smNDAY, OCTOBER 1, 190 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY ?AGE 8I~VEN Wisconsin . . . 28 Texas . . . . .. . 34 So. Methodist . . 32IIlinois....... 28' Iiidiaiia . . . . . . 20 I Notre Dame . . . 14 Northwestern . ~1 Marquette ... . 6jPnrdue . . .... 26~Ohio ~Iate . . . * 27Ohio U. . *.*.. Nebraska .... . 2O1North Caroline . 7IIowa State ... 4g~ ' ~ g.-,gb~JI-f-54f~ I~C5II~iTbC) Lone '21J~ 4 TD. ~# .*~ ~..~ ;4:.*.*&~A~~ 's~4~ ~' *pJr7ahl, * S~ .-~' ~.. '~A**~ '~ _______________ ~4 .~' . 23'Washington . .. 28 .13 Minnesota .. .. 13 (Continued from Page 1) ped the ball to Sonny Grandelius who was standing undefended on he left flank. lHe steppedl into paydirt un- touched, as Spartan rooters went wild. STRONG FORWARD WALL Earlier in the opening period, the tense Spartan fans .were de- nied the opportunity to cut loose as the then hot Michigan forward wall held for downs in a series of four plunges that began on the Michigan three. The Wolverines took possession of the ball less than a foot from their own goal line and Ortmann dropped back to punt. He un- corked a spiraling kick that sailed more than 60 yards through the sky and came down 52 yards from scrimmage. Neither team scored a first down and the resulting exchange of punts gave State the ball on their own 33, whence began their early tOrtmann received Spartan Bob Carey's after-touchdown kickoff on the Michigan goal and skipped through the State tacklers for 36 yards of broken field ground gain- ing, but was slow from getting out of the pile after the tack. .g| was made. He took a direct pass from cen ter on the next play, and as lh shifted his weight to pivot, th- Michigan passer dropped to tb and was unable to see action the remainder of the contest. Th he will be available for next wee] contest is still questionable. The Big Ten co-champs dro hard as they made two stror scoring bids. Late in the secor period, with fullback Don Duf( carrying most of the load, tI Wolverines rolled 55 yards, bi.r* were stopped on State's 22. Earlier, they penetrated to tL MSC 10, but were halted when ~ '--al E om speedy Jesse Thomas intercepted-ay-Kom Putich' pass attempt. NOT ENOUGH OF THIS-SPARTANS STOPPED ON GOAL-LINE IN FIRST PERIOD ALONG WITH Grandelius and Craneg inthea unexpectedl strongPR RCe S TMO M T 6 f poised junior, needled the weak ti ie m k r r y C n u r o g t Michigan pass-defense with his accurate aerials all afternoon. e C m TR L Ra 1 ,4 - Eeciv n key snnts Craneue'o e yO o gGalp,2- TOO MUCH OF THIS-LEROY CRANE SCORES MSC'S SECOND TOUCHDOWN * * * * * * * * * LOCK ER ROOM CONTRASTS-:, M nn Laud Spirited Pla of Spras By BOB SANDELL "I' extremely proud of my kids. They turned in a tremen- dous, spirited performance." These were the words of~ a happy Clarence "Biggie" Munn yester- day afternoon just after his cou- rageous Michigan State Spartans had finally snapped the long string of Wolverine victories that had stretched back to 1937. * * * * "BIGGIE" wouldn't single out any outstanding performer on the squad, claiming they all played good. He thought the turning point of the game was Jesse Tho- mas' pass interception in the wan- r ug moments of the contest. The State lockier room was a scene .of wild cheering and sing- ing. Quarterback Al Dorow was hieard to say, "This Is some- thing I'll never forget. We're going to be a tough team to beat this year." Of his pass interceptions the ed that he just happened tobe in the right place at the right time. * * * OVER IN THE quiet of the Michigan dressing room, Coach Bennie Oosterbaan praised the Sipartan team and singled out Al Wahi and Tony Momsen as play- ing exceptionally for the Wolver- ines. Charlie Ortmann was a pie- ture of disappointment and sor- row as he slowly dressed. Char- lie injured his ankle in the first quarter and didn't return to the contest. Oosterbaan didn't think any- body else was seriously injured. They got their usual bumbs and bruises. A key play in the fourth quar- ter was a beautiful tackle by Le- roy Crane on a punt to Frank Howell . . . Crane nailed the Wolverine sophomore on the four yard line and two plays later Thomas returned Koceski's punt to the Michigan 19. setting up the winning sc... . . Michi- gan changed tleir defense in the second half to almost balt the Spartan passing attack. ... The Wolverines let their ends fall back to cover the receivers and as a result State completed only two passes for 23 yards as compared to six for 85 in the first half. Michigan's first quarter goal line stand brought to mind the 1948 WolverIne defensive line which pulled the trick regularly ...Both teams made extensive use of the two platoon system, sub- stituting 7 to 9 men when the ball changed hands . . . . Wolver- ines who saw a lot of double duty were Leo Koceski, Don Dufek, and Sophomore Lowell Perry. ... Michigan's passing attack was handled by an exclusive group, alphabetically speaking. . . . It was nearly always Putich or Peter- son to Picard or Perry. Michigan probably used the "T" formation more than they ever have in a single contest. . ... Bill Putich passed from his quar- terback position and mixed up the attack with quick opening plays through the line and passouts to the halfs and the fullback. DETROIT--Detroit's Red Wings who won the National Hockey League championship and Stanley Cup playoffs last season, will test their mettle against the best the league can muster in the annual All-Star game at Olympia Sun- day, Oct. 8. The game wvill be a major test for the Detroiters, who juggled their personnel pretty sharply in off season trading. With the previous three games all having resulted in All Star victories, manager Jack Adams and his crew have set their sights on becoming the first Stanley Cup defender to win the blue ribbon contest of hockeydom. ' ' Mich.' Rushin Yardag 109 Passin Yardage 133 Passes Attempted 32 Passes Completed 13 Passes Intercepted 1 Punts 8 Punt Average 38.7 Fumbles Lost 1 Yards Penalized 25 MSC 158 108 19 8 2 8 40 0 25 set up the winning touchdown by smashing through a line of Michigan blockers and diving low to tackle the Wolverines, Frank Howell who received a punt on his own four. Dufek dove to the seven, but when Ko- ceski punted from his own goal with second down and seven showing on the scoreboard, Thomas returned to the Michi- gan 19. With 11 minutes and 40 seconds remaining in the final quarter, Grandelius carried to the eight and Crane dove through center and bounced over the goal. Carey again converted and the 14-7 score remained unchanged. Two minutes of playing time remained in the game as the Spartans ran four plays from their own 35 and then punted to Putich who reversed the ball to Koceski who in turn was smoth- ered on the spot. The Wolverines then had the ball on their own 24 with 32 sec- c o On the first play. Putich long pass was again intercepted by Thomas and State rooters be- gan laying plans for the destruc- tion of the goal posts. I Line-Ups University of Michigan Oratorical Association SPECIA L RAT E FOR ST U DENTS-Second Balcony, Unreserved-$2.40 TeXas,_3-2 6 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-(IP)-Illinois mixed a strong rnning and pass- ing attack yesterday to post a 28 to .2 victory over an outclassed Ohio University team. The game, played before 32,685 spectators in Memorial Stadium, was only five minutes old when Illinois' Sam Piazza, 150-pound halfback raced 40 yards for the first touchdown. After that, Illi- nois dominated the game com- pletely. * * * JOHNNY KAILRAS, the Argo Express who led Big Ten ground gainers last year as a sophomore, passed for one of the Illinois touchdowns and scored another. Dick Raklovits, who made several dazzling runs, counted the other touchdown. Ohio University's only real threat came at the start of the game when Illinois fumbled the kickoff and the visitors recover- ed on the Illini 33-yard line. Tom.Anderson completed a pass to the two-yard stripe. After a penalty put Ohio back to its seven yard line, the Illinois defense held Fre Maors who way maved up to first string quarterback after Don Engel was injured a week ago, kept the Ilhinois attack roll- ing with his accurate passing. Ohio scored a safety in the fourth period to escape a shutout. AUSTIN, Texas-('P)-The Uni- versity of Texas Longhorns, two- touchdown favorites over Purdue's Boilermakers, were hard pushed to win 34 to 26 before 40,000 spec- tators here yesterday. Texas' passing attack was not as sharp as usual but it accounted for two touchdowns, while a vastly improved running game sent Longhorn runners across the goal line three times. PURDUE HELD Texas to a 7-7 tie in the first quarter and was close enough on the Longhorn's heels to keep Texas fans nervous until the late moments of the final period. Sophomore left half Gib Dawson scored twice for Texas, once on a 24-yard pass play in the second quarter and on a pitchout good forwo y~ards and the final touch- Ferocious defensive play by left end Leo Sugar, the outstanding lineman of the day, helped Pur- due make a game of it. He did a great job of rushing the Texas passers and accounted for the Boilermakers' second - touchdown by recovering a fumble hehind the Texas goal line. for Students interested in Business Administration or Economics. Come over and meet Students and Faculty in Your Field! ____ON WEST POINT, N. Y.-(IP)-Vic Pollock, a slender, speedy halfback from Linfield, Pa., set a Michie Stadium record with a 94 yard extenddw it ubeaten football rec ord to 21 consecutlves games .by whipping Colgate 28 to 0'. Pollock's run was just one of several long gallops that provided a one-sided score for a game that might otherwise have been close, or even disastrous for Army. Fullback Gil Stephenson gal- loped 55 yards to set up the Sunday, Oct. 1 1212 Hill SI. 3-5 P.M. MICHIGAN Perry .. Clark Popp Pos. ... LE M.S.C. ....R. Carey King Dibble Dekker ..... Coleman Stevens Kozikowski .. ...Yocca Iopening touchdown In the first quarter. His substitute on the offensive, Al Pollard, scored scored on a 47-yard run In the second period and Jim Cain and Jack Martin reeled off long runs that failed t. produce. Stephenson made -two' of the touchdowns, scoring the first on an eight-yard of f tackle drive after his long dash and the third on a three-yard plunge at the end of Army's one concerted drIve. P01- lard, tabbed as Army's secret wea- pon, kicked all four extra points. ii Johnson ......LT Hess Powers .....LG Kinyon McWilliams Pad jen .. .. ....C Momsen Farrer Kelsey....... RG Jackson Wahl .. . .. ...RT Ohlenroth Alli ........ RE Putich...... .QB Palmer Billings Ortmann . .. .LH Peterson Koceski ...... RH Howell Dufek ....... FB Zatkoff .. ..Tamburo Bolthouse Weaver ....Tobin Kuh ....Horrell Stroia ..... Mnarik *...... Dorow Jones W. Carey ... Grandelius J. Thomas Mc uhife .....Vogt Pisano Benson .....Crane Timmerman SPanin I ATTENTION? GRADUATES DAVID LILIENTKAL Former Chr. Atomic Energy Commission "The Atom In Peace and War" and SENIORS CHARLES LAUGHTON Distinguished Actor "The greatest demonstra- tion of a orie-man theatre seen in years." - Montreal Star. T hose expecting to receive their Career-man's watch N /\ E G A diegrees in February, June or BENNETT CERF Humrs Pres. Random House "Changing Styles in American Humor" LOWELL In One of the Great Adven- ture Stories of Our T ime "Out of T his World: A Journey to Lhasa" Color Motion Pictures "The Truth About the Aom Bob This 1 7-jewel stainless steel automatic winding Omega with sweep second hand is water-resistant. Automaalystrs p 6-r:eer ve-a owid sportsmen, doctors, laboratory technicians. $95.00. (F.T.I.) August have only 19 more clays in which to maize their picture appointments for the 1951 year- b00k, the Michiganensian. Other Omega Automatics from $71.50 Master of the Documentary "England ina Changing II - Office hours are 9-12 A.M. and 2-5 P.M., Monday through Friday. JOHN MASON BROWN Noted Author and Critic C) U '~VN liii II