SUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1952 THE MICINGAN DAILY rAGE THEE BUNDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1952 PAGE THREE Balog, Knutson Spearhead Rugged Michigan Defense LONGEST WIN STREAK: Spartans, Maryland Post Triumphs (Continued from Page 1) playing with a game leg, that trainer Jim Hunt treated with heat every time Minnesota had the ball. The next play saw Kress com- plete another aerial to Topor for a first down on the five. Then Balzhiser made like Jack Weisen- berger or Don Dufek with a plunge to the 1. A second one like it and 4 Michigan led, 6-0. Russ Rescorla, almost as automatic yesterday (he missed a try for field goal later) as Jim Brieske, kicked his first of three extra points to make the, margin 7-0. THE NEXT two exchanges of the ball, however, brought mem- ories of a more recent vintage. SGophers Skunked MICHIGAN LE-Perry, Dingman, Green LT-Strozewski, Zatkoff, Walker LG-Timm, Williams, Cachey, Van- 4 er Zeyde C--O'Shaughnessy, Melchiori, Wine, Drake RG - Beison, Dugger, Matheson, Rahrig RT-Pederson, Balog, Geyer, Ben- nett i RE -Stanford, Topp, Knutson, Dutter QB-Topor, McDonald, Billings LH-Kress, Oldham, Cline, Tink- ham, Eyans RH- Howell, Witherspoon, Bran- off, Knickerbocker FB-Balzhiser, Rescorla, LeClaire, Baer MINNESOTA LE-McNamara, McElroy, Soltau LT-Hansen, Almer, Zachary, Can- akes, Andrus LG-Anderson, Kauffmann C-Prescott, Stamschror, Helgeson RG--Coates, Lindgren, Heidenreich RT-Drill, Hagemeister, Holz, Foss RE--Rutford, French, Kapotas QB-Swanson, Schmitt, Cappellet- ti LH--Giel, Klefsaas, Goode RH-Meighen, Sullivan FB - Baumgartner, Holme, Dar- gis, Wallin MICHIGAN 7 7 0 7 - 21 MINNESOTA 0 0 0 0 - 0 TOUCHDOWNS MICHIGAN-Balzhiser (2), Topor CONVERSIONS MICHIGAN-Rescorla (3) Time of Game: 2 Hours, 20 Minutes Official Attendance: 70,858 Minnesota Michigan back Dave Tinkham took the kick on his own 39, returned eight yards, and fumbled. Dave Drill recovered for Minnesota, and the Gophers were off-to the one yard line. GIEL, GIEL, Giel, Giel, Giel: First he ran to the Michigan 34. The next play he passed to quar- terback Don Swanson for six more yards. Then he tossed to Bob Mc- Namara for a first down on the five. Fullback Mel Holme fumbled for no gain. Giel was stopped on the five. Swanson carried to the two yard line. Giel was snowed under at the one, and the goal-line stand 'by Michigan was reminiscent of the defen- sive play of Len Ford, Al Wis- tert, Dan Dworsky, and Dick Kempthorn. Only yestrday Roger Zatkoff and Laurie LeClaire were the line- backers, Art Walker and JimBa- log the tackles, and Tim Green and Gene Knutson the ends who were the prime factors in holding Minnesota to a total offense mark of 135 yards-85 rushing and 50 passing. ON ONLY ONE other occasion did Minnesota threaten. On the Michigan 27, Giel hit end Bob Rutford with a scoring pass. But officials called a. holding penalty and the Gophers were set back to the 41. They never came close af ter that.I Michigan meanwhile chalked up markers in the second and fourth periods. The Wolverines rolled 54 yards and Balzhiser scored his second touchdown, this time on a plunge from three yards out. The key play was a third-down (with 15 yards to go) dash around end by Tony Branoff who literally ran over a couple of Gophers on his way from the Minnesota 37 to the 20. In the final stanza Michigan marched 80 yards to score. Topor eased into the end zone standing up from the one yard line. Once again a power smash by Branoff set up the touchdown. The Flint freshman knocked down several tacklers to move the ball from the Minnesota 49 to the 20. * * * THE WOLVERINES had anoth- er touchdown literally in their grasp in the final period. At the Minnesota nine, Topor found himself trapped on third down. He whirled away from three defenders, and tossed to Balzhiser in the end zone. There wasn't a Gopher within ten yards of the Wheaton, Ill. junior. He dropped the perfect pass. Rescorla failed on a field goal attempt the next play. The duel between tailbacks Kress and Giel came out exactly even, statistically. Each accounted for 100 yards. Kress gained 64 rush- ing on 16 carries. By the Associated Press EAST LANSING-Tousle-haired Tom Yewcic, brightest sparkler in Michigan State's 17-jewel back- field, flung 61, 56 and 45-yard touchdown passes yesterday to push top-ranked Michigan State from behind to a 34 to 7 victory over previously unbeaten Penn State. Quarterback Yewcic, unperturb- ed by a first period Penn State touchdown, calmly pegged Michi- gan State to its 20th straight vic- tory - longest winning streak among the nation's big colleges. But it was a cast iron Spartan line that gave him the protection he needed. THE SELLOUT homecoming crowd of 51,162 saw the five foot, 11-inch Yewcic-a product of Co- nemaugh, Pa.-throw to end Doug Bobo and end Ellis Ducket for 45 and 56-yard touchdowns in the second quarter. And they saw him toss a 61-yard over-the-shoulder scoring pass to Don McAuliffe in the fourth period. Michigan State Coach Biggie Munn didn't get a chance to use all of his 17 backfield stars be- cause of Penn State's stubborn play. Only half of them got to run, right halfback Billy Wells Big Ten Standings scoring the third Michigan State touchdown on a 26-yard reverse around left end in the third per- iod. Late in the fourth period Mi- chigan State's second string quar- terback, Willie Thrower, another Pennsylvania product, hurled 26 yards to Leroy Bolden for a touch- down. Evan Slovac, who converted the first four times, missed this one. Michigan State, No. 1 in the weekly Associated Press poll, saw its vaunted offensive crumpled in Harriers Lose In their first cross-country of the season the Wolverine Harriers ran a disappointing third behind Michigan State, Big Ten champ, and Penn State, IC4A champ, in East Lansing. The individual winner for the Spartans was their Captain, Jim Kepford. His time was a swift 20.:06.6. The first finisher for the Maize and Blue was George Lynch, who placed fifth. the first period by the Penn State line. Not until the very end of the first period did Michigan State get beyond midfield. MARYLAND 34, LSU 6 COLLEGE PARK, Md.-Three touchdown passes by the incom- parable quarterback Jack Scar- bath took the early stubbornness out of Louisiana State yesterday as Maryland rolled to another 34-6 rout and its 21st game without de- feat. The aggressive visitors were giv- ing the country's second ranked team hard going on the ground be- fore Scarbath unlimbered his pitching arm. The blond senior from Balti- more completed 11 out of 18 passes for 181 yards before leaving the game with the score 34-0 after eight minutes of the third quar- ter. DUKE 21, VIRGINIA 7 CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va.- Duke's power-packed football ma- chine, with sophomore Worth Lutz in the driver's seat, reduced the vaunted Virginia defense to a rub- ble in two periods yesterday. The final score, as Duke remained un- defeated and untied, was 21 to 1. But it could have been bigger if the Blue Devils had continued to play the way they did in the first half. Virginia-unbeaten up to this time-came back fighting aft- er being three touchdowns behind, got one of them back and made a game of it right up to the end. It was a fired-up, over-eager Virginia team, playing before a crowd of over 34,000, the largest ever to see a football game In, the state, that made a series of costly mistakes early in the game. And Duke, with the unperturbable 19 year-old Lutz maneuvering the offense and big Ed Meadows and Bobby Burrows leading the de- fense, took advantage of every er- ror. LATE SCOUR SOCCER Oberlin 4. MICHIGAN 1 -Daily-Don Campbell PAUL GIEL-Greatest of the Golden Gophers runs into Michigan's rock-ribbed defense as Laurie LeClaire (39), Jim Balog (72) and Roger Zatkoff (70) combine to stop him for no gain in the third quarter of yesterday's game. UCLA Stops Badgers; Iowa Beats OSU By the Associated Press MADISON, Wis.-The bruising Bruins of UCLA buried Wiscon- sin's high-powered offense in the turf of Camp Randall Stadium yes- terday and cashed three breaks of their own making to whip the Badgers, 20-7 before an all-time Grid Scores MICHIGAN MICHIGAN 21 Minnesota 0 Oklahoma A&M 21 Detroit 6 Brandeis 31 Wayne 19 Albion 41 Hillsdale 7 MIDWEST Iowa 8 Ohio State 0 U.C.L.A. 20 Wisconsin 7 Purdue 40 Illinois 12 Northwestern 23 Indiana 13 Kentucky 14 Cincinnati 6 Miami (Ohio) 20 Ohio Univer- sity 0 4. high Camp Randall Stadium crowd of 52,131. The westerners' crushing line- play throttled Wisconsin's run- ning attack and when the Bad- gers turned to the air the Uclan secondary intercepted five passes and converted two of them into touchdowns, * * * BILL STITS, playini -a ble time at right half, was the bright light as the Bruins emphasized their right to 8th national rank- ing and prime consideration for Rose Bowl honors. The 185-pound junior intercepted two passes, run- ning one of them 23 yards for the final touchdown and halting a Wisconsin drive with the other. Moments earlier he had grabbed a five-yard toss from Paul Cam- eron for the Californians' second score. s s . IOWA 8, OSU 0 IOWA CITY,. Iowa, Oct. 25- Iowa touched off a homecoming football bonfire under Ohio State yesterday that sizzled the Buck- eyes 8-0 in one of the most out- standing surprises in Western Con- ference history. Approximately 45,000 fans trudged into the stadium fully ex- pecting to see Iowa lose its fifth straight contest. In few Hawkeye hearts was there more than deep hope for a victory over the Buck- eyes. For the most part the predomi- nantly Iowa crowd sat in almost disbelief as they watched their favorites pick up a 2-0 lead in the second period on a safety while holding Ohio State outside the Iowa 27-yard line. PURDUE 40, ILLINOIS 12, CHAMPAIGN-Purdue's fired- up Boilermakers ruined Illinois' homecoming yesterday with a rousing 40-12 victory over the staggering Orange and Blue. Dale Samuels sparked the Pur- due attack with four touchdown passes to tie a conference record. The Illini lost their third straight Big Ten game while the lads from Lafayette rolled to their third con- ference win and a tie with Michi- gan for league leadership. W MICHIGAN ....3 Purdue ........3 Minnesota ......2 Wisconsin ......2 Ohio State .....2 Northwestern ...1 Indiana ........1 Iowa .. .........1 Illinois .........0 L 0 0 1 2 2 3 3 3 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pct. 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .500 .333 .250 .250 .000 I Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters W/C Tape & Wire Recorders Steel Desks, Chairs, Files MORRI LL'S 314 S.- State O O.'' PREMI ER THURSDAY... U. OF M. DEPT. OF SPEECH presents "The Shadow and the Rock" S.. A stirring drama by U. of M. graduate James Murdock '50 Oct. 30-31 and Nov. 1st Thurs.-Fri.-Sat., 8 P.M. I SPECIAL RATES for Students Thursday Nite... 50c 1 First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized 10 22 85 265 50 118 21 20 8 8 1 2 9 6 33.4 37.5 3 4 30 45 Tickets 1.20, 90c, 60c Box Office Opens Tomorrow 10 A.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre I Phone 7177 open Saturday till 5 P.M Except on Home Games Minnesota got the kickoff, but the Gophers' great tailback, Paul Giel, was forced to quick kick on second down to the Michigan 45. Some of the frustrations of last year must have welled up in the minds of the faithful when Howell reversed to the Maroon and Gold 20 for a first downs Howell and Balzhiser each gain- ed another yard, but two in- complete passes gave the Go- phers the ball on downs. After three relatively unsuccess- ful plays, Giel punted again. 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