i -q w I + o. ... ..w.....s.. w ..w. w awwww+w watiea' r s .r w rw SUNDAY, OCTOBER12, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Illinois ..... 48 Minnesota ...27 Marquette ....37 Pitt ... ..... 22 MSC .......48 Purdue ..... 41 Penn .......1 Washington .. 14 Northwestern . 26 Detroit ... .. 27 Notre Dame .. 19 Texas A. & M. 6 Iowa .. ...... 14 Princeton. ... f3 Ohio State . .. 23 7 Wisconsin . . . 14 5 SMichigan Takes Big TenOpener Perry Scores Twice in Final Half; Branoff Sparks M' Ground Game (Continued from Page 1) hauled in Kress' bulls-eye throw on the ten yard stripe and waltzed into the end zone unmolested. McDonald again fired the place kick through the uprights to give the Wolverines a commanding 21- 6 margin. * * * ANOTHER Kress to Perry pass gave Michigan its final score. Taking over from the sputtering Hoosiers on their own 48, the Wol- verines rolled to within one yard of the Indiana goal eight tries from scrimmage. Kay plays in this series were Branoff's 15 yard sweep down the eastern sidelines from the Indiana 30, and a diving catch of a short Kress pass by end Tad Stanford three feet from touch- down land. A delaying the game penalty moved them back to the six, and when two cracks at the line were stopped cold, the Maize and Blue tailback fired a third-down Jump pass to Perry in the end zone. McDonald's third good boot in as many tries ended Michigan's scoring for the after- noon. The first Michigan touchdown was the result of a recovered Hoos- ier fumble midway in the second period. Beginning on their own 48, the Wolverines moved to the Indiana five in just five plays. Three smashes at the visitors' forward wall pushed the pill to the six inch line before Topor bulled his way over on a quarter- back sneak. BOTH INDIANA scores were the direct result of D'Achille pass fluries. The first Hoosier tally came on the last play of the first half. Pass- ing on six out of nine plays, the Indiana quarterback moved his squad*to the Michigan 17 with 22 seconds left in the second quarter. A D'Achille to Larry Fromhart aerial moved the pigskin to the seven. An illegal procedure pen- alty against the Hoosiers moved the ball back to the 12 yard line, and with three seconds re- maining, Indiana Captain Gene Gedman skirted his own right end to score standing up. D'Achille's left footed placement was blocked. The game's final score came late in the final stanza when D'Achille cut off tackle from the Michigan 17, lateraled to Gedman on the 15, and threw a key block which sent the senior fullback into the end zone standing up. This time the placement split the uprights. Michigan's win was the sixteenth in the 20 game rivalry. Hail the Victors MICHIGAN LE Perry, Green, Bates Dingman LT Bennett, Walker, Geyer LG Cachey, Dugger, Williams C O'Shaughnessy RG Beison, Timm, Strozewski, Ma- theson RT Zatkoff, Balog, Pederson RE Stanford, Knutson, Topp, Dut- ter QB Topor, Billings, McDonald Zan- Fagna LH Kress, Oldham RH Branoff, Tinkham, Wither- spoon, Knickerbocker FB Hurley, LeClaire, Rescorla, Baer INDIANA LE Zuger, Smith LT Connors, Kimbo, Talarico, Lan- defeld LG Dailey, Slosky, Fioritto C Ferrari, Svantek, Vesel RG Razmicz, Schermer RT Roth, Jagielski RE Borden, Kobulnicky QB D'Achille, Petrauskas, Ashburn- er, Helinski LH Fisher, Bartkiewicz, Domenic, Kun, Holzbach RH Ellis, Byers, Dozier, Daugherty FB Gedman, Gmuca, Fromhart MICHIGAN 6 7 14 7-28 INDIANA 0 6 0 7-13 TOUCHDOWNS Michigan - Topor, Branoff, Perry (2) Indiana-Gedman (2) CONVERSIONS Michigan-Rescorla, McDonald (3) Indiana-D'Achille Time of Game: 2 Hours, 25 Minutes Official Attendance: 58,200 lBennie Says Wolverines Look Sharp By ED WHIPPLE Daily Sports Editor Notes from the locker rooms aft- er Michigan's first victory of the season: Michigan's coach, Bennie Oos- terbaan, said he thought the Wol- verines were sharper for 60 min- utes yesterday than they were against Michigan State and Stan- ford. "In the State game, we looked good in spots and so did they; today we looked sharp all the way." OOSTERBAAN had kind words for several players, including Ted Kress, who completed 11 of 14 passes, Lowell Perry, who scored two touchdowns, and Jim Balog, defensive tackle who, Oosterbaan declared, "played his best game so far." Jim Bates and Russ Rescorla were the principal casualties for the Maize and Blue. Rescorl't was knocked cold in the first half, but he wasn't hurt badly. Bates suffered a wrenched knee, and preliminary examina- tion indicated it wasn't serious. X-rays may be taken over the weekend. By the size of Captain Tim Green's right ankle, it was hard to understand how the Toledo sen- ior managed to play almost every minute on defense. Green's ankle was swollen to half again its nor- mal siz as he hobbled around the dressing room, but he turned in a good performance at defensive end. * * * AT THE TIME it seemed like a complicated official ruling that gave Indiana another down after time had apparently run out in the first half. The Hoosiers utilized it to score a touchdown.) The ex- planation is simple, according to Oosterbaan. "The official told Timmy (Green) there was one second to play in the half when time was called for the backfield- in motion penalty," Ooosterbaan said, "and the clock doesn't start until the play starts after a pen- alty. "Once a play starts, it is com- pleted, regardless of whether time runs out or not," he added. The same thing happened at Ohio State a few years back when the Buckeyes came from behind to score a tying touchdown and add the winning extra point after the game appeared ended. * * * ACROSS THE STADIUM tunnel in the Indiana dressing room, things were a bit more silent. To- day's loss was the Hoosiers' sec- ond in Big Ten competition for the season. Coach Bernie Crimmins and his players had already turned their attentions to Temple, next week's foe. Crimmins rated Perry Michi- gan's outstanding player. He add- ed the Wolverines could become a Conference championship con- tender if several players continue to improve. WELCOME STUDENTS! Specializing in: * Crew Cuts * Flat Tops D New Yorkers * Hollywoods Hairstyling to Please The Daseola Barbers near Michigan Theater I Ii -Daily-Alan Reid RAMBLING ROBERT -- Michigan fullback Bob Hurley roars through the Indiana line for a short gain in yesterday's 28-13 conquest of the Hoosiers in the Michigan Stadium. Hurley re- placed Fred Baer in the Michigan starting lineup. Princeton Win String Snapped; Notre Dame Surprised by Pitt By The Assoeiated Press COLUMBUS, O.-Ohio State's once-beaten Bucks hit the heights of gridiron greatness yesterday as they defeated top-ranked Wiscon- sin, 23-14, and trampled the Bad- gers' Rose Bowl hopes deep in the cleat-torn sod of Ohio Stadium. A stunned crowd of 80,345 watched the underdog Buckeyes outplay the Badgers in practically all departments, halting five Wis- sonsin drives inside the 20-yard- line with its stubborn defense. * * * THE BUCKEYES left little doubt of their superiority. They march- ed 88 yards in 12 plays for a touchdown in the first period, 64 yards in six plays for a third- period touchdown, and 55 yards in 11 palys for a fourth-period score. They tacked on a 68-yard drive in eight plays late in the game for a field goal to clinch the verdict. Wisconsin also went long dis- tances for its scores, moving 39 yards in seven plays in the sec- ond period and 70 yards in nine plays in the final quarter for touchdowns. Despite the final showing of the Ohio offensive team, it was the Buckeye defensive unit which frus- trated the Badgers and provided the astounding upset. Five times the Buckeye defenders took the ball. away from the Badgers after the invaders had struck inside the Ohio 20. Three times they took the ball on downs, once on the 12, once on the 17, and once on the 14. On another occasion, a fumble on Ohio's 6 and a pass intercep- tion in the end zone ended Wis- consin's thrust. Red-haired Howard (Hopalong) Cassady, Ohio's 155-pound fresh- man halfback, was the big thorn in Wisconsin's side. The little fel- low carried the ball nine times for 113 yarns rushing, caught two passes for 51 yards and a touch- down, and ran back several kicks for long yardage. PURDUE 41, IOWA 14 LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue's Spartans Top TexasAggies EAST LANSING, Mich. - (P - Ellis Duckett, a streaking sopho- more end, snagged two dramatic touchdown passes - one for 86 yards and another for 46 - to help boost second ranked Michi- gan State's powerhouse to their 18th straight victory yesterday, a 48-6 decision over Texas A & M. Texas A & M sparked by Ray Graves' passes, seemed upset- minded and trailed only 7-6 af- ter the first 18 minutes. Then Coach Biggie Munn turned loose his three backfields and it was all over. BIG TEN ROUNDUP: Ohio State Upsets Wisconsin, 23-14 Boilermakers overwhelmed the Iowa Hawkeyes yesterday 41-14, to become the only undefeated football team in the Big Ten and an odds-on favorite to go to the Rose Bowl. With quarterback Dale Sam- uels passing for long gains and plowboy Max Schmaling churn- ing out the important short ones, Purdue had a 27-0 margin before Iowa scored. Purdue was so clearly superior after running up'a two-touchdown lead in the first quarter that the homecoming crowd of 34,000 sat back and beamed quietly. Then Ohio State's 23-14 upset of Wisconsin was announced in the third quarter and Purdue's old grads all but went mad. The Pur- due band struck up "California, Here I Come" and the rest of the game was all but ignored. ILLINOIS 48, WASHINGTON 14 CHAMPAIGN, 11.-Tommy O'- Connell took charge of a spectacu- lar football airlift yesterday by hurling five touchdown passes, within 20 minutes to pilot Illinois to a smashing 48-14 intersectional victory over the Washington Hus- kies. Only in the last four minutes of the game did Washington come to life against Illinois sec- and and third stringers to push over two touchdowns and avoid the worst defeat a Big Ten team ever handed a Pacific Coast Con- ference eleven in regular season play. As it was, Illinois atoned vicious- ly for lickings handed the Big Ten so far this season by the West Coast, snapping a four-game Con- ference losing streak in the inter- sectional traffic. MINNESOTA 27, N'WESTERN 26 MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota and Northwestern traded touch- downs in a free scoring game yes- terday, but the Gophers converted one more point to win, 27-26, in the Big Ten opener for both teams before 47,410. Minnesota came from behind three times, and pushed over the winning touchdown with only 17 seconds to play. The final Gopher score capped a thrilling drive in which the Go- phers moved 42 yards in one min- ute, 29 seconds. Minnesota got the ball on its 48 with 42 minutes left. The Go- phers picked up a first down and then Northwestern intercepted a pass on its eleven and with only three minutes left that seemed to be the game. But Minnesota held and took a short wildcat punt on the Northwestern 42 with one min- ute, 46 seconds to go. John Baumgartner, sophomore Go- pher fullback, carried the ball twice for 29 yards. Then on fourth down left half Paul Giel tossed the winning touchdown pass to Don Swanson. The clock showed 17 seconds, and when Gene Cappelletti kicked the extra point, that was the game, 27 to 26. OFFER VA" A FRESH APPROACH to Foreign language Vocabulary Study * 1000 individual Cards * Most Frequently Needed Words * Foreign Word one side, English Reverse * Are Easy To Use * Eliminate Wasted Time * Fit into Pocket or Purse * Always Handy For Study at Odd Moments EXAMINE A SET TODAY On Sale at ULRICHS Ann Arbor's Busy Bookstore NEW YORK, (R) - Princeton's proud winning streak was snapped at 24 games by unawed Penn yes- terday as the college football cam- paign moved into high gear. With the exception of Wiscon- sin and Notre Dame, No. 8, which fell before the sledgehammer blows of Pitt, 22-19, all the other top teams in the nation came through as expected. * * * MICHIGAN State, No. 2, blasted Texas A & M, 48-6; California, No. 3, trounced Oregon, 41-7; Mary- land, No. 4 shut out Georgia, 37-0; Georgia Tech, No. 5, whitewashed Tulane, 14-0; Duke, No. 6, crushed South Carolina, 33-7, and Kansas, No. 9, trounced Iowa State, 43-0. Southern California, No. 7, beat San Diego Navy last night. Thus the leading teams rally broke loose for the first time this season in the wild scramble for top honors. The Penn triumph over Prince- ton was not entirely unexpected despite the Tigers' winning skein- the longest in college football when the day started. The Quakers were known to have a tough outfit that could make hash of most of their Ivy League rivals. * * * HERE AGAIN defense told the story. Penn intercepted five Princeton passes - two of which almost certainly would have gone for scores. The Tigers couldn't gain on the ground and that was it. Joe Varaitis bulled over for one Penn tally and a 46-yard pass from Walt Nynocki to Jack Moses accounted for the other. Dick Un- ger flipped to Frank McPhee for the Princeton touchdown. Pitt held Notre Dame score- less in the first half to chalk up its first triumph over the Irish since 1937. Frank Leahy's charges got going in the sec- ond half, but by that time it was too late. The Panthers wasted no time by pounding over for two touchdowns in the first quarter almost before Notre Dame knew it. California, the choice for the Pacific Coast Conference cham- pionship and the Rose Bowl bid, made it even closer. The Gold- en Bears could do no better than a 7-7 halftime deadlock with Ore- gon, one of the "have-nots" of the loop. But once they erupted, with Johnny Olszewski handling the major share of the offensive chores, there was no stopping the Golden Bears. U.C.L.A., Oklahoma and Illinois, three teams pounding on the door of the top ten, came through with easy victories. The Uclans dropped Rice of the Southwest Confer- ence, 20-0; Oklahoma polished off Texas, 49-20, and Illinois crushed Washington, 48-14. LATE FOOTBALL SCORES California 41, Oregon 7 Stanford 41, Oregon State 28 Oklahoma 49, Texas 20 I OF Michigan7 First Downs .........17 By rushing ........ 11 By passing ........ 5 By penalty......... 1 Rushing Yardage ....157 Number of rushes . 53 Passing Yardage ...s184 Passes Attempted .... 17 Passes Completed .... 12 Passes Intercepted .. 2 Punts...............5 Punting Average .... 41.8 Fumbles Lost ....... 1 Yards Penalized .... 40 Indiana 16 10 1 144 37 211 38 18 1_ 37.6 1 75 Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters W/C Tape & Wire Recorders . ,*. Steel Desks, Chairs, Files MITEELCA I ICD C3C3 I Big T( Purdue " MICHIGAN Minnesota Ohio State Wisconsin Indiana Illinois Northwestern Iowa en W 2 1 1 2 0 0 l a t z Standings L T Pct. PF OP 0 0 1.000 62 28 0 0 1.000 28 13 0 0 1.000 27 26 1 0 .667 70 48 1 0 .500 34 29 2 0 .333 46 74 1 0 .000 6 20 1 0 .000 26 27 2 0 .000 27 fi1 MORR LL'S Phone 314 S. State 7177 Open Saturday till 5 P.M. Except on Home Games i 1. Announcing... GOTHIC FILM SOCIETY'S 1952-53 SEASON "FILMS OF OUTSTANDING DIRECTORS" OCT. 13-William Wellman's "OX-BOW INCI- FEB. 23-G. W. Pabst's "THE JOYLESS STREET" DENT" with Henry Fonda, one of the finest West- with Greta Garbo; her most distinguished European ems ade.picture. MAR. 9-Sergei Eisenstein's "BATTLESHIP PO- NOV. 3-D. W. Griffith's "BIRTH OF A NATION" TEMKIN" recently voted the best picture of all the famous Civil ,Wor f ilm; a pioneer. time; and Frank Capra's "THE BATTLE OF RUS- the amos CvilWar ilm a ioner.SIA" from the wartime, documentary "Why We NOV. 24-Renee Clair's "LE MILLION" a French Fight" series. comedy of the freshest invention. MAR. 30-Lewis Milestone's "ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT" with Lew Ayres; the DEC. 8-Fritz Lang's "M" with Peter Lorre; the World War I classic.L y original psychological drama. APR. 27 - Josef von Sternberg's "MOROCCO" with Marlene Dietrich and Gary Cooper. JAN. 12-Eric von Stroheim's "GREED" with Zasu MAY 11-King Vidor's "HALLELUJAH" experi- Pitts; a milestone in the silent film. mental sound film with all-Negro cast. LATE HOCKEY SCORES Montreal 2, Detroit 1 CONTINUED THIS WEEK! 10% OFF ENTIRE STOCK MEN'S SHOES /d F~o/e $1795 to /29 / Vm ' :, \\17/q.. Select from 1236 Pair! MEN! Take advantage of this fine offer. 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