SUNDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1951 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACtE SP.VFlS a-as r itriiy.2 . a £aa1 .. 1 tl, kx rO~cO VrG 1 14 me . 3U MSC . . . 9 Pitt . * . . . .5$ Tennessee . . . . . 26 Tenn Tech. . 68 . 0 Texas Rice . . . . 14 Army.. . .. 6 Columbia . . 14 Princeton . . 53 California . . 9 Cornell . . . 15 Oregon . 35 Stanford . . . 14 Washington . 14 7 Illini Defeat Indiana, 7 21-9; Badgers Whip NU, 41-0 u * * * * ,1 f .. THE MORNING LINE By TED PAPES Daily Sports Editor BENNIE OOSTERBAAN SAT on a big trunk in the Michigan dress- ing room after the game yesterday, with a smile of genuine appre- ciation on his face. He was as happy as a flea in a dog pound. Removing the sweater and pair of overshoes which he had worn on the sidelines while watching his boys rock the Golden Gophers, he turned and said simply, "It's wonderful the way they give so much of what they have out there." "By the way, what was the final score?" he asked. The whirlwind offensive display had left even the head coach in confusion. Governor G. Mennen Williams elbowed his way through a maze of players and well-wishers to shake hands with Bennie. He, too, was more than a little amazed. "I was a few minutes late and missed two touchdowns," remarked the state's chief executive. * * * * Happy Days Here Again MANY FORMER MICHIGAN players, celebrating another Wolverine homecoming triumph, filed into the spirited atmosphere to get in a word or two of congratulations. The players themselves reflected the tenor of this third West- ern Conference success in a row as they jostled each other with- out restraint. Captain Putich could only say, "It feels great!" Per- ry, Bradford, Pickard, Peterson, Johnson, Zatkoff and the other principals were grinning like Halloween Jack-OLanterns Don Oldham, who played a great game on pass defense, neverthe- less showed a trace of disappointment. His last-minute interception of a Minnesota pass had sent him streaking up the field wtih what could have been another scoring play, but after outrunning the entire Go- pher team he was tripped up by a flying desperation tackle less than 20 yards from the goal. Actually the play was as good as a touchdown because a moment later the Zanfagna-Stanfard pass play clicked in the end zone. Ben Pederson was knocked unconscious during the bitter struggle but his injury is not serious. Some folks were alarmed when Putich began favoring his right knee after a pileup late in the game, but it was nothing more than a cramp. A check-up revealed that Putich's 12 yard touchdown run around right end in the first period was supposed to be a passing play, but the versatile tailback was trapped on the left so he threw himself into re- verse quickly enough to fool everyone. * * * * Fesler Singing the Blues .MHE MINNESOTA LOCKER ROOM was subdued as might be ex- pected. Wes Fesler bemoaned his team's lack of agility and inability to gain posses ion from the offense-minded Wolverines. He could hardly believe that the Gophers had "scored four touchdowns, run the ball inside the enemy 10 yard line three other times and still lost by such a margin." Fesler refused to compare Michigan with California (victor by 55 to 14 over Minnesota) because of the many variable factors involved. It was easy to see that he was impressed by the play of the Champ- ions, however. As the Minnesota coach was talking; one of his former gridiron pupils at Ohio State came up to shake hands. It was Bob Momsen, star Bucleye lineman now with the Detroit Lions of the National Football League. He'll be one of the principals in today's battle with the Bears at Briggs Stadium. * * * * Illinois Scout Worried UPSTAIRS IN THE PRESS BOX we had an opportunity to talk with Leo Johnson, veteran scout for the University of Illinois. This was the third straight weekend in which he had watched the Wolverines per- form and he was quite concerned with their obvious progress. "You look as good as last year and I can't understand it in view of your backfield losses," Johnson remarked. "Those boys are getting faster and sharper each week." He looks for another wide-open offensive show next Saturday when Michigan and the Illini meet at Champaign. Most sportswriters on hand yesterday felt that Minnesota showed signs of a new football era in the Northland. Fesler has injected some imagination into the Gopher attack. Best example of that was the third touchdown scored by the visitors which came on a play without a huddle, involving a short pass and a precision lateral with seconds left to play in the first half. f l A Illini, Paced By Karras, op Indiana BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - (A)-- Halfback Johnny Karras, the worst thing that ever happened to In- diana's football team, scored three touchdowns for Illinois yesterday and the Illini beat the Hoosiers, 21-0. He started his show with an 88-yard scoring run in the first quarter that set a new Western Conference record for the longest touchdown play from scrimmage. IT WAS THE third straight sea- son the 175-pound bundle of grid- iron leopard had proved too strong and fast for Indiana's defense. The difference was that he scored only one touchdown each in the Illini's 1949 and 1950 victories over the Hoosiers. Setting itself up as the team to beat in the Big Ten, Illinois had hordes of hard-running re- placements for Karras. He made the payoff plays but Pete Ba- chouros, Bill Tate and Don Ste- vens also smashed consistently through the battered Indiana line. Undefeated Illinois, now winner of five straight games including tw oconference contests, matched its poisonous offensive play with a fine defensive performance. AL BROSKY, Illinois safety man, twice hauled down Indiana passes that were tagged "touchdown" in the first half. Dick Ashburner threw both of them from the Illi- nois 20. Brosky's second intercep- tion 'started an Illinois drive cli- maxed by Karras' second touch- down. Fine punting by Indiana's Bobby Robertson, who once boot- ed the ball dead on the Illinois 6, kept the Illini off balance through all but the lasminute of the first quarter. Illinois did- n't make a first down until mid- way in the second period. Then it ground out six in a hurry. The turning point came with Stanley Wallace's recovery of an Indiana fumble on the Illinois 11. Ray Petrauskas had recovered an Illinois fumble at the Illinois 23 two plays earlier. Illinois gave Karras the ball twice after it re- gained possession and then he made his 88-yard trip. * * * THE 88-YARD dash replaced the 85-yard run by halfback Bill Cul- ligan of Michigan against Wiscon- sin 1944 as the Big Ten conference record for the longest scoring play from scrimmage. Illinois' first appearance in Bloomington since 1946, when it lost, disappointed a homecoming crowd of 33,000. SPEEDY WES BRADFORD (19) RUNS INTO DIFFICULTIES National Grid Scores l <. By The Associated Press MIDWEST Iowa State 13, Drake 0 Illinois 21, Indiana 0 Michigan 54, Minnesota 27 Michigan State 53, Pitt. 26 Notre Dame 30, Purdue 9 Ohio University 28.rKent State 27 Toledo 12, Bowling Green 6 Oklahoma 55, Colorado 14 Kansas 33, Kansas State 14 Wisconsin 41, Northwestern 0 Kenyon 34, Capitol 27 Ohio Wesleyan 20, Oberlin 13 Cincinnati 53, Texas Western 18 Ohio State 47, Iowa 21 Missouri 35, Nebraska 19 Western Reserve 15, Washington (Sti) 12 Lake Forest 41, Augustana (Ill.) 32 Western Illinois 63, Michigan Nor- mal 28 Kalamazoo 51, Hillsdale 27 Albion 25, Adrian 12 DePauw 25, Hope 23 Maryville (Mo.) 7, Cape Girardeau (Mo.) 0 EAST Yale 27, Colgate 7 Army 14, Columbia 9 Penn 14, Navy 0 Penn State 13, West Virginia 7 Maine 26, Bates 7 Princeton 53, Cornell 15 St. Bonaventure 22, Louisville 21 Dartmouth 26, Harvard 20 Syracuse 33, Fordham 20 Holy Cross 41, Brown 6 Hamilton 21, Haverford 14 Bowdoin 60, Colby 42 Carpegie Tech 18, Case Tech 13 Coast Guard 27, Worcester Tech 7 Bucknell 40, Lafayette 21 Lehigh 25, NYU 20 New Hampshire 54, Vermont 6 Williams 48, Tufts 0 Northeastern 20, Massachusetts 7 Amherst 21, Wesleyan 21 (tie) Bradley 47, Brandeis 0 St. Lawrence 61, Clarkson Tech 7 Cortland State Tchrs. 35, Brockport State Tchrs. 13 St. Michael's (Vt.) 12, Springfield 7 Franklin and Marshall 53, Swarth-. more 13 Gettysburg 27, Johns Hopkins 7 Potomac State 26, Shepherd 7 Jacksonville Naval 13, Patuxent (Md.) Naval 6 Washington & Jefferson 7, Thiel 6 California (Pa.) State Tchrs. 20, Shippensburg (Pa.) State Tchrs. 13 Iowa Bows To Stormy OSUAttack Buckeye Aerials SparkOffense COLUMBUS, O. - ( ) - Ohio State rebounded sky-high after a series of set-backs yesterday to defeat Iowa 47-21 in an offensive Big Ten football battle before 67,- 551 fans.* NEITHER team showed any- thing in the way of defense as Ohio piled up 399 yards in net gains, and the Hawkeyes advanced 342. The victory was Ohio's first in three Western Conference con- tests, and the loss was Iowa's third in as many conference starts. Ohio also has a tie. The Buckeyes put on one of their fanciest aerial shows as they completed 11 of 18 passes for 308 yards, all the completed tosses featuring touchdown drives. The seven Ohio scoring surges covered a total of 437 yards and the Buckeyes made it in 30 plays, in which the 11 completed passes ate up 308 yards. Another 28- yard gain waschalked up on a pass interference play. THE HAWKEYES had a 23-18 edge in first downs, but were nev- er in the game as Ohio built up a 27-0 halftime lead. A Backfield in motion penalty. nullified an Iowa touchdown early in the game, when quar- terback Burt Birtzmann passed into the end zone to halfback George Rice. Loss of the score, which would have been the first of the game, upset the Hawk- eyes and at that point Ohio took charge. After fullback Reichardt missed a placekick Ohio moved 80 yards in seven plays for the first mark- er. Bernie Skvarka plunged a yard for the score. Read Daily Classifieds Pennsylvania Military 35, Moravian 13 Susquehanna 34, National (Pa.) Ag- gles 6 Kings (Pa.) 14, Mansfield (Pa.) 7- West Virginia State 17, Bluefield State 7 American International 38, New Bri- tain 13 Glennville (W.Va.) 31, Concord (W.- Va.) 0 SOUTH Kentucky 14, Florida 6 Tennessee 68, Tennessee Tech 0 tWashington & Lee 34, Davidson 0 Wake Forest 39, North Carolina 7 William & Mary 20, Richmond 14 Alabama 7, Mississippi State 0 Georgia Tech 8, Vanderbilt 7 Virginia 30, Duke 7 Morris 26, Paine 13 Memphis State 38, Western Kentucky State 0 Auburn 21, Tulane 0 North Carolina State 19, VPI 14 The Citadel 35, Presbyterian 0 Hampton Institute 7, Lincoln (Pa.) 3 'Xavier (La.) 29, Tuskegee 19 Leland 39, Butler College 6 Centre (Ky.) 33, Bethel 0 Howard (Ala.)341, Union (Tenn.) 0 Western Maryland 20, Hampden-Syd- new 15 Fisk 19, Alabama State 0 Florida A & M 26, Bethune Cookman 13 Southeastern (La.) 33, Northwestern (La.) 14 Virginia Union 13, Virginia State 6 Delaware State 14, St. Paul 0 SOUTHWEST East Texas State 53, Sam Houston State 21 Texas Tech 41, Arizona 0 Hardin-Simmons-27, West Texas Staae 6 j Texas 14, Rice 7 FAR WEST Colorado Mines 14, Colorado State 13 Western Colo. 24, Montana State 0 Idaho State 34, Arizona State (Flag- staff) 20 Colorado College 21, Camp Carson 14 Pacific University 20, Lewis and Clark 12 Denver 56, Brigham Young 6 Utah State 19, Montana 6 Washington State 41, Oregon 6 Stanford* 14, Washington 7 Wyoming 13, Utah 0 Southern California 28, Texas Chris- tian 26 California 35, Oregon State 14 Badgers Drop Wildcats From Unbeaten Ranks EVANSTON,, Ill.-('-Wiscon- sin's Jerry Witt, a "B" team un- known two weeks ago, scored four times as the fierce Badgers smash- ed Northwestern from the unbeat- en ranks 41-0 in a tremendously one-sided Big Ten game yester- day. * * * WITT, 194 - pound sophomore halfback, scored on runs of 69 and four yards and on two passes from whip-armed quarterback John Coatta covering 60 and 16 yards. Northwestern, winner of four straight, was a completely out- classed team, its defense torn to shreds by the prancing of Witt and freshman Alan (the horse) Ameche, and Coatta's deAdly passing.; Fanning their Rose Bowl hopes to white heat, the Badgers threw up such a vicious defense that Northwestern made a minus five yards by rushing in the first half. Against Badger reserves North- western reached Wisconsin's eight for its best effort. * * * WITT scored his fourth touch- down, on a 59-yard romp, with the third quarter less than four min- utes old for a 28-0 Wisconsin lead. The ball game really ended there. Reserves produced Wisconsin's fifth and sixth touchdowns. Burt Hable passed six yards to Kent Peters for a third period score. In the fourth quarter, substitute fullback Bill Schleisner smashed over from the three. Illinois and Michigan rate stronger Big Ten title favorites, but Michigan is ineligible for the Rose Bowl and VAsconsin has only Minnesota, Iowa and Indiana left on its conference schedule. ILLINOIS has still to play Mich- igan.next week, and will then have COEDS!! Try our 5 Hair Stylists for the latest short haircut! The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre to take on an Ohio State squad which is rebounding from its early season slump. Wisconsin has a 2-1-1 record, but the Badgers are the only team in the Big Ten playing seven games, a factor which may give them some advantage. The Northwestern team that had beaten Colorado, Army, Minnesota and Navy looked as though it did- n't belong on the same field with the rugged Badgers. * * * NORTHWESTERN'S doom was sealed on the opening kickoff which Wildcat John Damore boot- ed twice out of bounds, giving Wis- consin the ball in midfield. Six plays later, Coatta shot a 16-yard toss to Witt in the corner for an easy score. Ameche, a 206-pound demon, ripped 29 yards in three tries during the march. That was the pattern through- out the first half-Coatta find- ing easy targets with his passing and Ameche spearheading a crunching ground attack. On the first play of the second quarter, Coatta worked his 60- yard pass play with Witt, Who wrested the ball from Northwest- ern's Wally Jones on the Wildcats' 35 and easily streaked for a touch- down. Also in the second quarter, Witt capped a 44-yard touchdown strike by circling across from North- western's four. That gave Wisconsin a 21-0 halftime verdict. TYPEWRITERS RENTED SOLD BOUGHT REPAIRED STUDENT SUPPLIES G.1. Requisitions Accepted on Supplies Only Webster-Chicago Wire Recorders MORRI LL'S 314 S. State St. Ph.7177 fountain pens repaired I' .4a t t \ I .1 " 1 7 g5 R t Brunch CUoa7ts- DUSTER STYLE In materials of cotton, cotton quilted, cor- duroy, and rayon crepe. In solid colors, checks, and floral designs. 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