PAGxE IX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, QCTQBER fi, 195I PAGE SIX SUNDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1951 Purdue.. .34 Northwestern 20 Illinois .. .14 Indiana .. Iowa . . . . 30 Army . . . . 14 Wisconsin . . 10 Pittsburgh.. 1 ; California . . 55 Princeton . . 24 Tennessee jNavy . . . 20jDuke.. . . . . 26 Georgia Tech. 13 6 Minniiesota . 149 0 1Kentuncky .. 7 . Spartans Edge Buckeyes in Final Minutes, 24-20 wa I BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Illini Edge Wisconsin In Rough Game, 14-10 By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN - Illinois surged from behind for a fourth period touchdown yesterday to defeat Wisconsin 14-10 in a Big Ten game of lucky breaks and hot tempers. While 56,207 watched in the stadium's murky gloom and mil- lions of others looked on in a coast-to-coast television hookup, the bitter Conference rivals played a bruising, ragged battle that nearly reached hand to hand com- bat. FOUR PLAYERS - two from each team-were ejected by offi- cials before they could take pokes at each other. All four were key men who might have swayed vic- tory either way had they been permitted to remain. As it was, Illinois barged a- head 7-U in the first four and one half minutes of the game on a 71-yard drive capped by Johnny Karras, who stabbed across from the six yard line. Wisconsin tallied at the outset of the second period and added a field goal for a 10-7 half-time lead Illinois broke the Badgers' back at the start of the finale. Quarterback Don Engels, find- ing himself bottled up, tossed a blind, desperation pass.uIt sailed 30 yards, bouncing out of the hands of end Steve Nose1k, the in- tended receiver, and into the arms of his teammate, Rex Smith. It put Illinois on the Badger eight.' From there fullback Pete Bach- ouros rammed five yards. Then Karras churned the final three for his second touchdown and his fifth in two games. * # : BOILERMAKERS RALLY LAFAYE'ITE, Ind., -Rebound- ing Purdue scored in the last minute to beat Iowa, 34-30, in spite of a three-touchdown per- formance by sophomore George (Dusty) Rice q Iowa. Rice's sparkling show in- cluded an end-zone to end-zone run on the first play of the game. Exactly one minute was left on the clock when quarterback Dale Samuels pitched th e winning touchdown to substitute halfback Tom Redinger. The play cov- ered 38 yards and Redinger was the fifth player to score for Pur- due. S S * CADETS BOW EVANSTON, 11.-A desperation, 33 yard touchdown pass with a minute and a half left gave North- western a 20 to 14 victory over Army's inspired football leftovers before 40,000 at Dyche Stadium, Until Northwestern quarter- back Bob Burson flipped the second of his two touchdown passes on this chill, murky af- ternoon-a toss to second string end Dick Crawford-Army's gal- lant forces had an upset in the making. Army battered through North- western, a three touchdown favor- ite, for two lightning-quick touch- downs in the third period for a 14 to 7 lead. GOPHERS TRAMPLED BERKELEY, Calif.-California's Bears sounded a challenge for Scalped Again Indian Pass Plays -Rock Wolverines 'I1' Talies Made By Perry, APutich (Continued from Page 1) Erie Southwood was the top ground-gainer with 92 yards on 13 rushes. It all started out as a routine affair until late in the first quarter, after four exchanges of downs, when Lowell took a Dick Horn punt on his own 45 and slithered his way down to the Stanford 46. First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepte Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized Last Tally Made With Only Three Minutes Left ToPlay Stanford Michigan 21 19 167 177 209"7 21 7 13 4 d ] 7 4 7 35.5 39 l (0 25 39 LINE UPS STANFORD MICHIGAN Storum.........E..........Perry Vick.,... ,...,.... LT...... ..Johnson Manoogian ..,.LG ........Kinyon Garner...........C . O'Shaugnessy Bonetti........RG.........Wolter Broderick ....,,RT..,,...,...Stribe McClo.....B..RE...... Pickard Kerkorian ,.QB..,.......Putich Hugasian.......LH........ Tinkamn Crist,.........RH.........-Howell Meyers........,.FB... Witherspoon Putich ripped a long pass that / / / //. §. , '<4, J found its way through Wes Brad- <6" % 7r$'; , , ford's hands, but on the next play // ' i>A y / Bradford fought nine yards to the / - //',4 '> / -< 37. Tom Witherspoon got the first / down and another incompleted / , pass later Putich took a pitchout :,' /,A / from Topor and hurled a long pads ' / 7V to Fred Pickard, complete on the ,,>;y seven. ~ , , < ,, <; ; Witherspoon went to the fourDailyRogerReinke ad thn tch gn placieminsce END-AROUND-Untouched by Stanford hands, Lowell Perry dashes into the end zone for the first duggery of old, Witherspoon got Michigan touchdown at 11:58 of the first quarter. Stanford, expecting a line buck from the three the ball, gave it to Topor who yard line, was caught unawares and the tall Michigan end had little trouble in scampering to pay- tossed to Perry on the end around dirt. however, Russ Rescorla missed the try for the extra point, leaving the score 6-0. Stanford for a free ride to pay dirt. scored five minutes liter and remained in command for the rest of the afternoon, winning 23-13. Rescorla's kick was partially blocked, leaving it Michigan 6,, Stanford 0. } -' Prineeton Beats Navy on Kazmaier Aerials BUT AFTER the kickoff Ker- ___ ----ill korian took to the air lanes. The Indians got their first first down T xas f1r m n' e MOUNTAINEERS ROLL WASHINGTON UPSET ern a pass from Kerkorian to Mc- onI tatascfomer korian to Mc- ; Q !KNOXVILLE, Tenn. - An alert SEATTLE-Brilliant passing by Colh that covered 35 yards to the Tarhel, 4 2 Tennessee team scooped up Duke Rudy Bukich and fancycatching .Michigan 2 ._____fmlsadtre thm io Sfumbles and turned them intoby Cosimo (Scooter) Cutri gave Two plays later with third y The Associated Pre touchdowns to smash the Blue down and 16 to go Kerkorian ANNAPOLIS, Md.-Three aer- Devils from the nation's unbeaten'Southern California a 20-13 foot- again unleashed a long heave to ial shots for touchdowns by All- football outfits, 26-0. ball victory over favored Wash- McColl on the west sideline. Pet- America halfback Dick Kazmaier A shirt-sleeved crowd of 45,- ington, scuttling the Huskies' erson took the gamble and tried flashed Princeton to its 15th o00 witnessed the game in 91- hopes for an undefeated season COLUMBUS, Ohio--IP)-Michi- gan State staged a smashing come- back by scoring two touchdowns in the last six mintutes of play to beat Ohio State and its mighty Vic Janowicz 24-20 here yesterday. Janowicz threw a pass for one touchdown, and fought his way over for the second after pulling down a throw that travelled more than 50 yards through the air.. * *.* WHEN A THIRD Ohio State touchdown had the score at 20-10, for the Buckeyes with time run- ning out in the final quarter it looked like curtains for the Spar- tans, rated number one in the As- sociated Press national poll. But Michigan State rolled 75 yards to score again and then a fantastically complicated ball- handling series in the backfield set up the final score. Here's how the game-winning play went. There was two minutes and 30 seconds left to play and Michigap State had the ball on the Ohi6 State 29. It was fourth down with five yards to go. FULLBACK Evan Slonac took a direct pass from center and hand- ed it to quarterback Al Dorow. Dorow pitched out to left half Tom Yewcic and headed for the side- lines. Yewcic lofted a pass over to Dorow, who pulled it down on the Ohio State 15 and raced along the chalk lines, evading grasping tack- lers to Score. The play that set up the win was the first pass of his college career for Yewcic. Until the Spartans staged their uprising, the game looked like all Try FOLLETT'S First USED BO OKS BARGAIN 1PRICES Janowicz. The amazing Buckeye All-American took care of the kickoffs, the punting, a good part of the passing and was a receiver, ball-carrier, blocker and safety- man for his outfit. OHIO STATE was the local fa- vorite and the brilliant Michigan State finale literally stunned a partisan crowd of 82,640-the third largest in the history of the Co- lumbus Stadiun. Penalties stalled two Michigan State drives in the first quarter and the Spartans had to settle for a field goal and a brief 3-0 lead. The first time Michigan State got the ball the green and white went from its own 35 to the Ohio State 36 but a 15 yard penalty killed any scoring chances, _1 STANFORD MICHIGAN 4 20 3-23 S 0 7 0-13 Stanford Scoring: Touchdowns, Kerkorian, Meyers 2; Conversions, Kerkorian 2. Field Goal, Kerkorian. Michigan Scoring: Touchdowns, Perry, Putich. Conversion, Rescor- la. Substitutes: MICHIGAN-ends- Ostermann, Kuntson, Dingman, Stanford, Green, Popp; tackles-Ba- log, Pederson, Geyer, Zatkoff, Ben- nett; guards-Timm, Beison, Dug-y ger; backs-Topor, Billings, Peter-I son, Kress, Bradford, Oldham, Res- corla, LeClaire, Schlicht, STAN- FORD-ends-Eadie, Rye, Thomp- son, Kirkland, Maorley; tackles - Latham, King, Calfee; guards-Hok- anson, H. Cook, Cone, Griffin, Pow- ell; backs-Horn, Castellucci, Bryan, Tanner, Southiwood, Saunders, St. Geme, Rice Auble, s. Cook, Mathias Essegian. national football honors with a smashing 55 to 14 victory over the Minnesota Gophers. A Crowd of 69,000, sitting in summer like weather, saw the defending Pacific Coast Coufer- ence Champions pulverize the, Big Ten Gophers with a ground and aerial attack that brooked no opposition. The strongest California team in years scored two touchdowns in every period. s * s BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Indiana whipped Pittsburgh's football team, 13 to 6, on two touchdowns by fullback Eugene (Pat) Ged- man. The Duquesne, Pa., lad ran 5 yards for one and caught a 16- yard pass from quarterback Lou D'Achille for the other. Smarting from last week's 48-6 loss to Notre Dame, 'Indiana roared back today with a fancy offensive combination starring Gedman, D'Achille and halfback Bobby Robertson. Tj r,, a .+ it to intercept, but the ball clear- ed his outstretched fingers to McColl who was dropped on the seven. Bob Meyers hit the line three timestomove the ball to the one, and then on fourth down with the Michigan defense drawn in tight, Kerkorian went over untouched on the bootleg play. Kerkorian's kick was good. * * * MICHIGAN couldn't get a sus- tained drive going so Billings punt- ed 44 yards out of bounds on the Stanford 18. Eric Southwood and Harry Hugasian lugged the leather to the 30 and Kerkorian was good on passes to McColl and Morley, putting the ball on the Michi- gan 28. Four plays later McColl again took a pass, going out on the two. Meyers smashed over for the t.d., but Kerkorian's kick was low. Four minutes later Meyers again plunged over from the one on the payoff end of a 54-yard drive that featured Kerkorian passes to Mc- Coll and Morley for eleven yards apiece, another to Morley for 13 yards and a scamper around right end to the two by Bob Bryan. In the second half the Wolver- ines almost made a comeback when Putich scored at the end of a 76-yard drive that started when Jim Balog recovered Hugasian's fumble. Putich, Peterson, Brad- ford and Perry carried to the .197 in 12 plays, from where the form- er danced over. But after that Michigan could- n't keep a sustained drive going and Stanford added its final three points on Kerkorian's field goal with 41 seconds left in the game. straight triumph yesterday by a 24-20 score over Navy in a spec- tacular display of offensive fire- works. Navy came close to beating the Tigers for the first time since Cornell turned the trick in the middle of the 1949 season, with a second halfhcomeback that net- ted all the Middie points. TIHE TIGERS sprung away to a 17-0 halftime lead. At that point the 21,000 sweltering fans in Thompson stadium felt the Prin- cetonians were out for a romp since Navy was stumbling all over itself. Then Navy unfurled second half touchdowns of the skyrocket var- iety and missed what might have been the winning score on a drop- ped pass over the goal. : 4 TEXAS ROMPS AUSTIN, Tex.-Texas found the running attack it has been search- ing for and combined it with a proven defense to crush North Carolina, 45-20. Left half Gib Dawson, a 170- pound speedster from Douglas, Ariz., finally ran the way Texas coaches knew he could and hit paydirt twice. He opened the Longhorn scoring by catching quarterback T Jones' 10-yard pass in the end zone for Texas' first tally-in the first quarter. North Carolina's Tar Heels cracked right back with an 87- yard drive. Fullback Dick Weiss took the ball on a spinner and drove through is left guard eight yards to put North Carolina brief- ly in the lead as Abie Williams kicked the extra points. But the blistering Texas attack was just getting warmed up. degree weather. Tennessee, the nation's third, ranked team in the Associated Press poll, showed marked im- provement offensively over its op- ening game. The Vols scored one. in each quarter-once on passes and the other three on running' plays. It was Bukich's what-the-heck, let's-shoot-the-works pass in the dying minutes of the first half that paved the way to USC's 13-7 half-time lead, and he scored the winning touchdown himself in the final period after engineering an- other 75-yard aerial drive. GLADYS SWARTHOUT TUES., OCT. 9, 8:30 I I JOSEF SZIGETI MON., OCT. 1, 8:30 A LIMITED NUMBER OF SEASON TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE A SINGLE TICKETS Information Concerning Follett's Michaigan Book Store, 322 S. State St. Overbeck Book Store,; 1216 S. University Ave. Slater's Bookstore, 336 S. State St. Student Periodical Agency, ,, - Municipal Court Bldg.% Ulrich's Book Store, 549 E. University Wahr's Book Store,L316 S State St. Paul. A. Ward, Law Campus REWARD! Remember these names-they're worth a dollar to you! These are the men who represent TIME on your campus. TiME's traveling sleuth will be on this campus next week tracking down information. He may ask you: "Who's the TIME reprezentative here?" if you can name a campus repre- sentative, you receive a $1.00 reward on the spot. 9 TIME means money for you next week-a dollar for information concerning TIME''yrepresentative on the campus. So it'll be worth your while to remember .. . $3.00 --$240- $1.80 at University Musical Society, Burton Tower L ___ Y -P *Men's shoe prices are LOWER! at the CAMPUS BOOTERY FLORSHEIM -BOSTON IAN - WEYENBERG A £ x w 0" 1- ~0 , . Save up to $2 a pair on new fall styles Manufacturer's prices have been REDUCED. 1 , ,_ "f. 16 vi , ' 1 i ,%n / t h //i i": / , j / / 'sir/ / ., .s l ' t ,/'.. .. . WE A RE passing these lower prices on to you - NOW 4 BIG SPECIALS FOR MEN w _ M .