SUNDAY NOVEMBER 12, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY situ OSU Moves Toward Big Ten Crown Sooners Surge To Top Kansas NEW YORK--(P)-Ohio State struck a sledgehammer blow for the Big Ten championship and Ok- lahoma weathered a threat to its record winning streak yesterday as the college football season moved into the stretch. At the same time Southern Met- hodist University, the nation's no. 1 team a week ago, suffered its second straight setback, losing to Texas A. & M., 25-20. The Mus- tangs were tumbled from first to seventh by Texas last Saturday. * * * THE BUCKEYES of Ohio State, ranked second nationally, moved a step nearer the Western Confer- ence title by beating Wisconsin, 19-14, before 81,535 fans at Co- lumbus. They can clinch the crown by whipping either Illinois next week or Michigan a week later. Illinois, a leading candidate for the Rose Bowl because of Ohio State's ineligibility, kept its hope.-' alive by turning back Iowa, 2i-7. California virtually clinched the host role in the Pasadena game by smashing UCLA, 35-0. It was the 32nd straight regular season victory for the Golden Bears, who have lost to the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl the last two years. They are ranked sixth. Oklahoma, the no. 3 team in the country, had its anxious moments before rallying to subdue a fired- up Kansas team at Lawrence, 33- 13. The Sooners, who stretched their modern record string of vic- tories t 28, trailed the Jayhawkers at the half, 7-0, and were behind, 13-7, at the end of the third quar- .ter. THE OKLAHOMANS spurted for 26 points in the final period to keep their record going., SMU was the only casualty yes- terday among the first ten. Top-ranked Army toyed with New Mexico at West Point's Mic- hie Field, winning 51-0, without even dressing such first string backs as Jim Cain and Gil Step- henson. Kentucky, no. 4, crushed Mis- sissippi State, 48-21, with Babe Pa- rilli's passing again the major fac- tor. Parilli passed for three touch- downs to make his season's total 18. Fifth-ranked Texas had a nar- row escape before beating Baylor, 27-20, on Bobby Dillon's 84-yard touchdown run in the fourth per- iod. * * * PRINCETON, the unbeaten and untied Ivy League power, won un- der wraps over Harvard, 63-26, let- ting substitutes play most of the game. Princeton is eighth ranked. Miami (Fla.), no. 9, was tied by Louisville Friday night, 13-13. Il- linois ranks tenth. The South witnessed two major upsets. The Citadel won its first victory in 24 years over South Car- olina, 19-7. Virginia Military stun- ned Georgia Tech, 14-13. Lone Loser of Grid Top enr cores -Daily-Malcolm Shatz ALL IN VAIN-Don Dufek, Michigan fullback, streaks goalward after taking a screen pass from Chuck Ortmann. Following the precision blocking of John Kreager and Lowell Perry, Dufek trav- eled all the way down to the Indiana two-yard line before being tackled. The play, however, was called back because of a clipping penalty upfield. * * * * PRO CIRCUITS: Red Wings Out-S kate Leafs,_3-I TORONTO -(R)-- The Detroit Red Wings handed the Toronto Maple Leafs their first defeat in 12 games last night, 3-1, and mov- ed to within four points of the National Hockey League leaders. A crowd of 14,235 saw the Wings, playing superb hockey, pick up their sixth victory against two losses and three ties. During its unbeaten string, Toronto had won eight times and tied three. Dordon Howe shot the De- troiters into a 1-0 lead at 18:02 of the first period. Then Metro Prystal and Jerry Couture tallied about 2%/2 minutes apart in the second period to sew up the game. * * * MONTREAL-Elmer Lach's un- assisted goal with 21 seconds gone in the third period gave the Mon- treal Canadiens a 1-1 tie with the New York Rangers in a Na- tional Hockey League game last night. * * * BOSTON-Boston's Bruins, who have won only one National Hoc- key League game, were shoved deeper into the circuit's cellar last night by Chicago's Blackhawks who skated to a 4-2 victory before an announced 9,003 Boston Gar- den crowd. * * * PRO FOOTBALL ... The Chicago Bears face the New York Yanks in a show down bat- tle for first place in a National Football League game in Chicago today. Also, Pittsburgh plays Baltimore and the New York Giants meet the Chicago Cards. The Detroit Lions are idle. The Bear-Yankee game will be televised over the ABC network beginning at 2:30 p.m. Tulane Beats Navy, 27=0; Ernst Shines BALTIMORE -- P) - Quarter- back Joe Ernst picked Navy's de- fenses to pieces with his passes as the Green Wave from Tulane drowned the Middies 27-0 yester- day before an estimated 20,000 football fans. The Southeastern Conference horde scored in every period while completely bottling up Navy from the start. The closest the Middies got to scoring in the sixth loss in seven games was the 23 yard line in the fourth quarter on a recover- ed fumble. In addition to its four touch- downs, Tulane was stopped on the 17, 10 and five yard lines and miss- ed another tally on a fumble over the goal. Ernst, a six-foot home town New Orleans senior, put on one of the greatest passing exhibitions in Tu- lane grid history. A team hitherto dependent mostly on its ground at- tack, Ernst took Tulane to the air with a vengeance. MIDWEST Ashland 33 Bluffton 13 Wilberforce State 32 Kentucky State 3 Case Tech 49 Muskingum 26 Wittenberg 7 Ohio Wesleyan 7 (tie) Otterbein 31 Capital 0 Bowling Green 22 Youngstown 7 Mount Union 72 Wooster 13 Ohio Northern 21 Findlay 13 Macalester 7 Grinell 0 Taylor 19 Indiana Central 7 Morningside 33 Iowa Wesleyan 12 Wabash 13 Hanover 13 (tie) Ball State 20 Indiana State 0 Canterbury 14 St. Joseph's (In- diana) 7 Concordia (Minn) 35 Moorhead Teachers (Minn) 0 Valley City, N. D. Teachers 14 Huron, S. D. College 0 South Dakota State 41 Carleton 14 Black Hills Teachers 18 S. D. School of Mines 7 Coe 21 Lawrence 14 Ripon 27 Carroll 12 Cedarville 20 Rose Poly 13 Bradley 33 Wayne 22 Monmouth 20 Deloit 14 Illinois State Normal 13 North- ern Illinois State 12 Hastings 38 York 0 Omaha 38 Simpson 6 Chadron Nebraska Teachers 6 Wayne*Nebraska Teachers 3 Cincinnati 14 College of Pacific 7 Nebraska 49 Kansas State 21 EAST ,Army 51 New Mexico 0 Colby 20 Bates 8 Boston University 41 New York University 13 Maine 6 Bowdoin 6 (tie) Coast Guard 27 Renssellaer 0 Dartmouth 14 Columbia 7 Fordham 14 Georgetown 13 Hobart 21 Hamilton 7 Cornell 26 Colgate 18 Lehigh 66 Carnegie Tech 0 Trenton State 38 Montclair State 0 Tulane 27 Navy 0 New Haven State 42 Long Island Aggies 0 Pennsylvania 50 Brown 0 Penn State 27 West Virginia 0 Princeton 63 Harvard 26 St. Lawrence 21 Rochester 19 St. Bonaventure 38 Toledo 7 Middlebury 20 Union 6 Trinity 47 Amherst 13 Bucknell 35 Temple 0 SOUTH Wooford 48 Erskine 0 Potomac State 20 Gallaudet 0 Western (Ky) State 14 Eastern (Ky) State 13 Georgetown (Ky) 14 Union (Tenn) '6 West Virginia Tech 28 West Vir- ginia Wesleyan 0 Mississippi 20 Chattanooga '0 Alabama 53 Mississippi South- ern 0 Kentucky 48 Mississippi State 21 Randolph-Macon 21 Hampden- Sydney 13 Centre 16 Sewanee 8 North Carolina A & T college 27 Virginia State 6 Elizabeth City Teachers 26 Mi- ner Teachers 0 The Citadel 19 South Carolina 7 Wake Forest 13 Duke 7 Georgia 6 Florida 0 George Washington 34 Furman 7 V.M.I. 14 Georgia Tech 13 Maryland 7 North Carolina 7 (tie) Tennessee 48 Tennessee Tech 14 Virginia 13 William & Mary 0 Richmond 32 Virginia 12 FAR WEST Eastern New Mexico 28 New Mexico Military 7 Wyoming 48 Brigham Young 0 Oklahoma A & M 32 Wichita 20 Colorado A & M 32 Utah 7 Colorado College 32 Frt Hays 0 Denver 48 Utah State 0 California 35 UCLA 0 Stanford 28 Washington State 18 Washington 27 Oregon 12 Oregon State 34 Idaho 19 Colorado State 27 Western State 13 Nevada 19 Montana 14 St. Michael's 19 Highlands 6 Missouri 21 Colorado 19 from last galley Midwestern 30 Trinity (San An- tonio) 14 North Texas State 16 Houston University 13 Southwestern Tech (Okla) 18 New Mexico A & M 16 Tulsa 39 Texas Tech 7 Rice 9 Arkansas 6 Texas 27 Baylor 20 Oklahoma 33 Kansas 13 Texas A & M 25 Southern Meth- odist 20 Southwest Texas State 20 Sam Houston State 13 College Grid S -Daily-Jack Bergstrom PUSH 'EM BACK-Michigan's Ozzie Clark is shown above about to throw Indiana's offensive ace, Lou D'Achille (22), for a loss. Al Wahl (72) is leaping in to help in the tackle. It was one of the few times that the Wolverines were able to catch the slippery quarterback behind his own line. Four Wolverine Players A 1-A merCan Nomirtees qnakp-,.. i Four Michigan football players, Al Wahl, Chuck Ortmann, Lowell Perry, and Tony Momsen, have been nominated for the Grantland Rice 1950 All-American team by members of the Football Writer's Association. The All-American team will be Big Ten Standings W LTPet. P composed of 22 men, an offensive and defensive unit. It will be pub- lished in the December 12th issue of Look magazine. * * * ORTMANN AND Wahl were nominated for both the offensive and defensive teams, while Perry, and Momsen were named only on the defensive team. The executive committee of the Football Writer's Association meets with Grantland Rice in Chicago, Sunday, November 12, to make the final selections. They will also pick an outstand- ing guard or tackle -or the Out- land Award. Wahl is among those being considered for the honor. 4 Ohio State Illinois Wisconsin MICHIGAN N'western Iowa Indiana Minnesota Purdue 5 3 4 2 2 2 0 0 0 1 2 1 2 4 3 3 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1.000 208 .750 54 .667 95 .625 53 .500 45 .333 81] .250 41 .143 13 .000 42 ties count OP 49 14 71 34 66 159 73 91 85 2 (Conference game1 game won, 2 game lost.) NOW ij the time to rder 9 OU PERSONAL CHRISTMAS CARDS no FOLLETT'S WHILE ALL SELECTIONS ARE COMPLETE THIRTY DISTINCTIVE LINES TO CHOOSE FROM Including: Alice Daly, Jane Jarvis, Karl Koehler, Art Lines, * inc, Oz, Bergo-Marvin, Masterpiece, Peckwich, . Stauder, Royal, Work- "' ,. shop, T. V. A llen, Ray- mnNu-art, Etchcraft,* it costs no more to have the ines vOMEFGA0 A AUTOMATIC U ^ ^0 - V (A century of research on your wrist.) 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