SUNDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Wolverines Tally Seven Times IiNational Football Scoreboard s s s ! * . K ress, Topor, I alzhiser Figure n Scoring Spree --Daily-Jack Bergstrom HERO OF THE bAY-Michigan's Ted Kress on one of his 20 carries which netted him 218 yards on the ground. This broke the Big Ten record set by fullback Bill Dailey against NU in 1943. WIN MARCH CONTINUES: Eight of Top Ten Retain Grid Supremacy (Continued from Page 1) Dick Balzhiser, who had re- placed the injured Hurley, shot up the middle for 15, then lateraled to Kress who sped on into the end zone. Rescorla converted and it was 21-0, Michigan. NORTHWESTERN took the kickoff and returned to the 25. Two Bob Burson-Kragseth passes advanced the ball to the Wildcat 48, the farthest Northwestern got in the first half. Big Gene Knutson quelled Purple ideas of going places when he snatched another Bur- son aerial and scampered to the 27. Michigan was detected clip- ping on the play, however, and the ball was moved back to the Maize and Blue 43. After Balzhiser lost six, Kress hit Perry for a first down on Northwestern's 41. On the next play Kress swept wide, cut back, and dashed through the Wildcat secondary for his third score. RESCORLA missed on the try for the extra point, and the score- board read Michigan 27, North- western 0, with only five minutes gone in the second quarter. Michigan's fifth touchdown resulted from the longest sus- tained drive of the day. The Wolverines, with Kress, Howell and Balzhiser in the drivers seat, moved 79 yards in 16 plays. Tom Witherspoon, who replaced Howell late in the drive, plunged over to get into the scoring act. Automatic Rescorla booted his fourth extra point to make it Michigan 33, Northwestern 0, at the end of the first half. * * * IN THE THIRD quarter neither team was able to hit paydirt. Northwestern managed to put to- gether a semblance of an attack, but never seriously threatened to score. Michigan made one bid mid- way in the period that advanced as far as the Purple four yard line, but Kress fumbled to Wally Jones to end the drive. Just as the period ended Mich- igan began to march to its sixth score. Northwestern punted out of bounds on its own 40. On the first play Balzhiser again broke up the middle and lateraled to Kress for 17 yards as the quarter ended. * * * WITHERSPOON'S two thrusts moved the ball to the one-foot line where Balzhiser carried it over for the score. Rescorla con- verted, making it Michigan 41, Northwestern 0. With Michigan heavy in re- serves, Wildcat quarterback Thomas began to open up a desperate passing attack. Start- ing on his own 47, he hit Krag- seth and Joe Collier on succes- sive passes to put the ball on the Wolverine four yard line. Hren went over on the second try to break the ice for the Purple. Kragseth converted to make it Michigan 41, Northwestern 7. * .s M THE WILDCATS, once having tasted success, werenow hungry for some mort. of the same. With Thomas again directing the at- tack, the Purple moved for its second touchdown. Jones returned a Maize and Blue punt to the Michigan 44. Thomas faded to pass, but elect- ed to run, the ball winding up, on the 31. Thomas hit Collier in the end zone for what ap- peared to be a score, but North- western was holding on the play. Thomas hit Lauter for 15 yards, then pitched to Collier who was again clear in the end zone. Krag- seth converted and the score was Michigan 41, Northwestern 14. The Wolverines added their last six-pointer at 12:42 of the final period. Green recovered a North- western fumble on the latters' 30- yard line, where Don Cline, sub- bing' for Kress, passed to Topor for the seventh Michigan touch- down. Rescorla again converted. Final score: Michigan 48, Northwest- ern 14. *aS)n MIDWEST Adrian 19,- Hillsdale 14 Albion 32, Hope 13 Alma 13, Kalamazoo 12 Bradley 40, Wayne 21 Bowling Green 27, Baldwin- Wallace 19 Campe Le Jeune 23, Dayton 19 Colorado 21, Iowa State 12 Detroit 57, Drake 0 Grand Rapids JC 7, Ferris ,0 Heidelberg 49, Capital 6 Hiram 26, Marietta 6 Indiana 33, Temple 0 John Carroll 32, Case 0 Kenyon 14, Hobart 13 Lake Forest 49,, North Central 13 Marquette 37, Arizona 7 Michigan 48, Northwestern 14 Michigan Normal 19, Northern Illinois 7 Michigan State 48, Syracuse 7 Michigan Tech 21, Northern Michigan 0 Minnesota 13, Illinois 7 Mount Union 7, Akron 6 Muskingum 26, Wooster 13 Notre Dame 26, Purdue 14 Ohio Northern 19, Bluffton 12 Ohio State 35. Washington St. 7, Ohio University 27, Kent 18 Ohio Wesleyan 28, Denison 13 Oklahoma 42, Kansas 20 Oklahoma A&M 14, Missouri 7 Percy Jones 27, Olivet 0 Scott Air Force Base 33, Great Lakes Naval Training Sta. 27 Western Michigan 19, Toledo 14 Western Reserve 20, Washington University (St. Louis) 16 Wisconsin 42, Iowa 13 Wittenberg 27, Oberlin 0 Xavier 27, Louisville 13 EAST Amberst 33, Coast Guard 14 Bowdoin 26, Williams 19 Bucknell 22, Buffalo 0 Carnegie Tech 19, Allegheny 0 Colby 13, Trinity 6 Connecticut 13, Maine 7 Dartmouth 29, Rutgers 20 Harvard 21, Colgate 20 Holy Cross 46, Brown 0 Lehigh 15, Gettysburg 7 Norwich 43, Champlain 19 Pittsburgh 22, Army 14 Pennsylvania 27, Columbia 17 Penn State 10, Nebraska 0 Princeton 48, Lafayette 0 Quantico Marines 21, Fordham 8 Rhode Island 26, Massachusetts 7 Rochester 12, Vermont 7 Springfield 14, New Hampshire 14 (Tie) Swathmore 33, Hamilton 26 Waynesburg 35, Bethany 0 SOUTH Duke 57, No. Carolina State 0 George Wash. 6, Virginia Tech 0 Georgia Tech 33, Auburn 0 Maryland State 20, Hampton 0 Maryland 38, Navy 7 Mississippi 20, Tulane 14 Mississippi St. 27, Kentucky 14 Tennessee 20, Alabama 0 Vanderbilt 20, Florida 13 Virginia 33, VMI 14 , Wake Forest 9, No. Carolina 7 W. Virginia 31, Wash. & Lee 13 FAR WEST California 27, Santa Clara 7 Colorado O&M 41, Montana 0 Idaho 54, North Dakota State 9 New Mexico 7, Wyoming 0 So. California 28, Oregon St. 6 UCLA 24, Stanford 14 Utah 35, Denver 0 Washington 49, Oregon 0 SOUTHWEST Baylor 21, Texas Tech 10 Kansas State 27, Tulsa 6 Texas 44, Arkansas 7 TCU 7, Texas A&M 7 (Tie) NEW YORK-(M)-The behe- moths of college football-almost without exception-continued to pile up victories yesterday as the campaign reached the halfway mark for most schools. Mighty Michigan State, the No. 1 team in the Associated Press poll, led the parade with a 48-7 crunching of Syracuse, which had been regarded as one of the bet- ter outfits in the East. * . * NOT TO BE outdone, second- ranked. Maryland clubbed Navy into its first defeat, 38-7. But C'ali- fornia, third, and swaggering to- ward the Pacific Coast Conference title and a bid to the Rose Bowl, made it close over Santa Clara, 27-7. Georgia Tech and Duke, two of the leading lights in the South, both scored impressive shutouts as they roared toward their showdown meeting on Nov. 1. The Engineers bashed Au. burn, 38-0, while Duke over- whelmed North Carolina State, 53-0. The Big Seven title was all but decided when defending champion Oklahoma whipped Kansas, 42-20, in a battle of the two leading teams of the loop. The way now appears clear for the Sooners to wrap up the title again. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA and U.C.L.A. both of which have hopes of upsetting California for the Rose Bowl nomination, also came through as expected. Seventh- ranked Southern Cal defeated Oregon State, 28-6, and U.C.L.A. dumped Stanford, the defending Rose Bowl champion, 24-14. Upsets-as has been the cus- tom this season-were few and far between. Notre Dame stop- ped Purdue in a minor reversal, 26-14; Minnesota triumphed ov- er Illinois, 13-7, and Tennessee beat Alabama, 20-0. The three results Were unexpected but hardly of a startling nature. The list of major undefeated teams in the country was thinned by four more with the defeat of Navy, Kansas, Stanford and Ala- bama. THE MSC VICTORY over Syra- cuse-a team that had dropped only one of its first four games- was effortless. Coach Biggie Munn used his first-stringers only spar- ingly and before the first half was over, the third-string backfield was in operation. All told, 61 players performed for the Spartans. They kept Syracuse bottled up until the fourth quarter when the Orange managed to tally its sole touch- down. The Maryland conquest over Navy was almost a carbon copy of Michigan State's win. The Ter- rapins ran up a 31-0 bulge before the third quarter was over. After that, Jack Scarbath and Co., re- tired to the bench to permit the lesser lights to hold the Navy out- fit in check. * * * CALIFORNIA couldn't do much against little Santa Clara for three periods, leading by only 14-7. But an outburst in the final chapter made it look easy. Oklahoma yielded Kansas a score in the opening minutes, but after that dominated the proceedings. The Sooners, shoot- ing for their fifth straight Big Seven title, scored in every quar- ter with Billy Vessels and Mer- rill Green leading the parade over the goal line with two each. Notre Dame apparently is go- ing to be one of those unpredictable teams that can look good one week and horrible the next. The Irish unleashed a passing attack for the first time this season with Tom Carey and Ralph Gugliemi hand- ling most of the pitching. Frank Leahy's lads also recovered eight Purdue fumbles.- First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized Michigan NU 19 10 443 110 57 191 9 32 4 13 4 0 8 4' 31.6 31 2 2 58 60 MICHIGAN LE-Perry, Dingman, Green LT-Strozewski, bennett, Walker Geyer LG-Timm, Dugger, Matheson C-O'Shaughnessy, Wine, Vander Zeyde, Melchiori RG-Beison, Balog, Cachey RT-Pederson, Zatkoff, Williams RE-Stanford, Topp, Knutson, Dutter QB-Topor, Mc Donald, Billings LH-Kress, Tinkham, Cline, Oldham RH-Branoff, Howell, Witherspoon, Knickerbocker F-Hurley, Balzhiser, Rescorla, Le Claire, Baer NORTHWESTERN LE-Collier, Kuehl, Niepokoj, Biever LT-Huizinga, Searcy, Sacks LG-Riba, F. Hren, Mc Auliffe, Mc- Cormick, Berman C-Riley, Damore, Haffner, Callaway RG-Belejack, Jecha, Higley, Elrod RT-Young, T. Roche, Dufill RE-Kragseth, Demyan, Peterson QB-Thomas, Burson, Rondou, Banel LH-Lauter, Barclay, White, Chandler RH-Weber, Jones, Hansen, Bennett, Ranicke F-C. Hren, Johnson Read and Use Daily Classifieds I YEHUDI MENUHIN WEDNESDAY; OCTOBER 22, 8:30 DANISH SYMPHONY. . . November 13 i SKY BOUND styling... Bostonian.,. VLADIMI RHOROWITZ . . November 19 BIDU SAYAO . . . . . . . . December 1 VIENNA CHOIR BOYS . . . January 16 MINNEAPOLIS SYMPHONY February 12 GERSHWIN ORCHESTRA. ; . . March 2 ARTUR RUBINSTEIN ... . . March 12 BOSTON SYMPHONY ...... May 19 TICKETS: Limited Number Season-$10.00 Single-$3.00, $2.50, $2.00, $1.50 YEHUDI MENUHIN I I CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA . November 9 CLAUDIO ARRAU . . .. . November 25 JASCHA HEIFETZ . . . . . February 17 BOSTON "POPS". . . . . . . . March 23 i I MEN! We have All Sizes in these Fine Values but the selection is limited so act fast. All shoes taken from regu- lar stock and no inferior grades bought for sale purposes. 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