PACE SIB THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1952 Minnesota .. . 13 Wisconsin ... 42 Indiana.. ... 33 Pitt . . . . . . . . 22 UCLA . . . . . . 24 Georgia Tech. 33 Penn State .. 10 Illinois .. ... 7 Iowa ....... 13 Temple .... . 0 Army ...... 14 Stanford .... 1.4 Auburn ..... 0 Nebraska ... 0 Georgia .... . 27 LSU. . . . . . . . 14 SMU Rice "* "9!9!0!9 " 09# 9M 21 14 Gophers, Badgers, Bucks Are on Top' Ohio State . :.35 Oklahoma ... 42 Kansas .....20 Michigan State 48 Irish Topple Boilermakers; Hoosiers Trample Temple Borton's Devastating Passes Rip Washington State, 35-7 Syracuse . . . . 7 MSC Backs Score Often On Syracuse EAST LANSING--(P)-The bril- liant running attack of Michigan State's first-string backfield, the blinding speed of the second-string backs and the pin-point passing featured by a third backfield com- bination combined to completely outclass Syracuse University yes- terday as the Spartans ran up a 48 to 7 score. A crowd of 38,254 saw Coach Biggie Munn's herd of backs grind - out two touchdowns in each of the first three periods and one in the fourth to give Michigan State's top-ranked team its 19th straight win, the biggest college streak in the nation today. MUNN HAD his second string "pony" backs working as early as the first period and the third of- fensive unit of "pepper backs" was in before the first 1'alf was over. Michigan State used 61 play- ers-believed to be an all time high for the college--as it coast- ed to an easy win 3ver the Syra- cuse team which had dropped only one of its first four games. Michigan State also added a safety. The only MSC weakness was in the extra point depart- ment where Evan Slonac made four of his seven extra point tries. THE SYRACUSE consolation counter came in the fourth period when Pat Stark threw a pass that was batted into the air and caught by guard Dick Beyer who went 28 yards for the score. The Spartans completed only eight of 17 passes for 89 yards compared to 11 of 19 for 124 by Syracuse. Willie Thrower, with five completions in seven tries, had a better passing average than Tom Yewcic, the No. 1 quarterback. Yewcie completed. three of six. Stark did most of the pitching for Syracuse and hit his receivers in 11 of 18 tries. Michigan State's complete domination of the play was illustrated by the fact that the Spartans didn't have to punt until late in the third period when By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota turned back the pages of history 28 years as it handed Illinois a stunning 13 to 7 defeat yesterday before 55,627 spectators. The loss was the Illinois second of the season against no victories in the conference, and virtually knocked the defending Big Ten champions out of the 1952 title picture. It was Minnesota's second straight conterence victory. * *, THE GOPHERS versatile offen- sive was sparked by the hard plunging of its two fullbacks, Mel Holme and John Baumgartner. It was the ability of the Gophers to crack the Illinois line that kept the ball in Minnesota possession for all but three minutes of the final period, giving the Illinois offense no chance. The upset victory recalled the 1924 game when Red Grange was running wild for Illinois. The Go- phers were given little chance in that game as in yesterday's, but they surprised the Illini 20 to 7. IRISH 26, PURDUE 14 LAFAYETTE - Notre Dame's unranked football Irish uncorked a potent passing attack for the first time this season and made the most of a series of breaks yes- terday to beat a Purdue team ranked No. 9 nationally, 26-14. Purdue gave up the ball eight times on fumbles in the course of its first defeat of the season. The suddenly discovered Notre Dame aerial skill produced one touchdown and set up another. Quarterback Ralph Guglielmi passed to Johnny Lattner for one 37-yard scoring play. Quarterback Tom Carey hit end Arthur Hunter with a 32-yard aerial that set up fullback Neil Worden's second touchdown. * * * INDIANA 33, TEMPLE 0 BLOOMINGTON - Lou (Little Poison) D'Achille, a snappy south- paw passer and nimble runner, stoked up Indiana for a 33-0 romp "ver Temple yesterday as the Hoosiers hoisted their biggest winning margin in three years and shut out their first foe in 38 consecutive games. The stocky, 178-pound D'Achille hum-bugged Temple's defenses with his darts off the split-T for- mation and his left handed tosses. * s s HE PEGGED a 20-yard scoring pass while on the run to end John Zuger and hooked up with full- back Gene Gedman on a 19-yard lateral pass touchdown play. The Hoosiers, dispatching five different players over the goal Big Ten Standings line, scored in each period and shot into a commanding 20-0 lead at halftime. ** * WISCONSIN 42, IOWA 13 IOWA CITY - Wisconsin, its pride tortured by Ohio State only last week, turned its cold fury on Iowa 42-13 yesterday to get the Badgers back in stride in the Big Ten football race. Knocked from the nation's No. 1 ranking and its Rose Bowl hopes jarred by the 14-23 loss to Ohio, Wisconsin stormed through a fum- bling Iowa team with a smashing offense and a rip-roaring defen- sive line that held the helpless Hawks to a net gain of 23 yards by rushing. At that the Badgers needed a bit of needling to get their of- fense under way. The stimulus came from Iowa safety Bernie Bennett who returned a punt 63 yards for a touchdown with 4:53 left in the first period. That sideline spurt jolted Wis- consin into reality and its potent line, led by ends Jerald Wuhrman and Don Voss and guard George O'Brien, and an alert secondary didn't let Iowa score again until late in the final period. COLUMBUS-(AP)-Ohio State's sophomore quarterback big John Borton, unleashed one of the most devastating aerial attacks ever seen in Buckeye Stadium yester- day as Ohio smothered Washing- ton State's Cougars under a 35-7 score in an intersectional contest. Borton, a 197-pound, six-foot, one-inch 19-year-old passed for all five touchdowns. Senior end Bob Grimes took four of the scoring tosses. Borton's touchdown heaves went for 11, 54, 14, 70 and 25 yards. WITH BORTON doing most of the throwing, the Bucks completed 18 of 21 passes for 375 yards. They had no interceptions. Washington State, beaten in its first three games after being picked as the best in the west in pre-season polls, made a game of it for the first 15 minutes. Neither team could score. But, the bristling Bucks broke loose for three touchdowns in the second period and added one in each of the last two to make it a runaway. At the finish, when the Cou- gars staged a 74-yard march for their lone touchdown in the final -Daily-Jack Bergstrom CHANGE OF PLANS-Gene Knutson intercepts a Burson aerial for the Wolverines. Michigan lost some distance when clipping was called on the play and a 15-yard fine assessed. Sooners Slam Kansas, 42 -20; two minutes, the field was flooded with Buckeye third, fourth and fifth-stringers. DUKE WASHINGTON, Cougar fullback, went around end for two yards to score. Ed Barker booted the extra point. Ohio's five touchdown drives covered a total of 331 yards in 26 plays -and 290 of the yards were through the air. The open- ing touchdown went 68 yards in four plays, Borton hitting Grimes with a 12-yarder for the count- er. It was only 34 seconds after the second period opened. Washington State, fighting to get back in the game, gambled for' one yard on fourth down on Ohio's 39, but lost the ball. FULLBACK John Hlay of Ohio' then hit for seven yards and Bor- ton passed 54 yards to halfback Fred Briney for the touchdown. The two plays covered 61 yards. Jim Head fumbled a moment later on Washington's 29. Marts Beekley recovered for OSU..On the' fifth play, thereafter, Borton hit Grimes on the five and the Ohio end carried a tackler into the end zone for a 14-yard scoring play. Early in the third period, quar- terback Bob Burkhart's kick went out on Ohio's 18. The Bucks need- ed only an eight-yard pass from Borton to end Dean Dugger, a two- yard line smash by Hlay and a 70-yard Borton-to-Grimes 'pass for a score. Rambling Wrecks Nip Auburn, 33-0 ATLANTA-(J)-H'ungry-hand- ed Bobby Moorhead, a defensive halfback with an appetite for Au- burn passes, ran back two inter- ceptions for touchdowns as Geor- gia Tech whipped Auburn yester- day, 23-0. Young Moorhead, a Miami, Fla., .kid who would make a great of- fensive erd, opened the gates for unbeaten Tech with a 46-yard run- back for a touchdown in the sec- ond quarter. He practically wrap- ped up the game in the third quar- ter with a 41-yard excursion through Auburn land. Nineteen games have passed since Tech lost the last time in November, 1950, to Alabama. The record record is third best in major college football, topped only by the slightly better strings of Mich-- igan State and Maryland. The Southeastern Conference victory with 37,000 fans on hand, was Tech's fifth of the season. Washington St. 7 Notre Dame. .-26 Purdue . . . . . 14 Maryland . . . 38 Navy . . . * ... 7 Mary land's Steamroller Downs Navy COLLEGE PARK, Md. ()-- Maryland poured on all its might for three quarters yesterday and then relaxed for an easy 17th straight victory by a 38 to 7 score over a Navy team hitherto unde- feated, The packed hose of 44,716 saw quarterback Jack Scarbath and his fellow offensive dynamiters blow Maryland ahead 31-0 by the mid- dle of the third quarter and then retire for the game. THE MARYLAND second string offensive added another touchdown in the third quarter and Navy didn't score until early in the last period. There obviously was no love between the two teams, located 20 miles apart with no future bookings against each other. Four Navy and three Maryland players were pu out of the game for getting too rough. The red-shirted Marylanders, with Scarbath carrying the torch, swept through Navy's vaunted de- fense like a prairie fire from the word go. They roared 76 yards in six plays the first time they got the ball and 52 yards the next time. When they got stopped on their third drive they kicked a field goal and piled on another touchdown for a 24-0 first half lead that finished the game for all practical purposes. * * * IT WAS THE fifth straight tri- umph this year for the Sugar Bowl champions who haven't been beaten in the last 20 games. For Navy, it was a rude awakening aft- er winning three straight this year and five in a row since Mary- land hung a 35-21 defeat on it last year. Scarbath's quarterbacking wizardry at the outset made Navy's defense, rated second best in the country up until to- day, look positively porous. On the sixth play of the game he flipped a pass from the Navy 48 to halfback Ralph Felton, who caught it 15 yards past the line of scrimmage and ran down the sidelines to score. I Pi'tt Downs Army; UCLA Winsl 4, Thrower wasnt able backfield rolling. to get his V Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters W/C Tape &u Wire Recorders Steel Desks, Chairs, Files MORRILL'S 314 S. State Phone 7177 By the Associated Press LAWR ENCE, Kas.--Oklahoma's magnificent Sooners, with football magician Eddie Crowder faking and passing in superb form, moved a notchnearer their fifth succes- sive Big Seven Conference cham- pionship yesterday by blasting the Kansas Jayhawks, 42 to 20. A capacity crowd of about 40,000 saw coach Bud Wilkinson's Okla- homans win their third victory of the year against one tie over a first loss in five games. The vic- tory left Oklahoma with a confer- ence record of a tie with Colorado and one triumph. Kansas now has two league successes and one loss. S . s THE SOONEUS spotted Kansas a seven point lead early in the game by bobbling the ball deep in their own territory. But after catching up at 7 to 7, barrelled ahead for a 14 to 7 quarter, and a 21 to 13 half-time lead. They were never caught by the eager Kansans. Crowder didn't show in the scoring summary but his ball handling tricks and spot pass- ing always had Oklahoma on the move. Billy Vessels and Merrill Green, both halfbacks, each scored twice for the Sooners. * * * Buddy Leake, the nation's lead- ing scorer with 46 points through last week, got a touchdown and two conversions before leaving the game with a chipped ankle bone in the second quarter. End Max Boydston scored on a 59-yard pass play from Crowder for the other touchdown. IT WAS Oklahoma's thirty-first Big Seven contest without a loss. The Sooners were last beaten by Kansas 16 to 13 in 1946. The worst the Sooners have done since then were ties with Kansas in 1947, and with Colorado this year. Kansas wasn't as bad as the score indicated today in a rough, hard offensive struggle. Key men from both teams left the field with injuries. The Jayhawks, with Charley Hoag, Jerry Robertson and Bob Brandeberry all scoring touch- downs, trimmed their handicap to a single point, 21 to 20, early in the third quarter and hung on gamely until the finish. Tom Catlin, Oklahoma's great center, was credited with two touchdown-saving tackles. He also threw the key block on Leake's first touchdown run of 10 yards that brought the Sooner's initial score. * * * PITT 22, ARMY 14 WEST POINT, N.Y. - Paul Chess, a second string Pitt full- back, exploded behind the crisp, vigorous blocking reminiscent of the old Jock Sutherland era yes- terday to puncture Army's dreams of a sudden return to the golden pre-scandal heights with a 22-14. victory. Only in the final minutes when Pitt had piled up a 22-0 lead did Army strike for its two too-late touchdowns against the inspired Pitt team that upended Notre Dame a week ago. RUDY MATTIOLI, the air arm and quarterback brains- of the re- vived Pitt club, wisely mixed the ground power of Chess, Billy Rey- nolds and John Jacobs with his own right arm to pierce Ar My de- fenses at crucial points. Chess swept wide on a 14- yard gallop after a pitch out from Mattioli, the sophomore whiz, to cap an 80-yard drive in the first. On the same play Chess sped home from the 8 ending a 70 yard march in the second. Each time Chess, a husky senior from Meadville, Pa., broke out into the clear, key blocks by Tony Ro- mantino and Jacobs cleared the way. * * * PITT ROLLED the score to 16-0 at half time when Joe Zombek and a half dozen other white-shirt- ed giants smothered Freddie At- taya in the end zone for a safety. Paul Branda's 40 yard coffin cor- ner punt, out of bounds on the one, had put Army in the deep freeze. Attaya, trying to punt, nev- er had a chance when Godwin Ordway's center pass bounced along the ground. Mattioli had stuck to the T formation most of the time until he launched this third touchdown drive. Chess almost got loose on a 21 yard run and Mattioli sneaked for another first down. UCLA 24, STANFORD 14 LOS ANGELES-Paul Cameron threw three touchdown strikes to send the UCLA football machine smashing through a rugged road block to the Rose Bowl yesterday with a 24 to 14 triumph over the Stanford Indians. Playing before. 80,167, largest crowd of the year out here, the Bruins racked up their fifth straight win of the season. It was the first defeat for the Indians, who carried the Pacific Coast Con- ference hopes in the Bowl last year. Coach Red Sanders' Bruins still have major obstacles in unbeaten California and Southern California to win the Bowl bid. Cameron, the UCLA All America candidate, threw two scoring passes to end Ike Jones, one for 43 years, the other for 2, and then cinched the final decision with an 8-yard toss to halfback Don Stal- wick. I r, 71 W Purdue .,.....,.2 Michigan .......2 Minnesota ......2 Ohio State .....2 Wisconsin ......2 Indiana ........1 Illinois .........0 Northwestern ...0 Iowa ...........0 L 0 0 0 1 1 2 2 2 3 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .333 .000 .000 .000 r Open Saturday till 5 P.M. Except on Home Games - . , . , k111 i 1IIL ONE STOP at Packard Laundry takes care of all 3! and fast! Laundry " Politics' Strange' ti. Bedfellows.. on "Labor Views the News" Sponsored by the international Union UAW.CIO :I .ar One half hour service. Serve yourself, .r wash and dry in less than one hour. No risk of damage to your daintiest washables using modern Maytag wash- ers that wash.clothes really clean. Dry Cleaning 10% discount 10% cash and carry discount for ex- pert, guaranteed work by Michigan Dry Cleaners, Inc. 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