I ! i. TEMBER 19, 1950 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAI llinois Upsets -7 oSren en B WIB-id Major Passes To Stevens, For Both Illini Touchdowns Cadets Plow Through Mud For Triumph Over Stanford By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-Illinois, the great running team, sprung two aerial touchdowns off trick plays in the second period to surprise mighty Ohio State 14-7 yesterday and shoot ahead'in the Big Ten Rose Bowl race. It was the first Big Ten loss for Ohio State, ranked last week as, the nation's top team in the AP poll. MUFFLED on the ground as never before this season, the Illini pecked at the Buckeyes' weakest spot, pass defense, and clicked su- perbly before a capacity throng of 71,119 wild fans. The win, the Illini's fourth in five league games, shoved them ahead of Wisconsin in their tor- rid duel for the bowl bid. Each has one more game to play. Little Fred Major, wearing a chin mask to protect a broken jaw bone, faked a jump pass in the first two minutes of the second quarter and finally fired the ball to Don Stevens. The former Youngstown, Ohio, prep star snar- ed it on the Ohio State 28 and, as defender Fred Bruney lunged at his heels, skipped loose to flee for a touchdown. The play was good for 52 yards and the tally was Stevens' first in two years at Illinois. * * * SIX MINUTES later the Illini thrust again through the air to what became the clinching mark- er. The drive was touched off by Illini Joe Hull's recovery of Chuck Gandee's bobble on the-Illinois 47. W i t h hobbled Johnny Karras streaking 12 yards, the Illini cover- ed the distance goalward in seven plays with Major finally pitching the last five yards to Stevens in the end zone. Just before the touchdown, Ma- jor's toss to end Tony Klimek on the same spread alignment was fumbled by the great end, but Ste- vens snapped it up in midairto make it count and set up the touchdown on the nextsdown. SAM! REBECCA converted both times. With three and one half min- utes left in the explosive second period, Ohio State became the first team of the season to score on the ground against Illinois' steeled defense. Ohio State's Vic Janowicz every bit an All-American today, and Tony Curcillo, the injured Buck- eye quarterback who played bril- liantly, used End Tom Watson as Be Sure To Vote Monday and Tuesday their passing target on three plays that gained 59 yards. * * * JANOWICZ eventually slammed over from the 4 to end an 83 yard surge in ten plays. He also con- verted. Two intercepted passes and a recovered fumble quelled Ohio State just as it appeared that the Buckeyes were wound up for touchdowns. H e r b Neathery filched a Curcillo pitch in the third, and Al Brosky minutes later stole a Janowicz aerial. Both times the Bucks were striv- ing to piece midfield and seemed to be rolling. In the finale, Walt Klevay's 22 yard run ignited a 70 yard Buckeye blast that ended on the Illinois ten when Eli Popa, a defensive fullback from Canton, Ohio, recovered his second fumble as Sophomore Kle- vay bobbled. Later Chuck Gandee led a spurt to the Illini 28 before Ohio State was stalled. The Buckeyes, who had averaged 41 points per league game before being tamed today, almost gave Il- linois another touchdown at the outset of the first period. Popa pounced on Frednbruney's fumble on the Buckeye's 20 and from there' Illinois moved to the one before Dick Raklovits lost five yards to cancel the threat. PALO ALTO, Calif.-(P)-While his coaching father peered anx- iously through the rain and gloom, Army Quarterback Bob Blaik whipped an. arrow-straight pass toE team captain Dan Foldberg to give Army a hard-fought 7-0 vic-' tory over Stanford in their inter- sectional football game here yes- terday. The scoring play, good for 28 yards, came late in the third per- iod, and cracked the strain forI some 40,000 fans soaked by a steady downpour.I ** * FOLDBERG, big left end from Dallas, Tex., and his true-throw- ing teammate, Blaik, thus main- tained Army's great record for the year, unbeaten and untied. The Ca+ '4s showed today they could op under any condi- tions. 1 28th consecutive victory on the country's grid- irons was as hard-earned as any. The field was sloppy, whip- ped into mud in the center and soggy everywhere else. Army's -Daily-Burt Sapowitch NORTHWESTERN HALFBACK JOHN MILLER ABOUT TO BE STOPPED BY AN UNIDENTIFIED WOLVERINE WITH HARRY ALLIS COMING TO HIS AID. best attack all season has been on the ground. Gains this way were almost negligible today. From all early indications, the two teams seemed destined to play to a scoreless tie. Stanford, who had previously lost two games and tied one, proved strong enough defensively to hold the West Painters to less than four touchdowns for the first time this season. Quarterback Blaik called his shots in such fine fashion that his disciplinarian father could not criticize his actions. When the ground plays failed he fearlessly took to the air. * -* * BLAIK'S GREAT punting paved the way for the score. Army held the ball on Stanford's 38. The ad- vance had bogged down. He toed the slippery oval toward the right sidelines. The ball went out of bounds on the Indian's four. Stanford couldn't gain and had to punt in return. The ex- change gave the Cadets the ball 39 yards from scoring turf. Coach Blaik sent in a freshman, right half Jack Martin. Quarter- back Blaik put the newcomer to work. Martin gained six yards on two plays. Young Blaik fum- bled the ball from center but was alert enough to recover it for a three yard gain. It was good for a first down onthe 28. More line plays, with Martin, left half Gene Filipski and full- back Al Pollard, carrying, put the ball on the Stanford 17, with first down. Martin came through with a single yard but the Cadets suf- fered ;a serious setback on a 15 yard hdlding penalty. The ball was 32 yards from the goal. Pollard slithered through for 4 yards. Then Blaik called the pass play. Foldberg, an all American candidate, raced down the field. He got behind the Stanford secon- dary, jumped up to snag the slip- pery oval, and made the last five yards In two steps: Pollard con- verted from placement. Irish Knot; Penn Trip s adgeirsl n--- I STATISTICS OSU First Downs............15 Rushing Yardage .........202 Passing Yardage ........ 97 Passes Attempted ...... 18 Passes Completed .... S Passes Intercepted by .. 0 Punts .................. 39.6 Fumbles Lost........... 4 Yards Penalized ........ 24 ILL. 10 120 89 17 6 3 36.0 0 65 Big Ten Standings W L Ohio State 5 1 Illinois 4 1 MICHIGAN 3 1 Wisconsin 4 .2 N'western 2 3 Iowa 2 4 Minnesota 1 3 Indiana 1 3 Purdue 0 4 (Ties count one T 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 PCT. PF .833 215 .800 68 .700 87 .667 95 .400 68 .333 81 :300 40 .250 41 .000 56 OP 63 21 57 71 110 159 95 73 112 MSC Passes Halt Panthers In 19-0_Win PITTSBURGH -(A)- Michi- gan State unveiled a sparkling and effective passing attack today to h'ammer out a 19-0 victory over a Pittsburgh football team whichf was stopped cold on the ground and bottled up in the air. The visiting Spartans closed their 1950 season with the mighty Sonny Grandelius showing 26,679 fans his speed and prowess. Al- though Grandelius flashed the, Spartans' running attack he left3 all the Michigan State scoring to. his team mates. THE SPARTANS' Al Dorow showed the Panthers that the new- est entry in the Western Confer- ence could take to the air lanes with good effect. He outshone Pitt's quarterback and passing star, Bobby Bestwick. The Spartans scored with dra- matic suddenness on the first play of the second quarter on a forward pass from Dorow to Henry Minarek, end from Flint. The visitors got another touch= down in the second and complet- ed their scoring in the third'per- iod with one more tally. Dick Panin, fullback from De- troit, scored next on a 12 yard run through the Pitt line. In the same quarter, Dorow passed to Carey in the end zone for the last touch- down. Carey made the only con- version of the day when he place- kicked after the second score. * * DOROW overshadowed Gran- delius with his two touchdown passes but Grandelius showed Pittsburgh the form and power which has made him one of the nation's outstanding ball carriers. half game won, Notre Dame Ties Iowa, 14-14 Quakers Blank Rivals, 20-0 one half game lost.) CONFERENCE SCORES Michigan 34, Northwestern 23 Illinois 14, Ohio State 7 Minnesota 27, Purdue 14 DO YOU KNOW ... that the Detroit Tigers have never fin,- ished last in the American League since the league's con- ception in 1901? IOWA CITY, Ia.-(P)-Iowa and Notre Dame entertained a capacity crowd of 52,863 fans yesterday with a vicious football duel that ended in a 14-all tie. It was Notre Dame that had to roar back to get the deadlock. The Irish were struck by two first quar- ter Iowa touchdowns, then set- tled down to a long, uphill grind that finally squared the battle. * * * AT THE FINISH it was Iowa that appeared to be willing to set- tle for the tie. The Hawks let the clock run out with 10 seconds to go on a fourth down on the Notre Dame 45 yard line. Iowa, seeking to upset Notre Dame for the first time since 1940, hit a terrific opening pace. The Hawks recovered a fumbled Irish pass in the air and they were on the Notre Dame 23-yard line. A touchdown came on Don Commack's 13-yard run with only 2:46 gone. The second Iowa touchdown came with'4:20 left in the first period. Joe Paulsen hugged home a Notre Dame pass on the Irish .38 and rambled to the 27. A 15- yard penalty hurt the Hawks. But they came back to score on a 26- yard pass play; Glenn Drahn to Bob Wilson. The Iowa halfback made a fancy catch on the 16 and was away for the touchdown. Bill Reichardt converted for a 14-0 Iowa lead. THERE WERE rosy dreams for Iowa fans. They visioned some- thing similar to Iowa triumphs over Notre Dame in 1921, 1939 and 1940. However, Notre Dame, lacking the physical capabilities'of former great Notre Dame teams but bless- ed with the customary Fighting Irish hearts, disturbed Iowa's hopes with a rousing comeback. PHILADELPHIA -(II)- Fran- cis (Reds) Bagnell, Penn's brilliant halfback, gave a magnificent per- formance yesterday in leading the rugged Quakers to a orushing 20- 0 victory over the Wisconsin Bad- gers from the Big Ten Conference. An elusive runner and a sharp- shooting passer, the red head from t h e sidewalks of Philadelphia sparked the winners on three long scoring marches of 68, 62 and 49 yards through the outclassed visi- tors and smashed across himself for two touchdowns. PLAYING in his next to last col- lege game, Bagnell ran through and around the harried Badgers for 164 yards on 28 rushs and hit his receivers on eight of 14 passes for another 65 yards. This brought his season's total to 1,587 yards running and passing. In one stretch today he completed six straight throws. Through all this, the Wiscon- sin team was able to offer only feeble resistance aga'nst Penn's slashing single-wing attack and on only ohe occasion was able to put together a sizeable march of its own on Johnny Coatta's passing. The Badgers came clos- est to scoring in the final quar- ter when they reached the Penn two yard line. Possibly the midwest team was suffering a letdown after its fine stand a week ago against Ohio State. Whatever the cause, it never belonged on the same field with the big Quakers today. Penn ham- mered 62 yards on nine plays to score after taking the opening' kickoff, with fullback Alan Corbo driving right through Wisconsin's' center from the two-for the touch- down. Vote Monday & Tuesday' Gophers Top' Purdue; Gain 'FirstVictory' MINNEAPOLIS--(P)--Minneso- ta's Gophers, fired by the announ- ced resignation of their coach, put1 on their finest exhibition of foot- ball this year, to come from behind and whip Piurdue, 27-14, in a West- ern Conference game yesterday. The Gophers spotted Purdue's Boilermakers two touchdowns - one each in the first and second periods and then put together its1 first victory of the year. * * * AND IN SO DOING, they un- covered a new potential star in halfback Kerm Klefsaas, who scor- ed the first three Minnesota touch- downs. In addition, he sparked most of the Gopher's drives down-, field into scoring territory. 1 It was Klefsaas who, early in the fourth period, put the Go- phers ahead with a driving, pun- ishing run around his own right end to put the ball across des- pite the efforts of three Boil- ermakers on the goal line. Then, to insure the victory, Halfback Bob Thompson ran 70 yards on a punt return to cross the goal line. Captain Dave Skrien accounted for three points with kicks after the scores. PURDUE'S ACE fullback, John- ny Kerestes, tallied both times for the Boilermakers, once in the first period and again in the second. Kerestes' first tally came on a 36-yard run behind beautiful blocking that mowed down Go- pher after Gopher. The tally came with about two and a half minutes of play remaining in theperiod. He took a pass from Quarter- back Dale Samuels, after a tumble recovery put the ball on Purdue's, 30. The pass and snaking run through half the Minnesota team, was 'good for 70 yards. ARMY.........0 0 7 STANFORD.....0 0 0 Tigers Crush. Yale, 47-12 NEW HAVEN, Conn.-(AP)-Trip- le-threat Dick Kazmaier a n d Princeton's fiery Tigers humbled fighting Yale, 47 to 12 yesterday and brought the Tigers their four- th "Big Three" football title be- fore .59,000 excited and shivering fans in the huge bowl. Kazmaier, 170 pounds of lighten- ing speed and a passer and kicker of rare talents, was efficiently sup- ported by a group of smart magic- ians who knew what it was all a b out. Unbeaten and untied Princeton r e c o r d e d its 12th straight victory, eight this season. PRINCETON, scoring at least once in each period, gleefully handed Yale its worst pasting in the 73 games they've played since 1873. Kazmaier opened the seven touchdown assault by Princeton, ranked no. 7. nationally, and tossed three scoring passes. Able teammates Bill Kleinsasser and Jack Davison each tallied twice and Captain George Chandler 'and Ed Reed accounted for the other six-pointers. Jack Newell and Bob Unger each converted twice. SGrid Results Idaho 26, Boston University 19 Williams 27, Amherst 13 Cornell 24, Dartmouth 0 villanova 29, Boston college 7 Navy 29, Columbia 7 Georgetown 21, Holy Cross 14 Harvard 14, Brown 13 Lehigh 38, Lafayette 0 New Hampshire 13, Kent State 7 Pennsylvania 20, Wisconsin 0 Buffalo 34, Rensselaer 14 Colgate 19, Syracuse 14 Penn State 18, Rutgers 14 Michigan State 19, Pittsburgh 0 Fordham 26, Temple 21 Vermont 24, Middlebury 7 Trinity 24, Wesleyan 7 Princeton 47, Yale 12 Union 26, Hamilton 19 Grove City 14, Bethany 0 Springfield 21, American Internatonal7 City College 33, Lowell Textile 6 wagner 13, Kings Point 6 vanderbilt 29, Memphis State 13 washington & Lee 33, Louisville 28 western Maryland 14, Johns Hopkins 6 Tulane 42, Virginia 18 Bloomsburg (Pa.) Teachers 1Indiana (Pa.) Teachers 0 Waynesburg (Pa.) 58, West Virginia Wesleyan 12 Norheast Louisiana College 13, Ameron (Oka. A&M) 13 (tie) Ciaflin 6, South Carolina A&M 2 Tuskegee 7, Alien University 7 (tie) Clemson 57, Frman 2 Duke 47, Virginia Tech 6 Miami (Fla.) 20, Florida 14 Georgia 12, Auburn 10 Hampden-Sydney 28, Sewannee 20 V.M.I. 13, The Citadel 7 Tennessee 35, Mssippi 0 North Carolina 14, South Carolina 7 Davidson 39, Richmond 0 wake Forest 6, North Carolina State 6 (Tie) Maryland 41, West Virginia 0 Quantico Marines 48, Tampa 0 Alabama 54, George Tech 19 Cincinnati 33, Xavier (Ohio) 20 Illinois 14, Ohio State 7 Indiana 18, Marquette 7 Iowa 14, Notre Dame 14 (tie) Detroit 20, Oklahoma A&M 13 Otterbein 20, Muskingum 13 Minnesota 27 Purdue 14 Denison 40, Capital 0 Valparaiso 20, Wittenberg 7 John Carroll 33, Baldwin-Wallace 2 Nebraska 20, Iowa State 13 Kentucky 83, North Dakota 0 Kansas 47, Kansas State 7 Ohio University 10, Western Michigan i Oklahoma 41, Missouri 7 Miami (Ohio) 69. Western Reserve 14 Tulsa 48, Wichita 0 Rices21, Texas A&M 13 Texas 21. Texas Christian 7 Southern Methodist 14, Arkansas 7 Houston 36, William & Mary 18 Albright 33, Muhenberg 6 Haverford 13, Swarthmore 6 Rider 26, East Stroudsburg Teachers 7 Bucknell 13. Delaware 0 Millersvllle 25, Mansfield 6 Shippensburg 35, SlIppery Rock 6 Lycoming 41, National Aggie 6 Carnegie Tech 20, Wesaminster 0. Elizabeth City MN.) Teachers 0, Fay- etteville (N.C.) Teachers 0 (tie) Emory & Henry 32, Randolph-Maxon 20 west Virginia State 23, Wilberforce (Ohio) State 19 Florida A&M 0, Southern University 0 (tie) Camp Lejeune (N.C.) Marines 26, Shep- herd College (W.Va.) 0 Arkansas State 27, Henderson 13 Betall Midwest 6, Hendrix (Ark.) 0 Butler 32, Indiana State 0 Oberlin 58, Wooster 2 Wabash 34, Depauw 20 Ohio Northern 35, Ashland 12 Elmhurst 25, Rose Poly 21 Bluffton 14, Huntington 0 Bradley 20, New Mexico 19 William Jewell 27, Central (Mo.) 26 West 'rexas State 47, Hardin Simmons 31 Army 7,, Stanford 0 North Texas 34, Nevada 21 California 13, San Francisco 7 Colorado 21, Oregon 7 Colorado Mines 14, New Mexico 'A&M 13 Montana 38, Utah State 7 New Mexico Western 28, Arizona State (Flagstaff) 6 Colorado College 20, Idaho State 7 Washington State 21, Oregon State 7 Texas Tech 39, Arizona 7 0--7 0-0 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11 a.- m. Saturdays). SUNDAY, NOV. 19, 1950 VOL LXI, No. 48 Notices School of Business Administra- tio: Students from other Schools and Colleges intending to apply for spring admittance should "se- cure application forms in Room 150, School of Business Adminis- tration, as soon as possible. Fellowship (interdenomination- al) : 10:45 a.m., Church and Sun- day-school. 4:45 p.m., Discussion Group; Pot-luck supper. Mon., Nov. 20, 8 p.m., General Nursery Meeting. Tues., Nov. 21, 8 p.m., Wives' Club Meeting. Wed., Nov. 22, 3:30 p.m., Re- hearsal for the Childrens' Christ- mas Party. Lec-tures University Lecture, auspices of. the Department of Botany. "Pro- cesses Governing the Evolution of Plant Species." Dr. Jens C. Claus- en, of the Division of Plant Bio- logy, Carnegie Institution of Washington. 3:30 pm.' Mon., Nov. 20, Rackham Amphitheatre. University Lecture, auspices of the Department of Germanic Lan guages and Literatures. "Ibsen's (Continued on Page 4) UfilVERSITY CHOIR CONCERT "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Collegiate styles to please -- 10 HAIRSTYLISTS NO WAITING The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State Overnight Permisisons for Wed., at Hill Auditorium Nov. 22, and Thursday, Nov. 23, on Nov. 16 now available may be obtained from the House on 78 and LP records. Director. Taken from WUOM tapes. University Community Center, IDIOM RECORDING CO. Willow Run. Phone 2-7550 Sun., Nov. 19, Village Church 12 DAYS LEFT to order IC CHRISTMAS CARDSU The ability of the stout Michi- NOTRE DAME 0 7 7 0--14 gan State line to pierce through IOWA ........14 0 0 0-14 the Pitt defensive set-up spoiled any hopes of a Panther upset via LATE HOCKEY forward passes. Bestwick was Detroit 2, Boston 1 smeared back of the scrimmage line time after time. 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