SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG THREE M' Gridde rs Hum bled Again New York Bounces Back to Even Series As Mize, Reynolds Shine in 2-0 Victory I FOOTBALL ROUND JP: Wisconsin, Notre Dame Score Upset Triumphs NEW YORK - (R) - Wisconsin took a long stride toward the Rose Bowl by humbling favored Illinois; today, 20-6, but it was Notre.Dame which struck the most staggering blow of the second -big week of college football. The Fighting Irish, tied 7-7 by Pennsylvania a week ago, bounc- ed back with vengeance to upset Texas' speedy Longhorns, fifth ranked in the Associated Press poll, 14-3. THE GAME at Austin high- lighted an important program of intersectional conflicts which vied with the World Series for the at- tention of the nation's sports fans. Michigan State, rated the na- tion's No. 1 team, barely man- aged to win 17-14 over Oregon Y State in the final two seconds on a field goal by end- Eugene Le- kenta. Except for the defeat of Texas and Illinois, the latter No. 2 na- tionally, and the terrific scare handed Michigan State, the top ten of college football came off the various gridirons without mis- hap: s : MARYLAND, California, South- ern California, Kansas and Duke also prevailed in a day of few form reversals. Maryland's Terrapins, unbeat- en last year and winners over Tennessee in the Sugar Bowl, protected their No. 3 rating with an easy 28-0 triumph over Clem- son in the so-called "Suspension Bowl." Both teams were ousted from the Southern Conference for a year for {playing in New Year's day games against orders. California, No. 4, whipped Min- nesota, 49-13. Southern Cal., No. 7, turned back an improving Army r eleven at Los Angeles, 22-0. Kan- sas, No. 9, moved into a com- manding position in the Big Sev- en Conference by toppling Colo- rado, 21-12, on Charlie Hoag's three touchdowns. Duke, No. 10, held mighty Tennessee to two first downs in stoppin gthe Volunteers, 7-0. WISCONSIN carried a No. 8 national ranking into the game at Madison, Wis., against Illinois' de- fending Big Ten Champions. Roo- kie quarterback Jim Haluska pass- ed to one touchdown and directed his mates to two others in a slash- ing attadk before a crowd of 52,071. The Illini are ineligible to re- turn to the Rose Bowl, having played there a year ago. The Badgers, on the other hand, are not only eligible but eager. They become the No. 1 favorite after today's victory. . At Austin, Johnny Lattner and Joe Heap put a new spark in Notre Dame which made the team look like the Fighting Irish of old. WingWin Rochester - The Rochester Red Wings won the Little World Series last night, by beating the Kansas City Blues for the third straight time, 6 to 4. The Wings, managed by ex- big league star Harry Walker scored all of their runs in the first two .innings, knocking out Kansas City hurling ace Eddie Erautt. and capturing the best- f-seven series after being down three games to one. Behind 0-3, they collaborated for two last half touchdowns to bring the surprising victory. * * * IN THE East, Princeton stretch- ed the sport'is longest current win- ning streak to 24 games by over- powering Rutgers, 61-19. Oregon State, beaten only by Michigan State a year ago, again proved . troublesome for the Midwestern powerhouse, The Cougars pounced on a fum- ble in the last period and drove 44 yards to tie the score at 14-14. Lekenta's field goal, providing the margin of victory, was in the air when the final gun sounded. It was that close. * * , * IN OTHER main intersectional games, Stanford won over Michi- gan, 14-7; Navy crushed Cornell, 31-7; Oklahoma whipped Pitts- burgh, 49-20, Tulane smothered Santa Clara, 35-0, and Vanderbilt held Northwestern to an unex- pected 20-20 tie. Midwestern activity saw Purdue top Ohio State, 21-14; Indiana squeeze past Iowa, 20-13, and Ne- braska down Iowa State, 16-0. Stribe Hurt, Star Tackle Hospitalized (Continued from Page 1) where the Wolverines were sup- posed to excell. '. Michigan's one scoring thrust started late in the first period from the Wolverine 28. During it Toper passed eight yards to half- back Ted Kress. Kress tossed six to Topor and again to right end Thad Stanford for nine. A 31-yard run around left end by Kress behind solid blocking put the bal on Stanford's 20. Def en- sive holding against Stanford la- ter advanced the ball to the In- dian six. But a Michigan offside moved it back to the 11. Topor then passed to Perry who ran five yards for the score. THE GAME was marked by ex- cessive fumbling, Michigan bobbl- ing six times to Stanford's seven. The Wolverines lost the ball twice to four times for Stanford. Mich- igan, however, was outlucked in the deal. The Stanford touchdown that tie dthe score in, the second period was aided by the break that saw the ball roll out of bounds after Mathias had, let go of it after a hard tackle. As he was the last to touch it, the .ball belonged to the Indians on the Michigan 19. If the Wolverines had regained possession, it prob- ably would have averted the touchdown pass which came on the next play. Ralph Stribe, Michigan tackle, was hospitalized after the game with a dislocated hip and a pos- sible chipped bone. Palo Alto hospital authorities said he would be confined there at least overnight. Stribe, 22, a senior and first string tackle played a great game for Michigan's offensive team un- til he was carried from the field on a stretcher late in the fourth period. * * * LINEUPS MICHIGAN LE-Perry,. Bates, Green, Vaselenak LT-Stowzewski, Bennett, Walker LG-Timm, Dugger C-'Shaughnessy RG-Cachey, Bieson, Mattheson, Balog RT-Stribe, Zatkoff RF-StanfordaTopp, Knutson QB-Topor, MacDonald, Billings LH-Kress, Oldham RH-Branoff, Knickerbocker FB-Baer, Hurley, Rescrla, Tink- ham LeClaire . STANFORD LE-Morley, Eadie, Bush LT-Vick, Tanner LG-Wilson, Wedge C--Goldberg RG-Mayhofer, Doster, Krickeberg, Armitage RT-Pyle, Stanton, Kirkland RE-Steinberg, Storum, Hoegh QB-Garrett L-Cook, Stewart, Brazel, Mon- tieth RH-Roger, Thompson, St. Geme FB-Mathias, Essegian PORTLAND - (P) - Unranked Oregon State slowed the vaunted Michigan State Spartans to a walk here yesterday and the Spartans had to kick a last-second field goal to pull out a 17-14 football victory. Only by the thin margin of an offside penalty did the Spartans, the nation's No. 1 team in the latest Associated Press poll, pull out the win. Tied 14-14, the Spar- tans battered down to the Oregon State 8 but only enough time re- mained for one more play there. IN CAME end Eugene Lekenta. His kick sailed wide of the bars and it looked as if Oregon State would take over the ball. But an offside penalty was called against Oregon State and Lekenta got an- other try. He did not miss that one. Oregon State, playing with few reserves, almost completely checked the Spartans' running game until the fourth quarter. Even then, with the Oregon Staters tiring badly and about half of them limping, the Spar- tans could not punch over a touchdown.1 Midway in the . period they marched 72 yards only to be halt- ed on the 8 by last-gasp Oregon State defense. There a field goal attempted by fullback Evan Slo- nac, who had kicked two conver- sions, sailed wide of the posts. * * * THEN, WITH time running out, Michigan State got the ball once more on its own 33. There were three minutes remaining. The aroused Oregon Staters dlammed the' Spartans' ground plays back hard but quarterback Tom Yewcic turned to the air. Three passes carried Michigan State again' to the 8,'and Lekenta's toe did the rest. It was Yewcic's passes earlier that gave Michigan State both of its touchdowns. His tosses were wobbly, but the agility of his receivers made up for that. He threw a long one in the first period that sailed between the arms of a defender; and halfback Bill Wells nabbed it for a 50-yard gain to the Oregon State 11. A few seconds later Yewcic passed 8 yards to end Paul Dekker in the end zone. MICHIGAN STATE made it 14-0 in the secondquarter as Yew- cic passed the team downfield to another touchdown. The payoff toss was a high, flopping throw that came near the 2-yard line. Just before it hit the ground, end Ellis Duckett raced in from the side, grabbed the ball at ankle height and twisted over the goal. Oregon State, after fumbling away three scoring chances earl- ier in the game, finally scored just before the end of the third quarter. A 39-yard pass from quarterback Jim Withrow' to halfback Wally Jackson set it up. Jackson was downed on the Spartans' 1. From there half- back Ken Brown bucked over. Then Michigan State's hard- running halfback, Don McAuliffe, fumbled on his own 44, and Ore- gon State sensed its chance to tie the highly ranked Spartans. It took just six plays for Oregon State to get the tying touchdown with Withrow passing 20 yards to end Claret Taylor for the score. End Jim Cordial kicked the second of his two conversions for Oregon State with 13/2 minutes remaining in the game. Late Spartan Field Goal Protects Unbeaten String (Continued from Page 2) With Reynolds and Black knot- ted in another terrific struggle Mize came up to bat as lead-off man in the fourth. With the count one ball and two strikes, he strok- ed one some 10 or 15 rows back in the lower right stands. Mize, the leading active Major Leaguer in home runs with 355 in regular season play, bounced a double into the right field seats for * * * bed the ball and tried an under- handed peg to Phil Rizzuto. The throw sailed over little Phil's head into short left for an er- ror that put men on first and third with ofily one out. Then Reynolds really poured it on. Mixing his streaking fast ball with a swerving curve, the chief caught Robinson watching a third strike. Campanella went down with a mighty swing to snuff out this early threat. S * * * IN THE FIFTH, Pafko's single~ to left and a walk to Gil Hodges on four straight balls looked like real trouble. When Carl Furillo sacrificed, there were Aien on sec- ond and third and only one out. The big pitch of the ball game came to Black who was under orders to lay down a squeeze bunt on the third pitch. Black missed a low inside pitch as Pafko raced toward the plate. Berra easily ran him down and tagged him out. Although Reynolds walked Black to put two men on base again, he made Billy Cox loft a high foul to Berra who grabbed it for.the final out of the inning. * * * FOUR CONSECUTIVE balls to Campanella leading off the sev- enth again raised the storm sig- nal in the Yankee bull pen. Rey- nolds calmly whiffed Pafko and got out of the inning on Hodges' double play roller to Rizzuto. When Furillo opened the eighth with a single off Rizzuto's glove and Chuck Dressen start- ed parading his pinch hitters to the plate, Reyolds was superb. George Shuba, swinging for Black, lifted a 3-2 pitch to Mickey Mantle. Pinch hitter Rocky Nel- son, batting for Cox, got only a loud foul on three strike pitches. THE BROOKS, who finally were made favorites after Friday's win behind Preacher Roe, named Carl Erskine (14-6) to face Blackwell tomorrow. The handsome right- hander was beaten by Vic Raschi in Thursday's game, 7-1. * * * BROOKLYN (N) A R H 0 A I Cox 3b B-Nelson Morgan 3b Reese ss Snider cf Robinson 2b Camipanella Pafko If Hodges lb Furillo rf Black p A-Shuba Rutherford Totals McDougald Rizzuto ss Mantle cf Mize lb C-Collins Berra c Woodling if Bauer rf Martin 2b Reynolds p Totals A-Flied o 3 0 1 0 0 0 4 0 4 0 b 4 0 Lc 3 0 3 0 2 0 2 0 1 0 1 0 p 0 0 28 0 NEW YORK (A) A R 3b 3 0 2 0 3 1 3 1 lb 0 0 4 0 t' 3 0 3 0 3 0 3 0 28 2 ut for Black inI 2 0 0 0 3 0 4 2 10 1 0 0 0 24 0 0 1 4 4 1 12 1 2 1 27 0 1 3 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 10 A 1 3 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 8 _FOOTBALLSCORES HEAR! SEE! ADLAI STEVENSON TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7 2:30 P.M. GROUNDS OF PEACE AUD., YPSILANTI THOSE WHO NEED OR CAN SUPPLY TRANSPORTATION: CALL 3-0708, 2-2822, 2-4367 MICHIGAN Stanford 14, Michigan 7 Michigan State 17 Oregon State 14 Western Michigan 18 Central Michi- gan 0 Washington University 13 Wayne 12 Hillsdale 13 Olivet 0 Michigan Tech 21 Albion 7 MIDWEST California 49 Minnesota 13 Kansas 21 Colorado 12 Missouri 26 Kansas State 0 Purdue 21 Ohio State 14 Indiana 20 Iowa 13 Wisconsin 20 Illinois 6 Northwestern 20 Vanderbilt 20 Nebraska 16 Iowa State 0 j Denison 28 Mt. Union 14 Bowling Green 45 Ohio Wesleyan 0 Miami (Ohio) 26 Xavier 7 Oklahoma 49 Pittsburgh 20 Ohio University 22bToledo 20 Oberlin 34 Otterbein 6 Wooster 35 Kenyon 19 Hiram 26 Capital 20 Manchester 21 Rose Poly 0 Earlham 33 Indiana Central 21 Valparaiso 32 St. Joseph's 13 Wabash 27 Butler 25 Depauw 40 Ball State 25 Hanover 27 Franklin 7 Wheaton 47 Augustana 6 Drake 34 Emporia (Kas) Teachers 18 Knox 33 Grinnei 25 Wittenberg 47 Marietta 12 Findlay 31 Ashland 20 Dayton 20 North rexas State 14 EAST Pennsylvania 7 Dartmouth 0 Columbia 16 Harvard 7 Penn State 35 William & Mary 23 Navy 31 Cornell 7 Yale 28 Brown 0 Princeton 61 Rutgers 19 Maine 14 Vermont 6 N.Y.U. 20 Kings Point 20 Holy Cross 12 Fordham 7 Brandeis 28 Northeastern 13 Coast Guard 20 Colby 18 Bates 19 Middlebury 14 Rochester 12 Williams 7 Albright 28 Lafayette 6 Trinity 34 Hobart 0 Connecticut 26 Massachusetts 13 Tufts 15 Worcester Tech 13 Rhode Island 27 New Hampshire 7 Hamilton 52 Brooklyn College 0 Delaware 7 Lehigh 6 Wesleyan 27 Bowdoin 7 Case Tech 13 Washington & Jeffer- son 0 Franklin & Marshall 19 Johns Hop. kins 13 SOUTH Maryland 28 Clemson 0 Georgia 49 North Carolina State 0 Duke 7 Tennessee 0* W~est Virginia 49 Waynesburg 12 Marshall (W.Va.) 16 John Carroll 7 South Carolina 27 Furman 7 Mississippi 20 Auburn 7 Mississippi State 41 Arkansas State 14 JOHNNY MIZE . .. haunts Dodgers * * I his 1,999th hit. That includes his series, all-star game and regular season base hits since he first hit the majors in 1936. WHEN THE big fellow from Demorest, Ga., finally retired for a pinch runner in the eighth, a mighty cheer rattled windows in passing elevated trains. It mattered little that the Yanks blasted home an "extra" run in the eighth on Mickey Mantle's 450-foot triple off re- lief man Johnny Rutherford and Reese's wild peg on a relay throw. Mize did it and Reynolds locked the door. That was the story of this fourth game. With the series even at 2-2, the clubs now will return to Ebbets Field Monday for a sixth game following today's Yan- kee Stadium finale. If they need a seventh, it also will be played in Brooklyn. Today's game will start at 2:05 p.m. EST. AFTER REYNOLDS' fine vic- tory with only two days of rest, Stengel named Ewell Blackwell, the ex-Cincinnati whip, to do the ho'nors Sunday. Blackwell was 1-0 with the Yanks, working only 16 innings after he was waived out of the National League Aug. 28. Black, also trying to come back with only two days rest after his brilliant opening win, was not as sharp as he was Wednesday. 'Still he allowed only three hits-a homer and two doubles-in his seven inn- ing stay. He walked five and had men on base in every inning except the seventh. A sensational one-handed stab of Yogi Berra's long drive by Duke Snider near the auxiliary score- board in right field saved Black from further trouble in the fourth. Berra, still smarting from yester- day's two-run passed ball "boner," was the next batter after Mize hit his homer. He actually hit the 'ball farther than Big Jawn but the 400-foot poke was caught by the agile Snider. REESE, ON A hitting rampage in this series, plunked a single to left center with one out in the first inning, after Reynolds had fanned Cox. On Snider's sharp double play rap toward second, Billy Mar- tin appeared to catch his spikes in the dirt. He stumbled, grab- WELCOME STUDENTS! Specializing in: 0 Crew Cuts " Flat Tops * New Yorkers. "* Hollywoods Hairstyling to Please The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theater by RYTEX HI 0 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 0 4 8th B-Struck out for Cox in 8th C-Ran for Mize in 8th Brooklyn (N) 000 000 New York (A) 000 100 {aV aVa faacsv a as 1 k r ALM 000-- 0 61x--2 STATISTICS Michigan ,1 Virginia 42..P.I. 0 Tulane 35 Santa Clara 0 Ft. 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