SUNIDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1951... 0 1 Miami J Reds Amass FOOTI Early Lead Jan By The For Victory Coumbus halfback Vi 14-yard fou. By BOB LANDOWNE yesterday to A strong Miami University of 0 victory ov Ohio jayvee team downed Michi- Western Co] gan's Junior Varsity on the Ferry by 71,089. Field gridiron yesterday morning. It was a g The score was 21-13. tunities and The Big Red from Oxford, Ohio, squads and rolled to a 21-0 lead by virtue of a the biggest touchdown in each of the first each team. three quarters and then staved off FIVE T a Wolverine rally in the final surged deep quarter for its second straight win. but missed f The Maize and Blue now have a and the 12 a 2-2 Junior Varsity record. on downs Tu e star for the Miami team wrecked the was right halfback Bobby Wallace On the ot who, scored all three Redskin ried to the touchdowns on saunters of three, cats wound ten and one yards. quarterback Halfway through the first quar- thrown for ter Miami was forced to punt on aerials. fourth down but Michigan safety Ohio Sta man Dave Ray fumbled and Miami great offe end Mel Baker recovered on the smothering Wolverine eight yard line. missed on Twvo plunges brought the ball chances. TI to the three, and following an in- period the complete pass in the end zone, the Wildca quarterback Denny S tudr aw a move agar pitched out to Wallace who swept Northweste around the right side for the tally. Janowicz Near the close of the half Wal- from the 27 lace capped a 42 yard march with iod and was a ten yard scoring play on a re- becoming the verse over the left side of the lowing two Michigan line. The touchdown play western recc was set up by a 13 yard run by up with his Studrawa whose 14 yard 1rass to the final pe lefthalf Don Hunter also contri- buted to the drive. FOLLOWI Trailing 14-0 at the opening of pointer, the the .second half the Wolverines Northwestern tried to get back in the ball game. ball on the Almost immediately after the which halfb kickoff a pass from Bob Hurley to covered. Late Ed Hickey covered 60 yards and lost the ba put the ball on the Miami seven Northwestern yard line. But the Ohioans held for four Northwes downs and took possession on their a lead ri own four. dmate, Minutes later, Michigan, again placekick in possession, lost a fumble on its plckc own 38 and three Studrawa passes Burson and reached the one from where Wal- Norman Kr laces lugged it over to practically wide of the ice the game. In the fourth quarter the Wol- threw four verines finally began to roll as against Iow Hurley completed four passes for pleted only 54 yards, three to Bob Topp and today for 9 the last one to John Veselenak pleted 12 of that carried to the three. Fromt Northwest there Hurley ran to the one-foot to Ohio's 1 line before Hickey. took the ball gained had a over, ending a 57 yard drive. Topp missed his conversion at- Iowa, G tempt to make the Michigan cause look even darker. Iowa City On the first play after the kick- chardt turn' off Michigan recovered a Miami ternoon into fumble on the Redskins' 15 but 40,000 Iowan three Hurley passes went incom- ing Iowa to plece and on fourth down he nesota in a 'reached the seven after being spurt. trapped and Miami took over on Minnesota downs. going into t With 15 seconds remaining to the gifted Michigan scored again as fullback Paul Giel a Fred Baer plunged over from the appeared to one to complete a 51 yard march renewal of that was also sparked by Hurley. series all wra Topp converted this time as the game ended with Miami players BUT REI carrying their coach, Richard ing fullback "Doc" Urich, from the playing pearance be field with a 21-13 victory. sparked an The Wolverines racked up 14 the Gophers first downs to Miami's 13, but minutes of tl Studrawa, working from the T- winds rangin formation, completed 11 of 16 per hour. passes while quarterback Mark Iowa sco Scarr and Hurley hit on six of down with twelve passes for Michigan. fourth perk THE MICHIGAN DAILY - Defeats M' 21 -13 PIC t S , t;T I BALL ROUND-UP: iowicz' Toe Defeats Wildcats, 3-0 e Associated Press 0-O. - All-America c Janowicz booted a rth quarter field goal give Ohio State a 3 to 'er Northwestern in a nference game viewed ame of missed oppor- futile offenses by both an 18-mile wind was defensive factor for - * - IME S Northwestern into Ohio's territory ield goals from the 17 nd the loss of the ball on the 12 and two Wildcats' chances. her surge, which car- Buckeye 21, the Wild- up on their own 49 as Bob Burson was losses on attempted te, which displayed a use a week ago in Iowa, 47-21, also plenty of scoring hree times in the first Buckeyes were inside it 30 but failed to inst the stalwart rn defenders. missed a field goal early in the first per- s well on his way to e goat of the game fol- fumbles which North- Dvered when he came game-winning kick in riod. * * * NG Janowicz' three- Bucks moved to the n 12, only to lose the All-America's fumble ack Pat O'Brien re- er in the session Ohio 11 on downs on the n six. tern, trying to take ng the torrid second hich the Wildcats tried a 17-yard by quarterback Bob l a 12-yarder by end agseth, but both were e mark. ck Tony Curcillo, who touchdown passes a a week ago, com- seven of 21 attempts 2 yards.2Burson com- 30 for 120 yards. ern had 11 first downs 0 and in total yards 203-to-195 edge. Yophers Tie y, Ia.-Big Bill Rei- ed a sub-freezing af- warm joy for nearly ns yesterday by rally a 20-all tie with Min- stirring fourth quarter , holding a 20-0 lead he final period, thanks running of sophomore nd senior Ron Engel, have the thirty-fifth this intense football apped up. * *. * CHARDT, the charg- making his final ap- fore hometown fans, Iowa spurt that swept apart in the closing he duel fought in cold ig from 25 to 35 miles red its first touch- 5:21 gone in the od after blocking a Minnesota 28. That as Iowa had been all This time, however, made 24 yards in , going six for the Big Bill made the and it was 20-7. left, Iowa was far 5. But again Reichardt nd to inspire an Iowa finished with a pass by Burt Britzmann to ston in the end zone ligible play. DT'S conversion at- ide. There were many t Minnesota was off- kick but there was no t was Minnesota 20, Iowa13, and time running out at 4:26. Plenty of time thought, for the aroused Hawks and Big Bill, their leader. They struck from their 44 to the Minnesota 36 from where Rei- chardt broke into the open for a touchdown run. Big Bill's kick was good and Iowa had come from far behind to deadlock the contest at 20-all. * * * Badgers Win, 6-0 Madison, Wis.-A 36-yard pass from Johnny Coatta to reserve halfback Bill Hutchinson gave Wisconsin a 6 to 0 win over In- diana in a Big Ten game played in a driving snowstorm yesterday. Wisconsin had completed only two passes before the final desper- ation toss that Hutchinson caught in the end zone. The Badgers, tenth in the Associated Press na- tional poll, now have won three, lost one and tied one in Western Conference play. * * * THE BADGERS threatened fre- quently with their powerful ground attack despite the wet slippery gridiron but could not score until the dying minutes of the game be- cause of fumbles and a stubborn Indiana line that held when its goal was threatened. Ten fumbles were chalked against the winners. Indiana re- covered five of them. Indiana got beyond midfield on only three occasions and its greatest advance was to the Badger 42 early in the game. Most of the time it had to play deep in its own territory. Fine punting by Florian Helin- ski, freshman from Hurley, Wis., pulled the Hoosiers out of trouble frequently. Bill Lane, Wisconsin defensive back, gave the Badgers the break that resulted in the touchdown. He recovered Jerry Ellis' fumble on the Indiana 11 with one minute, 13 seconds to go. * *4 * Lions Tip Cornell Ithaca, N.Y. - Mitch Price, straight-throwing quarterback, led an aggressive Columbia football team to a 21 to 20 upset over Cor- nell yesterday. For the second year in a row favored Cornell went down to de- feat before Columbia by one point. The Lions beat Cornell 20 to 19 in New York a year ago. AN ESTIMATED 21,000 fans more than half-filled Cornell's Sthoellkopf Stadium to watch this year's upset despite 30-degree weather and a four inch morning snowfall. It stopped snowing just before the starting whistle and bulldozers power shovels and trucks cleared the field. Cornell trailed through three quarters of the game and finally came to life halfway through the final period, but it was too late. The Big Red, trailing 21 to 7; made two touchdowns in the last 10 minutes of play. Bill Kirk converted one of the two tallies, but missed the other. Cornell's chances of overcoming the one-point Columbia margin ended when Columbia intercepted a pass during a Cornell drive for a score in the final minutes of play. Columbia scored in the first, second and fourth quarters and Al Ward converted all three touch- downs. Cornell made its first touchdown in the second quarter. TROlP'lIES FROM THE SOIL--M rs.James Reed displays giant Guinea beans grown in her backyard garden at Rock Island, Wash. One weighs ten pounds, is 50 inches long. RELAXING-Hollywood old-timer Mae Marsh, of "Tr of A Na-, tion" fame, works on a seascape during leisue I une bet ween roles in filmland prdduction. 0 r II National Grid Scores By The Associated Press EAST Princeton 12, Brown 0 Kutztown (Pa.) Tchrs. 26, New Bri- tain Tchrs. 6 Dartmouth 14, Yale 10 William and Mary 20, Penn 12 Holy Cross 34, Colgate 6 Boston University 52, New York Uni- versity 6 Rutgers 13, Fordham 7 Bowdoin 27, Bates 12 Maine 24, Colby 0 Bucknell 28, Temple 7 Massachusetts Maritime 0, Loyola of Montreal 0 Lehigh 3, Muhlenberg 2 Rochester 14, Oberlin 0, Hobart 41, Haverford 6 Northeastern 13, Coast Guard 13 (tie) Maryland 35. Missouri 0 Amherst 21, Tufts 13 Rensselaer 20, Clarkston 0 Connecticut 20, New Hampshire 0 Williams 40, Union 0 St. Lawrence 20, Hofstra 0 Norwich 20, Middlebury 13 St. Michaels (Vt.) 26, Kings Point 0 American International 6, Wesleyan 0 St. Bonaventure 39, Youngstown 6 Johns Hopkins 39, Swarthmore 6 Franklin and Marshall 35, Ursinus 0 Massachusetts 6, Vermont 0 Rhode Island 25, Springfield 19 WesternM aryland 6, Drexel 0 Carnegie Tech 18, Washington and Jefferson 0 MIDWEST Baldwin Wallace vs. Case, postponed Tulsa 35, Oklahoma A & M 7 Drake 35, Great Lakes 20 Kansas 27, Nebraska 7 Oklahoma 33, Kansas State 0 Purdue 28, Penn State 0 Detroit 7, Bradley 6 Kent State 27, Bowling Green 27 Miami (O.) 27 Buffalo 7 Findlay 20, Ashland 6 Denison 38, Wittenberg 7 Ohio Wesleyan 13, Mount Union 12 Capital 18, Ohio Northern 6 Hamilton 26, Kenyon 12 Muskingum. 34, Marietta 7 Wayne 21, Washington (St. Louis) 0 Albion 34, Kalamazoo 0 Alma 20, Hillsdale 12 Lewis (1l.) 32, Northern Michigan 6 Elmhurst 20, Concirdia 0 Wheato n18, Michigan Tech 0 Knox 6, Coe 0 North Central (III.) 26, Milliken 12 Valparaiso 33, Luther 7 Central 9, Indiana Central 6 St. Joseph's (Ind.) 39, Ball State 21 Hanover 14, Taylor 6 Quincy (I11.) 45, Central (Mo.) 0 Wichita 19, Houston 14 Otterbein 12, Hiram 12 Evansville 7, Eastern Kentucky 6 Western Michigan 20, Butler 0 Depauw 14, Indiana State 13 Rose Poly 14, Cedarville 6 South Dakota 25, Iowa Tchrs 7 Ripon (Wis.) 13, Carleton (Minn.) 0 South Dakota Mines 6, Dickinson (N.D.) Tchrs 0 Simpson 19, Central (Ia.) 13 Grinnell 7, Cornell (Ia.) 6 SOUTH Alabama 16, Georgia 14 Duke 14. Georgia Tech 14 George Washington 20, South Caro- lina 14 Tennessee 27, North Carolina 0 Washington and Lee 60, VPI 0 West Virginia 35, Western Reserve 7 Kentucky 32, Miami (Fla.) 0 Virginia 39, Citadel 0 VMI 35, Davidson 13 Auburn 49, Louisiana College 0 Mississippi State 10, Tulane 7 Clemson 21, Wake Forest 6 Van derbilt 19, Chattanooga 14 Morris Brown 57, South Carolina State 6 West Virginia State 14, Virginia State 13 Xavier (La.) 45, Clark 0 Camp Lejeune Marines 20, Quantico Marines 13 SOUTHWEST Texas Christian 20, Baylor 7 Rice 21, Pittsburgh 13 Texas 20, Southern Methodist 13 Arkansas 33, Texas A and M 21 FAR WEST Brigham Young 21, Colorado A and M 19 Utah 28, Utah State 20 Colorado 47, Iowa State 20 Oregon 14, Idaho 13 Oregon State 40, Washington 14 Stanford 21, Washington State 13 Wyoming 34, Montana 7 Colorado College 26, Colorado State 0 t1 NEARS C OM PL E TION - This view of th1 Baha'i House of Worship at Wilmette, Ill., shows interior oe ti fof of $2,500,000 shrine Iwhich will be opened to putiic in 1i3. RECALLING OTHER Y EA -eact rgapop- urar 19th century sport, a balloon begins its ascent from the London South Bank site during the 1951 1"e iva of Britain. The scoring: MIAMI........7 MICHIGAN ....0 7 0 7 0. .21 0 13..13 Touchdowns: Wallace 3; Hickey, Baer. Conversions: Williams 3, Topp (placement). "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Try a Collegiate: 0 Crew-Cut - Personality Style The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre kick on the was as deep afternoon. Reichardty three plays touchdown. extra point With 8:39 back on its 35 took comman drive that f from the 10x Hubert John on a tackle-e REICHARI tempt was w who thought side on the 1 penalty. So here i Now is the time to select your PERSONAL CHRISTMAS CARDS and Note Papers "Storyland and Toytown" What a spot for CHILDREN'S BOOKS, TOYS, GAMES and RECORDS on FOLLETT'S SECOND FLOOR - State Street at N. University COMPLETE SUNDAY DINNERS Ranging in price from $1.50 to $2.75 I'{ d' V E E P 1 N V 0 1 C E-Vice President and Mrs. Alben Barkley (right) sing with guests at buffet supper given in Washington for servicemen by Mrs. Barkley and Mrs. Clark Clifford. _. .... ยข'1uiia1.-'Ihainer, 0-n yearold ash~4oAD. C 7 tom xx' u .. .