7 OW TUESDAY, OCTODER 7, 1959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAM TSRE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1955 ?AGE mm Wenley Conquers Adams, 6-0! PRO FOOTBALL ROUNDUP: FriscoWins, 37-14, To Gain First Place Psychological Letdown Hurt Wolverines in Stanford Tilt Bad Breaks Also Helped Defeat Michigan; Stribe Out for Season with Dislocated Hip Hinsdale Overcomes Cooley; Michigan Edges Hayden, 7-6' By IVAN KAYE The delayed effects of their gal- lant opening day stand against Michigan State were painfully ap- parent in the Wolverines' perfor- mance against a mediocre Stan- ford eleven last Saturday. The Maize and Blue was listless, lackadaisical and lethargic-a far cry from their razor-sharp effect- ivesness against the Spartans. Stanford, on the other hand, after subduing Santa Clara and Wash- ington State, was riding high and definitely "up" for the big inter- sectional battle with its ancient foe. * * * DESPITE the extreme differ- ence in the psychological readi- ness of the two teams, it took sev- eral fumbles and pass intercep- There will be an important meeting of the 'M' club tonight at 7:30 in the 'M' room at Yost { Field House. -Laurie LeClaire tions at key moments to keep Coach Ben Oosterbaan's Wolver- ines from running away from the defending Pacific Coast Confer- ence champions. Throughout the game it seem- ed that whenever the Michigan squad would get within striking distance of the Indian goal, the fates would conspire to turn the pigskin over to Chuck Taylor's lads from Palo Alto. The fact that the Wolverines were so lacking in offensive punch can probably be attributed in some degree to the terrific all-out ef- fort against Michigan State on the preceeding weekend. * * * . THE USUAL crop of bruises were the aftermath of the expedi- tion to the West, with the only ser- ious injury being the dislocated hip which has shelved stellar tackle Ralph Stribe for the re- mainder of the campaign. The loss of Stribe is going to be severely felt as the confer- ence season progresses. In the first two games, the varsity has been putting the "off tackle" play to exceedingly good use, with Ted Kress doing the run- ning and Stribe opening a gap in the opponent's forward wall. This play has long been consid- ered the "bread and butter" play of the single wing attack, and Stribe has been superb in his key role as the blocker. * * * IT WAS FIRST thought that Stribe had incurred a fracture, but doctors disclosed yesterday that the injury was a dislocation. Lowell Perry suffered a recur-' rance of his old leg injury, but is expected to be in condition for the Big Ten innaugural against the Hoosiers on Saturday. Four residence hall football teams rolled to their second straight victories yesterday as I-M football entered itts second week. Wenley House, defending cham- pions, had to stretch into overtime to beat Adams, 6-0. Wenley's co- captains, Jim Robertson and Jim Finnegan then combined on a 25- yard pass play for the winning marker. S * * * LARRY SCHLEH sparked Hins- dale House to a 14-6 win over Cooley. Schleh pitched aerials to Joe Yope for both Hinsdale tal- lies and was on the receiving end C 1 j RALPH STRIBE . .. out for season AERIAL ARTISTRY: Potent Passing Attack Shown By Seven Remaining 'M' Foes of Bill Stuart's passes in chalking up the extra points. Michigan House snuck by Hayden, 7-6, for its second tri- umph under the leadership of standout Dale Ewart. Ewart, who passed for one TD and scored another on an interception last week, was just as brilliant against Hayden. He passed to end Jim Hatton for the touch- down and added the extra point on a pass to Mike May........ Hayden's tally came late in the final stanza when Doug Beck toss- ed to Harold Kiefer in the end zone. BOB KANY'S aerial to John Wolfe in the second period gave Allen-Rumsey all it needed in a 8-0 win over Winchell House. Jack DeCou and Laird Wallace added insurance points when they nabbed a Winchellrunner in his own end zone. Gomberg bounced back after a defeat last week to slaughter Greene, 20-0, in the most lop- sided game of the day. John McCann and John McClurg pro- vided Gomberg's offensive pow- er.McCann threw to McClurg for three touchdowns and one of Gomberg's extra points, the oth- er extra point being scored by McClurg on a run. Kelsey edged Lloyd, 7-6, behind Ross Tandorsian's throwing arm. Other scores: Huber 12, Fletch- er 6; Taylor 7, Williams 0; Ander- son 7, Reeves 0; Van Tyne 13, Scott 6. The San Francisco '49ers, led by the passing of Y. A. Tittle and Frankie Albert, moved into first place in the National Division of the National Football League Sun- day by crushing the Dallas Texans, 37-14. Tittle passed for two touchdowns and set up the way for one other. Albert threw for one marker, and set up a '49er field goal with an- other. IN THE running department, Hugh McElhenny stood out for the victors as he ran 89 yards to one score and took a pass for a second. For the Texans, Bob Celeri passed for a touchdown and Buddy Young scampered 28 yards for the only other Dallas score. In other National Conference play, Babe Parilli, former Ken- tucky All-American quarterback, led the Green Bay Packers to a 35-20 win over the Washington Redskins. THE KENTUCKY BABE passed for two touchdowns, pitched out for a third and set up the fourth as he earned his professional spurs with a sparkling performance. Eddie LeBaron led the Red- skins offense most of the way, but Washington was only in the game in the first quarter, when a 13 yard pass from Harry Gil- mer to Julie Pykovich knotted the score at 7-7. The Redskins scored again in the third quarter on a 70-yard pass from LeBaron to Hugh Taylor and then finally in the last stanza when Neil Ferris crashed right guard for eleven yards. *. * * tackle plunge by Fred Cone. Cone kicked all five extra points. In the only other professional football contest scheduled Sun- day, the Chicago Cardinals swept from behind to upset their rival Chicago Bears, 21-10. The Cards racked up all of their A 1916-mm ( se " r~s cto a t h e r v alveo..out lather! ua stl $kSAVE ' rUldqIgJ As Tour B r scores on long runs, two by Ollie Matson and one by Charlie Trippi. MATSON, an All-American at the University of San Francisco and an Olympic perform er in the 440, brought the Cards to life late in the first half with a 100 yard touchdown dash. TUESDAY'S SPECIAL Choice of any 1.50 tie in store, $100 6 Everything new - 1000 ties to choose from. By DICK LEWIS Two of Michigan's future foot- ball foes won last weekend, while four lost and one tied, but they all had one thing in common-a potent passing attack. Aerial artistry at its peak was displayed by the six Big Ten schools and one outsider (Cornell) that remain on the Wolverine schedule. Here is a rundown of what the Maize and Blue is likely to encounter in the next two months. * * * INDIANA: Veteran Hoosier quarterback Lou D'Achille com- pleted three out of six tosses for 117 yards to engineer a 20-13 de- feat of Iowa in the Big Ten open- er for both schools. The accurate left - handed thrower found freshman Les Kun with a 67-yard toss three sec- onds before the first half whistle for the initial Indiana score. He hit Pete Fisher with a 41-yard heave to set up the second six- pointer for the winners, and also booted two extra points. Jerry Ellis plunged four yards and sprinted 13 for Hoosier touch- downs in the final period. NORTHWESTERN: Coach Bob Voigt's charges gained 133 yards through the air and 277 on the ground but had to settle for a 20-20 tie with Vanderbilt. Wildcat Dick Thomas threw for all 133 yards and one touch- down, a 33-yard toss to Joe Collier. Thomas also plunged one yard for the opening tally of the game. Bob-Lauter picked up the other TD with a 27-yard scamper after Clarence Johnson had gone for 38 via the overland route. Badgers Move Into Top Spot In APSurvey NEW YORK-(IP)-Wisconsin's poised Badgers, the current favor- ites to capture the Big Ten crown, took over first place in the As- sociated Press' Football Poll yes'. terday as the result of their im- pressive victory over Illinois and Michigan State's tight battle with Oregon State. The Badgers jumped up from eighth place by whipping Illinois' Rose Bowl champs, 20-6, while Michigan State needed a field goal in the final two seconds to edge Oregon State, 17-14. State, the pre-season pick of the experts to finish the season as the No. 1 team, fell from their first place perch to second. MINNESOTA: The Gophers took their second straight setback from a West Coast outfit as California romped, 49-13, at Minneapolis. Three minutes after the opening gun, Gopher halfback Paul Giel stepped off tackle for 47 yards and the first Ski-U-Mah counter. Giel passed 15 yards to Bob Mc- Namara for the other Minnesota score. ILLINOIS: The Rose Bowl champions could not cope with a Wisconsin attack that netted 434 yards and a surprising 20-6 win. The stunned Illini gained only 127 yards on the afternoon, 67 of these coming on seven com- pletions in 21 throws by quarter- back Tommy O'Connell. Rocky Ryan, Illinois end, re- turned a Badger kickoff 63 yards late in the contest to account for the losers' six points. CORNELL: This hapless Eastern team took number two on the chin. Navy provided all the fire- works in a 31-7 triumph that saw the Red Raiders lose the ball six times on fumbles, have two kicks blocked, and suffer two pass in- terceptions. On top of all this, Cornell gain- ed a net of two (2) yards on the ground, while the Middies ran for 169. Dick Cliggott took a 50-yard pass from Jack Jaeckel for the Ithacans touchdown. Six of 16 Cornell passes netted 146 yards. * * *. PURDUE-OSU: Purdue convert- ed a fumble, a blocked kick and an intercepted pass into three touch- downs and a 2 1-14 verdict over OSU before 75,417 partisan Buck- eye fans. Max Schmaling, a 205-pound Boilermaker fullback, scored from three and four yards out to reg- ister the first and last touchdowns for Coach Stu Holcomb. Soph Tom Bettis covered a blocked punt in the end zone for the tally that came in-between. Quarterbacks Dale Samuels and John Borton staged an overhead duel all afternoon, and Borton twice carried the ball over himself to cap Ohio State drives. Ohl ': NO BRUSH-NO GREASE-NO RAZOR CLOG Get smooth, slick shaves the profes- sional way.. with AFRO SHAVE! Gives you rich, stay-moist lather for shaving do comfort! Contains 3 beard softeners r" shoves plus soothing Lano-Lotion! Try it! 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