9 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1951 Wolverines Beat Gophers with Six Intercej rtions 'V & * * * Cal Trounces Oregon State; USC Edges Stubborn TCU BERKELEY, Calif.-(P)-Cali- fornia's Bears thundered down football's comeback trail yesterday with a thumping 35-14 victory over Oregon State's bulky Beavers. A crowd of 43,000 saw the contest. Beaten last week by USC, for the first time in four seasons in con- ference play, the defending Coast Conference Champions cracked the stone wall defense of USC for four touchdowns in the first half and another in the third period. ** * AFTER BUILDING up what ap- peared to be a game-clinching score, the Bears yielded two touch- downs to the Fighting Beavers in the final quarter. California combined breaks and heads-up play to count a first period score and three more Sin the second quarter. The Bears boosted the count to 35-4 in the third period. The third period touchdown was the most sensational run of the game, a 98-yard gallop b: right halfback Bill Powell. It was the longest run from scrimmage in California football history, better- ing the record 90-yard dash by W. S. Heitmuller in the Bears' 1902 game with the Sherman Indians. Les Richter place-kicked the five conversions. LOS ANGELES -(OP)- Texas Christian University almost knock- ed Southern California loose from its new-found national reputation yesterday, but the Trojans came from behind with counter brilli- ance in the last quarter and emerg- ed on the top end of a 28-26 score. The game, pitting the top teams of the Pacific Coast and the South- West Conferences, and witnessed by 50,732 fans, was not decided un- til the final gun. TWO INVALUABLE points mis- sed on attempted conversions and two touchdowns fumbled away in the end zone, cost the Horned Frogs from Fort Worth the victory. The vaunted Trojans, rated No. 6 this past week in the As- sociated Press poll, went into the intersectional battle favored to whip the Frogs by 13 points, at least. Instead, USC was held to a 7-7 tie at halftime, and only the heroic play of tailback Frank Gifford and awakened wingback Al Carmichael, brought USC its fifth collegiate triumph of the season. THE OUTSTANDING star for TCU was its 19-year-old sopho- more, Ray McKown, who led his team to an upset win over Texas A&M last week and almost did it again this bright, warm after- noon. USC took a 7-0 lead in the second quarter. Getting across the 50 yard stripe for the first time, Gifford led the Trojans 48 yards in six plays and scored the first of his two touchdowns. TCU came back with an 82- yard thrust, as halfback John Me- danich raced 20 yards from a clos- ed formation-the first of but a few all day-for the tally. Notre dame Overpowers Purduemen SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- Notre Dame touched off a group of teen- aged thunderbolts, fused by fresh- man Paul Reynolds, that shot through Purdue yesterday for aj 30-9 football victory. The youthful Irish, trailing 9-7 in the third period, opened up with 23 points within the next 20 min- utes to frisk off with their fourth win in five starts. * * * FOUR different players romped into touchdown territory and soph- omore Menil Mavraides booted a field goal and three conversions. The rout amply avenged an upset 28-14 victory by Purdue last year that ended Notre Dame's four-sea- son undefeated streak. The triumph, punched out be- fore 57,890 fans who sat through a cold drizzle that was finallyI ended by the sun, was the Irish's 16th in a 23-game series with the Boilermakers stretching back to 1896. Notre Dame went ahead 7-0 at the half, watched its lead overcome 9-7 by onrushing Purdue in the first 3% minutes of the third, then uncorked a field goal and three touchdowns, two of the scores coming in the final period. Reynolds, a 180-pound ripping halfback from Springfield, Ill., pumped life into Notre Dame af- ter the veterans sledged through a scoreless first quarter. MSC Evicts Scout EAST LANSING-U.4'-Claiming Notre Dame had scouted Michigan State three times already, Athletic Director Ralph Young of MSC asked an Irish scout to leave the press box here yesterday. I Their two football teams meet here Nov. 10.e While neither is a football mem-t ber of the Big Ten, both MSC and Notre Dame subscribe to itst rules which permit only threec scoutings of a team per season.t Young "invited" Johnny Druze of the Notre Dame coaching staff, to pack up his diagramming kit and leave the press box when he spot-1 ted Druze an hour before the game. Big Ten i Standings 1 Bradford Gains 177 Yards; Giel Gets 144 for Gophers Johnson, Zatkoff and Green Spark Defense; Oldham Sets Up Final TD with 82 Yard Run (Continued from Page 1) -Dalvy--Ai Reid VICTORY GRIN-With nothing but grass between him and the Gopher goal line, Michigan end Lowell Perry smiles as he begins the last 30 yard j aunt of a 71 yard pass play early in the third. quarter. Perry snared a Ted Topor aerial on the Minnesota 45 and succeeded in eluding the Go- pher secondary, two of which, Dick Wheaton (45) and Dick Dardis (47) are seen chasing him in vain. Captain Wayne Robinson (barely visible behind Wheaton) closed in on Perry near the fifteen yard line, but his desperation tackle netted Robinson a piece of Perry's jersey and the fleet Wolver- ine end went on to score. The touchdown was number two of the day for Perry who thrilled the Michigan rooters with a 75 yard punt return in the second quarter. In the fourth period Perry added another touchdown as he and Ted Topor clicked on a 25 yard pass play. Perry was outstanding both offensively and defensively in Michigan's 54-27 rout of the Gophers before a homecoming crowd of 87,000, NA TIONAL GRID ROUNDJP: Princeton Whips Cornell; Spartans Win on the Michigan three. Engh was! tackled on the spot but threw a quick lateral to Don Swanson on his way down and Swanson went over with ease. But Michigan broke the 'game open in the second half, staying at least 15 points ahead of the Gophers after Topor threw to Perry for a 71-yard s.coring pass with only two minutes gone. Perry took the ball at the Go- pher 45 on a play which originated at the Michigan 29 and outdis- tanced four Minnesota pursuers to make the score read 34-20. One Minnesota tackler came within a thread of nailing the Ypsilanti flash-he was left clutching part of Perry's jersey-at the fifteen yard line. RESCORLA converted for the fifth straight time and from then on it was Michigan's ball game, al- though the Gophers did manufac- ture one more touchdown. Perry came back to score his Ithird touchdown seven minutes later, again on a Topor pass. The burly quarterback, who has come along like a whirlwind at the position, flipped a beauty to lopin' Lowell from the Minnesota 25 yard line. Perry made a nice catch on the fifteen and swept by tw en to cross the goal line on the east side of the field. Minnesota staged a sustained drive of 74 yards for its final touch- down, with sophomore Giel bear- ing the brunt of the attack. Ron Engel punched over from the four on an end sweep. Cappaletti con- verted and it was, 42-27. e, * * MICHIGAN opened the fourth quarter with another scoring threat. After Bill Putich had pick- ed up three 'on an off-tackle slash, he called a running pass play on the same sequence. Stopped mo- mentarily by a Minnesota lineman, he got off a throw to Fred Pickard on the Minnesota 29 which covered 26 yards. Pickard, who had but- ton-hooked in front of two Gopher defenders, spun around and steam- ed the remaining distance for the touchdown. That would have been enough thrills for most games. But the Maize and Blue reserved another startler for the waning minutes of the contest. Don Oldham, a fine runner who has been something of a hard- luck player, intercepted a Minne- sota pass on his own goal line, cut in beautifully behind a wave of Michigan blockers, and went all the way to the Gopher 18 with the clock showing a half-minute to play. Oldham was tripped up by one cleat and barely failed to go -i the distance. AFTER WHICH Don Zanfagna, third Michigan quarterback to en- ter the game, pitched a great pass to Thad Stanford in the coffin corner for the final Michigan touchdown. Rescorla's conversion attempt, made from the seven be- cause of a penalty, was wide, and the final score was 54-27. Michigan had so many heroes for the day that no man could be, singled out as the big factor in the victory. The Wolverine line, a large part of the recent resurgence, was outstanding, particularly tackle Tom Johnson, who was a . pillar of power on both offense and defense. On defense, Merritt Green and Bob Timm turned off the Gopher faucet time after time. Cleanly-played all the way,the game nevertheless produced three injuries for Michigan. Ben Peder- son was carried off the field in the third quarter, and on the next play Timm was shaken up. Both weret reported to be all right after the game. Putich had a short bout of knee trouble in the fourth period,'- but returned in the closing minutes to help out on defense. For Bradford, the game was a fitting last fling if the Troy, Ohio junior is inducted into the army next week as expected. He was Michigan's leading ground-'gainer with 98 yards on ten carries from* scrimmage. * * * In the Jug MICHIGAN Illinois Wisconsin Ohio State Northwestern Purdue Indiana. Minnesota Iowa 3 2 2 1 1 0 Q I, 0 1 1 1. 2 2 3 T 0 1 0 0 0 a Pct. 1.000 1.000 .625 .500 .500 .500 .333 .000 .000 PF OP 108 41 35 10 88 27 63 59 21 48 41 61 46 64 34 75 51 102 NEW YORK - tP) -- Incredible Princeton - the team that was written off before the season start- ed - ran, passed and stepped over Cornell, 53-15, yesterday, while Tennessee and Michigan State, the top two football outfits in the country, scored 121 points between them. The Vols, rated No. 1 in the weekly Associated Press poll, had only a light scrimmage at the ex- pense of Tennessee Tech, 68-0, while Michigan State vanquished Pitt, 53-26-and had to overcome a 20-19 halftime deficit to turn the trick. ** * CHARLIE Caldwell's Princeton outfit, decimated by graduation, hardly gave Cornell a chance. The Lions To Face Chicag o Bears In NFL Came DETROIT - (P) - The Detroit Lions will be laying their hopes and chances of a National Football League championship on the line today against the Chicago Bears -and they know it. They also know no Lions team has beaten the Bears, now tied with Los Angeles for the National Conference leadership, in 10 con- secutive encounters. AS HOPPED-UP mentally as a college club, the Lions held a pep rally Thursday, vowing to "win this one for (Coach) Buddy (Par- ker)," and expressing belief they let both him and the fans down,in dropping a game to Los Angeles and letting the New York Yanks tie them, Big Red, undefeated until yester- quarterback Al Dorow. A Dorow day, managed to hang on for the to McAuliffe pass, good for 47 first quarter, but thereafter the yards, was the biggest stretch in Tigers pulled away to record their 18th consecutive victory-the long-E est winning streak among major' teams. The story was the same as it has been during most of the win- ning streak -- Dick Kazmaier. The great Tigertown back scored two touchdowns himself and passed for three others, while hisj mates were stopping Cornell's impressive array of runners al- most in their tracks. Michigan State trailed 20-19 at the half but ran wild for three touchdowns in the third quarter. It was the fourth successive Sat- urday that the Spartans have had to come from behind to win from inspired opposition. the second drive. PANIN'S RUN of 62 yards was the spark that gave Michigan State its one second quarter touchdown. McAuliffe scored from the 11. Chris Warriner, Lou Cimarolli and Dick Deitrich made some miracle catches from Bestwick throws when he was hitting in the first half. GEORGIA TECH, Illinois and Texas, all members of the top ten, came out with victories, but Bay- lor, Southwest Conference leader, was forced to settle for a 21-21 tie l with Texas A and M. i Michigan Firs.................. 16 Rushiug Yardage. 224 Passing Yardage.......203 Passes Attempted....... 9 Passes Completed ...... 8 Passes Intercepted ..... 6 Punts .......... Punts Average........ 34 Fumbles Lost .......... 3 Yards Penalized.......50 Minnesota 20 145 ' 249 33 16 0 4 40.5 I 24 " ''i~s Y/ Going for GARGI --1I THE UNCANNY pin-point pass- ing of Pitt quarterback Bob Best- wick made it look for awhile as if the Spartans might finally be in for an upset. Michigan State took a 13 to 0 first quarter lead, then Bestwick, who could do no wrong in that first half, started hitting his ends with long ones. His 16, completions in 21 tries for 235 yards in the first half accounted for all the Pitt touchdowns in the frame. The familiar pattern of all re- cent MSC wins followed. Michi- gan State drove 87 yards for one third period score, safety man Jim Ellis ran a punt back 54 yards for the second score. The third drive in the quarter rolled 86 yards for another touchdown. Don McAuliffe and Leroy Bolden capped the long drives by carry- ing over. Michigan State's two early scores were on a 60-yard run by fullback Dick Panin and a four-yard pass completion from McAuliffe to Georgia Tech was hampered by a muddy field, but managed to eke out an 8-7 triumph over Vanderbilt, to maintain its un- blemished record and keep up with Tennessee in its quest for the southeastern conference championship. Baylor's tie with Texas A and M, combined with Texas' win over Rice threw the Southwest Confer- ence race into a scramble. Baylor, Texas A & M and Texas all could win it. Notre Dame, its teen-agers clicking smoothly, walloped Pur- due, 30-9 and Kentucky, another team that's coming along after a wretched start, stopped Florida, 14-6. Babe Parilli's two passes ac- counted for both Kentucky touch- downs. In the Big Seven, Oklahoma pro- jected itself into the top spot by whipping Colorado, 55-14. The Sooners are seeking their fourth straight title. Kansas dropped Kansas State, 33-14, and Nebraska took it on the chin again, this time from Missouri, 35-19. 0 Tau Delts Eke Win Tau Delta Phi beat Triangle in overtime in the fourth revival of their annual homecoming classic yesterday. The Tau Delts won in the over- time period when Sherman Car- mell intercepted a Triangle pass to gain a 15-yard rushing advant- age. They began rolling in the middle of the first half with a 30 yard jaunt by Gene Curtiss to the Tri- angle four. Tau Delta Phi capital- ized on the.gain with Curtis firing a short pass to Erv Rubenstein for a touchdown. Triangle evened things up in the second half with a short touch- down pass. The situation remained the same until the Tau Delts came through in overtime. LATE HOCKEY SCORE Detroit 2, Toronto 1 MICHIGAN LE PERRY, Green, Stanford, Schlicht, Walker LT JOHNSON, Pederson, Balog, Bar- tholomew LG KINYON, Kelsey, Timm, Wagner C O'SHAUGHNESSY, Morlock, Bow- ers4 RG WOLTER, Dugger, Matheson, Wil- liams RT STRIBE, Zatkoff, Bennett RE PICKARD, Osterman, Knutson, Dingman QB TOPOR, Billings, McDonald, Zan- fagna LH PUTICH, Oldham, Eaddy RH BRADFORD, Tinkham FB PETERSON, Rescorla, LeClaire, Hurley MINNESOTA LE McNAMARA, French, Soltau LT ALMER, Ryan, Raveling, Holz LG ANDERSON, Lindgren, Burnham C ROBINSON, Wood RG HEINDENREICH, Hugunin RT DRILL, Mundinger, Carlson RE FOSS, Hendrickson, Durda QB SWANSON, Schmitt LE GIEL, Cappelletti RH ENGH, Wheaton, Dardis, Gregory FB WALIN, Swanum, Heinz, Sullivan,. Quist, Holme, Engel, Meighen Score by Periods: Michigan 14 14 14 12-54 Minnesota .... 7 13 7 0-27 Touchdowns: Michigan - Bradford (2); Putich, Perry (3); Picjsard, Stanford. Minnesota-Engel, Carl- son, Swanson. Conversions: Michigan-Rescorla (6) Minnesota-Cappelletti (3). Time of Game: 2 Hours, 35 Minutes. Official Attedance: 86,200. On Sale October 31 Men's shoe prices are LOWER! at the CAMPUS BOOTERY FLORSHEIM - BOSTON IAN - WEYENBERG ACCURACY BEAUTY *"CONVENIENCE C Save up to $2 a pair on new fall styles Manufacturer's prices have been REDUCED. WE ARE passing these lower prices on to you - NOW 'I 0 OMEGA AUTOMATIC The thinnest self-winding watch in the world...made with all the pre- cision that has won for Omega the world's most coveted prizes for accuracy. The slightest movement of your wrist keeps it working perfectly. Shock-resistant and anti-magnetic, 18K gold applied figure dial. Y 4 BIG SPECIALS FOR MEN cwae rdmnrwc _ee. n II Gold Filled Case $71.50 " I+( r ,1 r f 't lid % -* , ,; 11 III III