0 TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1952 Subs Spark Minnesota, OSU Gridiron Victories THE MTCHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE By DICK LEWIS Formula for grid success: take an unheralded performer, give him the football, and watch the points roll up on the scoreboard. Only two of Michigan's five fu- ture foes, Minnesota and Ohio State, used that formula Satur- day. The three that didn't, Illi- nois, Purdue and , Cornell, all wound up on the short end of the score. MINNESOTA-ILLINOIS: Sub- stitute fullback Mel Holme crash- ed four yards through the center of the line midway in the final period to give the Gophers a sur- prising 13-7 triumph over Rose Bowl champion Illinois. Holme's plunge capped a 55- yard drive and moved the Go- Ghers into a first-place Big Ten deadlock with Purdue and the Wolverines. Illini quarterback Tommy O'- Connell completed 12 of 15 passes for 134 yards in the first half, but Coach Ray Eliot's backs made tAree costly fumbles on the one, 15 and 25 yard lines, to end long marches. Ski-u-Mah's alert pass defense held O'Connell to four comple- tions in 15 throws during the final 30 minutese. The Gophers drew first blood in the second session when All- America candidate Paul Giel loft- ed a four-yard pass to end Bob McNamara, following an Illini bobble. Visiting Illinois notched its only counter on a 29-yard pass play from O'Connell to halfback Austin Duke. CORNELL: Punchless Cornell' went down to its fourth successive defeat, a 13-0 setback at the hands of Yale. The Big Red's porous defense allowed Old Eli to cross the goal line twice within two minutes in the second period, after a Cornell drive had stalled on the Yale four in the opening minutes of the Ivy League encounter. r * * 1 PURDUE: Coach Frank Leahy's unpredictable Notre Dame eleven recovered eight Purdue fumbles to pave the way for a 26-14 upset of the previously unbeaten Boiler- makers. Even with Purdue quarter- backs Dale Samuels and Roy Evans finding the range on 13 throws for 196 yards, the Fight- s ng Irish built up a 20-7 half- time advantage and were never headed. End Bernard Flowers accounted for both of the losers' touchdowns, one coming on a 27-yard heave from Samuels and the other on a 32-yard pass play from Evans. * * * . OHIO STATE: A two-man aer- ial demonstration with soph John Borton and end John Grimes as the featured performers was more than enough to provide the Buck- i eyes with a one-sided, 35-7 verdict over victoryless Washington State. Kany Paces Win By Allen-Rumsey Michigan Takes Fourth Straight; Chicago, Strauss Still Unbeaten SHADES OF FIELDING YOST: Stellar Defense Key to 'M' Victory _ F Resuming .. . TWO-HOUR * DRY CLEANING SERVICE * AT NO EXTRA CHARGE Service Available Monday through Saturday -K 7:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. (- TWO N4ES 1210 S. University e * By DAVE BAAD Sparked by Bob Kany who was, directly responsible for 22 points, Allen-Rumsey swept to its fourth straight victory of the season yes- terday and remained unscored up- on in its quest for the Intramural House football title. Win number four came at the' expense of Kelsey, and the 28-0 victory was the most one sided de- cision collected thus far by Rum- sey. * * * BOB KANY garnered the first touchdown minutes after the game opened on a slant around left end. He then passed to Laird Wallace for the extra point and Rumsey was off to 'a quick 7-0 lead. A few minutes later Kany and Wallace teamed up again, this time for a touchdown, and the subsequent extra point made the halftime score, 14-0. Kelsey never had a chance after this and Allen-Rumsey scored twice more in the second half on pass- es from Tom Propson to Jack DeCue and Bob Kany to Jim Kanitz to bring the final total to 28-0. Michigan House also extended its unbeaten streak to four straight games by marching past Taylor, 22-7. Although Michigan pulled away in the second half to win the game in convincing fashion, Taylor put up a stiff battle in the early stages of the contest. MICHIGAN scored first on a pass from Dale Ewart to Jim Hat- ten, but failed to add the extra point and it led, 6-0. Taylor came right back and Bill Roeder threw a game-tying aerial to Jim Ross. A pass to Tom Stapleton gave Tay- lor the extra point and the lead, 7-6. However, following the next kickoff Michigan marched right back into the lead again with a pass from Ewart to Ray Tam providing the touchdown. This time Tam caught a pass to make the extra point successful and Michigan held a 13-7 lead at halftime. Gene Holcomb grabbed Ewart's third touchdown pass midway in the second half. A successful ex- tra point increased the lead to 20-7. A safety in the waning min- utes was responsible for the final margin of victory. Chicago House annexed its third consecutive victory by coming from behind in the second half to beat Huber, 7-6. Bob Vanderzyl inter- cepted a stray Huber pass and then caught an aerial for the ex- tra point to give Chicago its win- ning margin. In a battle of -undefeated teams, Strauss defeated Hinsdale, 7-0, to roll up its third straight win. Other I-M scores were Winchell 12, Reeves 6; Lloyd 1, Anderson 0; Cooley 6, Van Tyne 0;Adams 18, Fletcher 0; Gomberg 20, Hayden 0; Williams 7, Greene 6. Cardinals Gain Tie for First By Edging Out The Chicago Cardinals moved into a tie for the lead in the American Conference of the Na- tional Football League by edging out the New York Giants in a tight ball game Sunday, 24-23. Trailing, 23-17, the Cardinals Trove down to the five-yard line, where Don Panciera lateraled out to Ollie Matson' who swept the end for the tally. Joe Geri added the extra point that proved to be the margin of victory. * * * WITH SECONDS left to go, Ray Poole tried a 22-yard field goal for the Giants, but it missed by less than a yard. The Cleveland Browns kept their AmericanrConference hopes alive by trampling the Philadelphia Eagles, 49 to 7. Otto Graham was the star of this one, pitching four touch- down passes and handing the Eagles their worst defeat since 1933. Graham gained 299 yards in his three quarters of action, netting 18 completions out of 30 attempted passes. The other Cleveland scores were made by Len Ford, who recovered an Eagle pitch-out in the end zone; Jones, on a 16-yard dash; and Horace Gillom, who took an 11-yard pass from George Ratter- man. Lou Groza established a new N. F. L. conversion record by boot- ing seven extra points in a row. The former Ohio State star has a total of 86 successful consecutive conversions over, the last three years. * s * THE DETROIT LIONS bounced back from their 28-0 defeat last week by downing the Los Angeles Rams, 24-16. Cloyce Box, 6 foot, 4 inch end, caught two touchdown passes to provide the victory spark. The Lions started out very slowly, and wound up the first half trailing by a 13-7 margin. The Rams scored on an off- tackle slant by Dan Towler and a 20-yard pass from Norm Van Brocklin to Tom Fears. Los This is the final week to' make Senior Picture ap- pointments. You may sign up from 1:30 to 5:30 un- until Friday at the Student Publications Building. Giants, 24-23 Angeles had a third touchdown called back, and then the Lions came to life. Bobby Layne tossed a 50 yard aerial to Box, who took it on into the end zone. Pat Harder kicked all the extra points. In the third period, La Verne Torge- son intercepted a pass by Bob Waterfield and carried over for the second Lion tally. Then, Layne handed off to Bob Hoernschmeyer, who passed to Box for the win- ning "touchdown. * * * HUGH McELHENNY. led the San Francisco 49ers to a lop-sided 40-16 pasting of the Chicago Bears. McElhenny was the out- standing ground-gainer of the af- ternoon, and featured his per- formance with a 95-yard end sweep to pay dirt. This left the 49ers firmly entrenched on the top slot fo the National Confer- ence. In the only other Sunday game around the League, the Washing- ton Redskins came from behind to knock off the Pittsburgh Steelers, 28-24.i By IVAN KAYE Fielding Yost would have been proud of the Wolverines last Sat- urday-they played his kind of football. The late great "Grand Old Man of Michigan" always held to the belief that the best offense was a good defense, and the varsity heeded that axiom withedevastat- ing results. * * * THE MAIZE and Blue convert- ed Northwestern's fumbles and in- tercepted passes into an insur- mountable 34-0 halftime advant- age. The woeful Wildcats could penetrate no farther than their own 48-yard line during the first 30 minutes of play, mute testi- mony to the varsity's rock-ribbed defense. The much maligned gentle- men of the secondary playedI key roles in the first two scores. Don Oldham set up the initial touchdown by purloining an er- rant aerial at midfield and rac- ing to the Northwestern 28. Mo- ments later Dave Tinkham re- covered Chuck Hren's bobble to put the Purple in the hole. The Wildcats managed to stave off the Michigan attack, but the stage had been set for another.' defensive performer, Captain Merritt "Tim" Green, to block Norm Kragseth's punt in the end zone. This opened the dikes, and the Wildcats were drowned in a flood of Michigan touch- downs. Linebacker Laurie LeClaire and defensive end Gene Knutson grabbed two more enemy passes to set up the third and fourth Maize and Blue scores. It is final- ly beginning to dawn on Michi- gan's opposition that end-run plays might just as well be dis- carded when the Wolverines come to town. If there are two better defensive ends than Green and Knutson in college football, they must be in hiding. * * * THOUGH the defense was most instrumental in demoralizing the Purple, great credit must be given to the offensive unit. Ted Kress smashed Bill Daley's old single game Big Ten rushing mark with a rousing 217 yards on twenty trips with the leather. Fullback Dick Balzhiser, playing before many of his home town partisans from nearby Wheaton, turned in his greatest game, scoring two touchdowns and spinning with precision and deception. The Wolverines lost the ser- vices of fullback Bob Hurley for the remainder of the season. The hustling Alamosa, Colorado junior sustained a cracked ver- tebra on the third play of Sat- urday's game. Kress was not up to his aerial performance against Indiana ac- cording to one of the radio com- mentators, and it prompted the statement that all the Detroit junior could do was run. This brings to mind the comment by Bob Zuppke when the same was said about Red Grange. "Yeah," snapped the grizzled Illinois coach, "and all Rembrandt could do was paint." Undoubtedly Kress will start at left half against the Go- phers. All was not so rosy even in such a generally effective performance. Nine fumbles marred the other- wise impressive show. The pass defense, contrary to its first half effectiveness, seemed to disinti- grate in the fourth period. Soccer Team Tops Ypsi, 1-0 YPSILANTI-The newly form- ed Wolverine soccer team nosed out a Michigan State Normal College eleven, 1-0, here Sunday for its second win in as many weeks over the Ypsilanti booters. Over a hundred spectators watched the Wolverines con- sistently outplay their Ypsilanti foes on Burton Field as two Wolverine goalies had a com- paratively easy day. The winner's goal came mid- way in the first half when center half Allan Cassels headed a corner kick through the uprights. A strong wind kept the ball high in the air most of the afternoon making control difficult and help- ing to keep down the score, O, CaueP Patt? One of the most interesting and profitable careers in which a young American can invest his future is FOREIGN TRADE or FOREIGN SERVICE The American Institute For Foreign Trade offers you graduate-level training for a satisfying and lucrative career abroad. Advanced degrees of fered. Write tot The Registrar American Institute For Foreign Trade P. O. 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