TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THRER Wenley, Michigan, Still Unbeaten in IMIA )Otball Robertson Sparks Wenley To 19-0 Win over Fletcher Rumsey, Chicago Score Shutout Triumphs As Star Backs Kany, Hanslowski Shine 4 PRO GRID ROUNDUP: 49ers, Giants Win To Stay Undefeated R Wenley House, the defending /champions in the Residance Hal I-M grid loop, rolled to its third straight win blanking Fletcher 19-0 yesterday afternoon. Jim Robertson ran and passed Wenley to its victory, skirting right end for one score and toss- ing touchdown passes to Jim Fin- negan and Morgan Davis as the champions coasted home over their undermanned opponents. Gene Johnson scored the lone ex- tra point on a short run in the first half. ALSO PRESERVING unblem- ished records yesterday were Allen-Rumsey, Michigan and Chi- cago. Rumsey and Michigan have taken three games apiece and Chi- cago has won twon. The Rumseyites did all of their scoring in the first half in beat- Ing Lloyd, 12-0. On the second play of the game, back Bob Kany lofted a long pass that Tom Propson gathered in for the Wolverines Show Lethal Pass Attack The varsity uncorked a lethal aerial punch Saturday to floor In- diana's Hoosiers with a weapon heretofore thought to be the weak- est in the Michigan arsenal. Critics who have bemoaned the lack of an adequate passer should be well silenced by the week end goings-on in the Stadium. * . * TED KRESS completed 11 out of 14 tosses for 180 yards and two touchdowns, a performance which was a good deal more than ade- quate. All-America candidate Low- ell Perry collected both of Kress' scoring heaves in addi. tion to six others for 95 yards, his best effort of the young sea- son. On the ground, freshman wing- back Tony Branoff paced the run- ners with 77 yards on 15 carries. * * * IT SEEMS that the only weak spot in Branoff's all-round play is his slowness at getting started on running plays. Once under way, the Flint lad is extremely difficult to halt, as was evidenced in Saturday's game. Fullback Bob Hurley, starting his first game for Michigan, found the going a little rough and gained only 29 yards. Hur- ley however is certain to im- prove if hustle and drive are any indication. A decided improvement in pass defense during the second half was perhaps the most encouraging note of the entire game. The line spear- headed by Jim Balog, Ron Wil- iams, Art Walker and Gene Knut- son was instrumental in the hur- rying of Lou D'Achille's passes. * * * IT HAS long been held by foot- ball experts that the best pass de- fense is to rush the passer. The Michigan line heeded that axiom, and the results were gratifying. The postgame check of injur- iesrevealed Jim Bates' twisted knee plus the usual crop of bumps and bruises. Russ Res- corla was knocked unconscious late in the second quarter and did not play for the rest of the game. Duncan McDonald took over his extra point kicking chore and booted three out of three, while Dave Tinkham filled in on the kickoffs. Officials banished two Indiana players, tackle John Connors and halfback John Bartkiewicz, for unnecessary roughness. PRIZE WINNING t use the Net' MICROTOMIC -the Absolutely Uniform score, and minutes later Kany l connected again, this time pick- ing out Jack De Cou with a r touchdown toss. Michigan House had a rough I time in extending its spotless rec- qrd, as its intra-quad rivalry with - Williams House moved out onto the gridiron. Michigan had to go into overtime before it could eke out a r 1-0 win. * * * TRAHNG in overtime with only one down left to them, the Michiganders finally pulled out the game with a long yardage-eat- ing Pass from Ray Tam to Mike e May. Jules Hanslowski led Chicago House to an impressive 19-0 win over Adams. Hanslowski scored one touchdown on a run and passed for another while Tom Bugland swept around right end for the other Chicago score. Trailing 7-6 at the half, Taylor came from behind to stop Gom- berg 20-14 in a hard-fought con- test. Bill Roeder led the Taylorites comeback by passing to Bob Elch- er for a touchdown and Tom Stapleton for an extra point, and then. tallying another six points himself with a jaunt around end. IN OTHER games played yester- day, Kelsey tripped Reeves 13-7, Anderson slipped by Winchell 7-0, Strauss defeated Van Tyne 13-2, Cooley over-powered Scott 14-0 and Hayden blanked Greene, 12-0. In the professional fraternity di- vision, Phi Chi crushed the Ma- roons by a 28-6 count and Nu Sig 1 Nu had an easy time of it in beat- ing Psi Omega 26-0. Soccer Team Defeats Ypsi In First Test Two quick goals early in the first half provided the winning margin Saturday morning as the newly formed Wolverine Soccer Team defeated an intra-mural squad from Michigan State Nor- mal College, 4-2. It was the first time an Ann Ar- bor soccer team defeated Ypsi- lanti in three years of competi- tion. * * . KWO-CHIEW QUAN paced the victors with two tallies while teammates Robin Weevahon and Jack Reines added one apiece. The two teams will play a re- turn match at Ypsilanti Saturday iorning. Ken Ross, captain of the new group, called on organizational and blackboard meeting for 8 o'clock tonight in Rm. 247 Ar- chitecture. In issuing a call for all interested undergraduates to attend the meeting Ross stated that he has several other games tentatively scheduled. "Soccer is catching on fast in the Midwest," he said, "and this is a good chance for interested men to break in with a fin egroup of young athletes. We are especially interested in seeing Freshmen come out for the team." Sign up for Senior Pic- tures, 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Deadline is Fri., Oct. 17. The New York Giants and San Francisco 49ers maintained their league leads in the American and National Conferences with impres- sive wins Sunday in National Foot- ball League play. The Giants came from behind twice to take a hard-fought game from the Cleveland Browns, 17-9. The Browns, rated the top team in the American loop, started off the scoring early in the contest with a 30 yard field goal by Lou Groza. * * * NEW YORK gained command of the situation by a beautiful 70- yard pass play from Chuck Con- erly to Bob Wilkinson early in the second period, to go ahead 7-3. Within the first ten minutes of the third period, Groza kick- ed two field goals, 52 and 21 yards, to put the Browns back on top, 9-7. The Giants jumped back into a 10-9 lead on a 25-yard field goal by Ray Poole. Then in the final stanza, Tom Landry intercepted a Cleveland pass on the Brown 30 and scored the final touch- down. SAN FRANCISCO moved ahead by routing the Detroit Lions, 28-0. The undefeated West Coasters scored twice in the second quarter, on plunges by Bill Wilson and Hugh McElhenny. The other scores came on a quarterback sneak in the third interception of a Detroit pass by Don Burke, who raced 35 yards into the end zone. In other contests played around the League, the Philadelphia Eag- les scored 13 points in the last nine minutes of play to overpower the victoryless Pittsburgh Steelers, 26-21. Bob Walston led the Eagles by kicking four field goals, in- cluding the one that put them into the lead, 23-21. * * * THE LOS ANGELES Rams came to life in the fourth period to tally three touchdowns and one field goal and edge the Green Bay Packers, 30-28. The Packers went into the final stanza with a comfortable 28-6 lead, but watched it slip out of their grasp. Charlie Trippi's passing led the Chicago Cardinals to a 17-6 win over the Washington Redskins. The Cardinals took command early in the first half on a one-yard plunge by Trippi after he com- pleted six out of seven passes, and were never in trouble. In the only other game played, the Chicago Bears took the meas- ure of the Dallas Texans, by vir- tue of a 38-20 win. Quarterback Bob Williams was the whole show, completing thirteen of fifteen passes, including three touchdown tosses. AMERICAN New York Chicago Cardinals Cleveland Philadelphia Washington Pittsburgh NATIONAL San Francisco Chicago Bears Detroit Green Bay Los Angeles CONFERENCE WV L T 3 0 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 2 1 0 0 3 0 CONFERENCE W L T 3 0 0 2 1 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 1 2 0 Pct. 1,000 .667 .667 .667 .333 .000 Pet. 1.000 .667 :333 .333 .333. -Daily-Malcolm Shatz LOWELL PERRY-Speedy Michigan left end gathers in a Ted Kress pass for a five yard gain in Saturday's game with Indiana. THE LARGEST LITTLE TP STORE IN TOWN For the f inest in Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobaccos 'M' Future Foes Display Potent Offensive Punch By DICK LEWIS Michigan's five remaining Big Ten opponents poured across 165 points Saturday in an offensive barrage that averaged 33 points per contest, while the one out- sider on the Wolverine schedule (Cornell) was held to a single touchdown. Each of the Maize and Blue's future conference foes scored at least three six-pointers in win- ning four out of five tussles. On the other side of the ledger, the losers in these contests averaged two scoring plays apiece. NORTHWESTERN-MINNESO- TA: Gopher tailback Paul Giel tossed a six-yard pass to quarter- back Don Swanson to tie the game with 17 seconds remaining, and Geno Cappelletti's accurate place-kick pinned a 27-26 defeat on the Wildcats. Minnesota drove 42 yards in the final two minutes to gain its initial victory of the season behind an attack that ate up 228 yards on the ground and 111 in the air. Fullback Chuck Hren notched three touchdowns for the losers, and Clarence Johnson went across for the other Wildcat score. Ski-u-Mah's opening TD came on a 27-yard pass from Swanson to Bob McNamara, and Mel Holme plunged over from the one to make it 14-6 at halftime. Swanson added the third tally for the winners on a fourth period sneak from one foot out. Infractions hurt Coach Bob Voigts' eleven, which was penaliz- ed 104 yards to 11 for the Go- phers. * * * ILLINOIS: Quarterback Tommy O'Connell and end John Ryan teamed up for a sensational aerial demonstration to give the Illini an easy 48-14 triumph over an in- vading Washington squad. O'Connell connected with 14 of 17 throws for 262 yards and five touchdowns. Ryan was on the receiving end of three of the payoff heaves, one of which cov- ered 78 yards. Six of the seven Illinois scores came by the overhead route, the only one on the ground being a nine-yard plunge by sophomore Austin Duke. Duke also got into an overhead show, heaving a 51-yard scoring toss to halfback Pete Bachouros. The total Illini passing game hit on 20 of 28 for 393 yards, and racked up ten first downs. * * * CORNELL: The punchless Red Raiders absorbed their third con- secutive loss, a 26-6 setback at the hands of Syracuse. Dick Eligott hit paydirt with Cornell's lone marker, gathering in a 35-yard pass from Tony D'- Agostino late in the first half. PURDUE: Dark-horse Purdue chalked up its second successive Big Ten win to take over the con- ference lead with a powerful 41-14 lacing of Iowa. Quarterback Dale Dale Sam- uels and fullback Max Schmal- ing were the spearheads of a Purdue offense that overcame 145 yards in penaltiese. Samuels found the range for the 19th and 20th touchdown pass- es of his three-year career, com- pleting 10 of 16 for 143 yards. Schmaling picked up 88 yards in 20 carries, crossing the goal line on two short plunges. The high-powered Boilermaker offense, which netted 409 yards, scored its sixth marker on a three-yard quarterback sneak by Samuels. Fullback Bob Leonard intercepted a stray Hawkeye pass and ran 70 yards with 10 seconds remaining to cap the scoring. * * * OHIO STATE: Unpredictable' OSU sprung the biggest upset of the young conference season with a stunning 23-14 success over highly-regarded Wisconsin. The once-beaten Buckeyes halted five Badger drives with- in the 20-yard line and iced the game with a ten-point splurge in the last 15 minutes. Howard (Hopalong) Cassady, 155 - pound freshman halfback, romped 113 yards in nine carries. He hung on to two passes for 51 yards and one of thepBucks three touchdowns, and ran back several kicks for long yardage. Alumni Club To Run Trip To Evanston The University of Michigan Alumni Club of Detroit announced that it will run a special train to Evanston, Illinois for the game there with Northwestern this com- ing Saturday. Bob Morgan, the Alumni Clubs representative, emphasized that the train will not be in competi- tion with the Wolverine Club's bus trip, but that it is intended for the convenience of those who wish to make the trip by train. THE TRAIN will leave the Mich- igan Central station in Detroit 7:00 a.m. Eastern Standard Time Saturday and arrive in Ann Arbor around 7:30. It is expected that it will reach Chicago at 11:45 a.m. Central Standard Time. Two different price tickets are available, $23.50 and $33.50. Both prices include round-trip train. fare and a ticket for the game. If someone desiring to take the special train to Chicago already has a ticket, it will be deducted from the total cost. The $33.50 trip is by Pullman and includes a night stop-over at the Hotel Sherman in Chicago. The train to Ann Arbor will leave 2:25 p.m. CST Sunday and arrive in Detroit at 8:40 EST. The $23 tour returns the eve- ning of the game, leaving Chicago at 7:20 CST. 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