouldn't admit it, but the field as it was probably ham- pered an aerial game much more than a running attack which was Illinois' chief weapon. Coach Ray Eliot of the Illini readily admitted that it was nol day for the likes of a passer likeI Stevens along with hard hit- ting fullback Dick Raklovits ac- counted for all but seven of Illi- nois 220 yards on the ground. Stevens had 91 yards in 17 tries and Raklovits picked up 122 in 27 attempts. The right halfback jinx again plagued the Wolverines yesterday. Don Peterson, who had taken over in place of Leo Koceski and Frank Howell, reinjured his knee in the first quarter. He was replaced by Don Oldham who promptly got his knee banged up early in the second half. Finally Sophomore Wes Brad- ford got his first chance in a college game and it can be said he turned in a creditable first game performance. The only other 'injury was a black eye to Ozzie Clark. More encouraging was the report that Koceski should be ready next week. THE GAME'S tempo picked up the minute fans had settled down for the second half's activities. It was then that Chuck Ortmann made his lone contribution to the Michigan offense, rambling 20 yards to the Illinois 45. Ozzie Clark missed a block or the blonde tail- back might have gone all the way. Ortmann's ensuing quick kick * * * Lsine-Ups College Grid Scores MICHIGAN Perry ....... Clark Johnson ....; Hess Pederson Kinyon...'' Jackson Powers McWilliams Momsen .... Kreager Pad jen Wolter ..... Pos. ILLINOIS LE ..... Klimek Wodziak LT ...... Ulrich Mueller. Elsner LG ...... Cahill Studley Murphy Smith C ..... Vohaska Sabino Cole Hall Boerio RG ...... Brown EAST inceton 45, Brown 7 oly Cross 26, Harvard 7 aine 26, Colby 7 ucknell 41, New York Univer- 7 owdoin 13, Bates 0 high 42, Muhlenberg 13 mple 39, Delaware 0 artmouth 7, Yale 0 merican International 25, Wes- n7 rnegie Tech 21, Washington Jefferson 14 utgers 15, Brown 12 nn State 20, Boston College 13 ttsurgh 21, West Virginia 7 * * * MIDWEST ansas 39, Utah 26 sntral Michigan 26, Northern )is State 14 ena Vista 40, Tarkio (Mo.) 7 rncinnati 23, Ohio University 0 hio Wesleyan 27, Mount Un- 9 Acalester (Minn.) 7, Michigan h6 braska 40, Missouri 34 wa State 13, Kansas State 7 ake 42, Bradley 14 uth Dakota 14, Iowa State 7 ma 7, Albion 0 S SOUTH TO THE VOTERS SECOND CONGRESSIONAL DIST. . As former teachers of George Meader, an honor graduate of the Law School of the University of Michigan, whose subsequent pro- fessional career we have followed closely, the undersigned urge the voters of the Second Congressional District to vote for him as Re- publican candidate for' Congress. Mr. Meader is an able and ex- perienced practicing lawyer. His term as Washtenaw County's Pros- ecutor was marked by vigorous, but fair enforcement of the law after prompt and thorough inves- tigation of the facts. Mr. Meader's service as Counsel for the United States Senate War Investigating Committee (The Truman-Mead Committee) and the Senate Sub- committee investigating the Re- construction Finance Corporation (the Fulbright Committee) earned him the praise of all the members -whatever their party affiliations. Mr. Meader will not be an ordi- nary "first term" congressman; his successful experience in Wash- ington will enable him to represent our District most effectively. All voters-Republican, Demo- cratic and Independent-can vote for George Meader for Congress with full confidence that they will be represented by a man of integ- rity, ability, good judgment, and experience. RALPH W. AIGLER, GROVER C. GRISMORE, PAUL A. LEIDY, EDSON R. SUNDERLAND, and JOHN E. TRACY. 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