SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1952 TT-'"G' mTvy-TTv A "iv 7l A TT v PAd"IR Tn SUNAY1NOEMER9, 95i l ilT A 1' A1TY'U Pittsburgh...21 Purdue .....14 Wisconsin ...24 MSC .......41 NotreDame..27 Navy.......16 Washington..22 Ohio State . . . 14 Minnesota . . . 14 Northwestern. 20 Indiana . . . . . 14 Oklahoma . . . 21 Duke . . . . . . . 6 California . , . 7 SC .fd.....54 Stanf ord . . .. 7 5 Wolverines Manhandle Weak Cornell Eleven, 49-7 * 0 0 * # * # * * Topor Scores on Passes From Cline and Oldham NATIONAL GRID ROUNDUP: Washington Upsets California, 22-7 (Continued from Page 1) to a lead they never relinquished. Minutes later, five to be exact, Kress hit Tad Stanford on the Cornell four yard marker to set up the second touchdown. * * * KRESS then drove over for the score, but on the play the talented left half, who spearheaded both marches, was injured, and spent the rest of the day on the bench. With Dan Cline subbing for the injured Kress, Michigan racked up its third touchdown late in the second stanza. The Rockport, N.Y., sophomore hit Perry for 35 yards good to the 11 yard line of Cornell. Two plays later he tossed to Ted To- por for a 21-0 half-time lead. A Don Oldham-Topor pass cli- maxed a 69 yard drive for Michi- gan's fourth touchdown after Cor- nell had countered at the start of the final half with its only score. * * * IN THE final quarter Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's charges un- loosed a three-touchdown barrage that literally buried the Big Red in the turf of Yost Memorial Sta- dium. Oldham went into paydirt territory from four yards out to notch touchdown No. 5 with 10 minutes left in the game. Then Oosterbaan began to let the reserves pour in, among them being the widely heralded Duncan McDonald, who sparked his mates to their last two scores. McDonald's first act upon as- suming command was to pass 38 yards to end Bob Dingman for the sixth TD with only 49 sec- onds remaining in the game. On the following kickoff Cor- neil's Al Sebald fumbled and Bob Topp pounced on the errant pigskin on the Cornell 27. Two interference penalties mov ed the ball to the one, where Mc- Donald flipped to Topp to end the day's scoring. Decisive Win Over Cornell Elates Team By DICK SEWELL Associate Sports Editor A week can make a lot of dif- ference. Just seven days ago yesterday the Michigan dressing room was so quiet you could have heard a feather slap a velvet cushion. * * * YESTERDAY, after an easy and convincing triumph over a hap- less Cornell eleven, the Wolver- ines had cause for celebration. Shouts and loud laughs boomed about the room. Maize and Blue mentor Bennie Oosterbaan moved happily among his well wishers, obviously pleased with the show- ing of his charges. "I think we looked better than we did against Illinois last Sat- urday," declared Oosterbaan. "Although Cornell isn't in Illi- nois class, I still feel that we were sharper today." , Oosterbaan pointed to the fine Wolverine defensive play as being a big factor in the onesided tri- umph. The blue-shirted defenders held the Big Red offense to less than a hundred yards for the aft- ernoon. POST-GAME examination re- vealed that there were no serious injuries to Michigan's pigskin gladiators. Guard Dick Beison, tackle Dick Strozewski, and tail- back Ted Kress were sidelined, but trainer Jim Hunt expected to get all three in shape in time for Saturday's tussle with Purdue. The Big Red were clearly dis gusted with their inept perform- ance. Coach Lefty James told newsmen that "Michigan was Just too much for us today." The Cornell coach had special words of praise for the bruising de- fensive work of Wolverine linemen Art Walker and Don Dugger, and linebacker Roger Zatkoff. -Daily-Don Campbell TED TOPOR-Michigan quarterback shown snagging a Dan Cline aerial late in the second quarter for the Wolverine third touchdown. Wingback Tony Branoff (17) stands by to give Topor moral support as Cornell defender Andy Hanley (42) watches. MSC, Wisconsin, Illini Beat Big Ten Opponents as Pitt Passes Down OSU SEATTLE-An alert defense and the daring, mix-'em-up quarter- backing of Don Heinrich earned the Huskies of Washington a sur- prise 22-7 triumph yesterday over California's fumble-plagued Bears in a Pacific Coast Conference football game. Losing their third straight deci- sion this season, the Bears con- tributed to their own defeat by fumbling away opportunities. THE CROWD of 49,000 was treated to a scoring explosion in the opening quarter when Wash- ington tallied twice and California once. For the rest of the route it Late Hockey MONTREAL-Maurice (The Rocket) Richard set a new Na- tional Hockey League goal-get- ting record last night when he slammed home the 325th goal of his great career in the Ca- nadiens 6-4 win over the Chi- cago Black Hawks. At Toronto, the Detroit Red Wings tied the Maple Leafs 3-3 on a third period power play score by Alex Delvicchio. was a defensive wrangle except for a 68 yard touchdown march by the Huskies at the start of the second half. NEBRASKA 14, KANSAS 13 - LAWRENCE - Nebraska's fur- iously battling Cornhuskers getting sparkling duty from Bobby Rey- nolds, came from behind in the fourth quarter to whip the Kansas Jayhawks, 14-13 and score a major football upset yesterday. Reynolds', Nebraska's All-Amer- ica in 1950 but hobbled by injuries until today, kicked two perfect con- versions to provide the winning margin. IT WAS Kansas' second loss in eight games and their second in the Big Seven conference. Play- ing without their great Charley Hoag, the Jayhawks were bogged by the inspired Nebraskans most of the day. The winning touchdown was scored by quarterback John Bor- dogna on a one-foot keeper play with less than six minutes re- maining. Reynolds' conversion was straight between the uprights. NAVY 16, DUKE 6 DURHAM - Fred Franco, a stubby senior fullback from New-' port, R. I., powered over third and fourth period touchdowns to lead Navy's underdogs to a 16-6 vic- tory over Duke yesterday. The 5-9 185-pounder picked up 115 yards rushing, only two yards less than the entire Duke team gained against a rugged Navy de- fense which entered the game with the nation's eighth best record. * * * DUKE, dropped to 12th in the national Associated Press ratings when Georgia Tech handed it its first defeat last week, nursed a 6-0 halftime lead, thanks to a second period touchdown by halfback Charlie Smith, but the Blue Devils were completely outplayed in the last half. USC 54, STANFORD 7 PALO ALTO-Southern Califor- nia's Trojans, unveiling a stun- ning, new-found offense to go with their vaunted defense, buried Stanford's Indians under a 54-7 avalanche yesterday before 45,000 fans. The unbeaten contenders for the Pacific Coast Conference Cham- pionship and the Rose Bowl charg- ed another lap to their twin ob- jectives with a ground and aerial attack that shattered the defense as well as the morale of Stanford. USC SCORED a touchdown in the first period, two in the second, and obliterated the confused In- dians with three touchdowns in the third. The Trojans added two more for good measure in the fourth. * * * UCLA 57, OREGON STATE 0 LOS ANGELES-The unbeaten UCLA football team plastered a 57 to 0 defeat on Oregon State College yesterday and marched on toward the Rose Bowl. The Bruins, led by halfback Paul Cameron to their eighth straight triumph of the season, now have but one more game and only USC to beat to win the Rose Bowl as- signment for the Coast Conference. * * * COACH HENRY R. (Red) Sand- ers Uclans banged out four touch- downs and two safeties to take a 30 to 0 lead at half time, Some weird thinking by the Beavers on Bruin kicks present- ed the locals with two safeties and an odd 4 to 0 lead in the opening minutes. Then UCLA clipped off two touchdowns in rapid order, with Cameron passing to Pete Dailey for 33 yards for the first. Cameron hit Ernie Stockert for a 23-yard gain soon afterward and Dailey scampered the next 19 yards on a reverse for the second tally. Cameron led the Bruins 42 yards in nine plays for No. 3, and plung- ed the last yard for his first touch- down of the year. GEORGIA TECH 45, ARMY 6 ATLANTA-Sugar Bowl-bound Georgia Tech rode its vaunted run- ning attack and an improved pass- ing game to a 45-6 victory over Army today despite the loss of Ail- America hopeful Leon Hardeman in the first quarter. Billy Teas, Glenn Turner and George Humphreys gave the Ca- dets no let-up after the squat, tough Hardeman was sent to the dressing room with a sprained ankle and the Engineers rolled easily through their 22nd straight game without defeat. * * , THE ENGINEERS, No. 3 team in the nation, made it a rout in the last three quarters scoring al- most every time they got their hands on the ball. Tech's defense. second-best in the nation, allowed Army only one long march. Collegiate Cuts to please 8 BARBERS NO WAITING The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theater STATISTICS Michigan Cornell First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes Intercepted Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized Score by periods! Michigan 14 Cornellf Touchdowns: 20 257 262 31 14 3 4 34.5 2 95 5 39 55 20 8 1. 32.' 4 63 BLOOMINGTON - Michigan State won its 22nd straight victory 41-14 in a free-swinging brawling game with Indiana here yesterday. At times the game looked more like a Madison Square Garden fea- ture than football. MICHIGAN STATE did the most scoring but Indiana threw the most punches. Indiana had six men thrown out of the game on two ejected for the Spartans. Michigan State started Its scoring with dramatic sudden- ness and had a counter with only 56 seconds gone in the game. A fumble recovered by Rex Cor- less on the Indiana 26 account- ed for the opportunity. On the second play, Tom Yewic passed to Doug Bobo just in front of the goal line for a touchdown. WISCONSIN 24, NORTHWESTERN 20 MADISON - Wisconsin rolled freely in the first half yesterday but wilted in the second and, aided by a fourth quarter field goal, nipped Northwestern, 24-20, to re- main in contention for the Big 10 football title. THE BADGERS, with Alan (the Horse) Ameche leading a line-bat- tering attack, had a comfortable 21-7 halftime margin. But North- western took over after the inter- mission before 52,131 homecoming fans at Camp Randall Stadium with quarterback Dick Thomas manning the aerial guns and Wis- consin was reeling at the gun. The Badger triumph, coupled with Minnesota's 14-14 tie with Purdue left Wisconsin a second place tie with Michigan behind the still-unbeaten Boilermakers. ILLINOIS 33, IOWA 13 IOWA CITY-Tommy O'Con- nell, a sharpshooter with his trusty right arm, smashed three Western Conference passing records as he pitched Illinois to a 33-13 victory over Iowa yesterday. * .* A SURE-SHOT witha football, the 22-year-old Chicago senior completed 22 of 34 tosses for 306 yards against an Iowa defense that leaked badly in its attempts to throttle the Illinois quarterback. PITTSBURGH 21, OHIO STATE 14 COLUMBUS - Pittsburgh used its supposedly weakest weapon- its air arm-to defeat Ohio State 21-14 before 75,120 fans today. Pitttsburgh, known as a running team, had scored only three touch- downs through the air in six pre- vious games, but collected twice through the airways yesterday as halfback Bill Hoffman hit half- back Bill Reynolds with a 10-yard- er late in the second period, and quarterback Rudy Matiola passed 56 yards to end Dick Deitrick late' in the third session. * * * DEITRICK shook off five Ohio tacklers as he turned and twisted down the sideline for the touch- down which proved decisive. Orchards of Orchids from- STUDENT FLORAL SERVICE Call 8804 for Pan-Hell Ball i 7V x1-49 ! 0-7 Michigan-Perry, Kress, Topor (2),j Dingman, Topp. Cornell-Whelan Conversions: Michigan-Rescorla (7) Cornell-Van Buren FOOTBALL SCORES1 r t Wheln possin3 an yjour Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters W/C Tape & Wire Recorders * . s Steel Desks, Chairs, Files Ir!EELCAa1 C3 C ca 3 %two h MICHIGAN Michigan State 41 Indiana 14 Michigan 49 Cornell 7 Olivet 6 Grand Rapids Junior College 6 (tie) Albion 49 Adrian 0 Kalamazoo 27 Hillsdale 20 Wayne 34 Great Lakes 19 Western Reserve 16 Western Michi- gan 13 Michigan Normal 14 Illinois State Normal 14 (tie) Central Michigan 41 Eastern Illinois 0 Northern Michigan 27 Cedarville 19 MIDWEST Wisconsin 24 Northwestern 20 Pittsburgh 21 Ohio State 14 Purdue 14 Minnesota 14 (tie) Missouri 27 Colorado 7 Illinois 33 Iowa 13 Nebraska 14 Kansas 13 Notre Dame 27 Oklahoma 21 Wyoming 20 Kansas State 7 Iowa State 54 Drake 7 Hamline 21 Carleton 7 EAST Dartmouth 38.Columbia 14 Princeton 41 Harvard 21 Georgia 34 Penn 27 Bates 17 Colby 0 Middlebury 19 Vermont 13 Hofstra 44 Kings Point 20 Lehigh 26 Muhlenberg 13 Rochester 33 Hamilton 6 Gettysburga35 Dickinson 7 Lincoln (Pa.) 74 St. Paul 7 Rhode Island 55 Brooklyn College 7 St. Michael's 53 Champlain 7, Clarion State (Pa.) 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