t SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1952 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I MID-WEST Wisconsin, MSC, 'M' Win Big Ones Top-ranked Michigan State rolled with a second Half surge to turn back Notre Dame, 21-3, and maintain its unblemished record. The Spartans beat Notre Dame mainly on Irish fumbles. MSC recovered seven bobbles, and Captain Don McAuliffe notched two touchdowns as a result. The Notre Dame field goal also came as a re- sult of a fumble, this one by Michigan State. * * * MEANWHILE, in the Mid-West; Michigan and Wisconsin scored important victories, while Purdue fell by the wayside in the Western Conference title race. Michigan's comeback 21-10 beating of the Boilermakers knocked Stu Holcombe's eleven right out of the Rose Bowl pic- ture. The Badgers, early-season flag favorites, pinned a 37-14 de- feat on Iowa. Ohio State racked up its fourth league triumph by defeating Illinois, 13-7. This win moved the Buckeyes into fifth position in the Big Ten. * * * * IN A NON-CONFERENCE affair, Minnesota invaded the Big Seven successfully with a 13-7 verdict over Nebraska. The only other action on the Big Ten scene saw Iowa maul Northwestern, 39-14, for its second loop win. This defeat dropped the Wildcats into the league's basement. SOUTH Opponents In Dixie Classics Decided Mississippi, with an upset win over Maryland, joined Georgia Tech, Tennessee and Texas in the elite major colleges to gain bowl spots. Texas will act as host in the Cotton Bowl, having wrapped up the Southwest Conference title with a 14-7 decision over Texas Christian. * * * * BOTH THE Cotton Bowl and Sugar Bowl teams are decided-' Tennessee vs. Texas in the Cotton and Mississippi vs. Georgia Tech in the Sugar. A nation-wide television audience watched Georgia Tech squeeze by Alabama, 7-3. Dick Pretz, a second-stringer, scored Tech's only touchdown in the second period when he bucked nine yards. FRESHMAN FRED WYANT threw touchdown passes to Dick Nicholson and Paul Fischoff in the final period to lock up a 27-7 victory for West Virginia over underdog Virginia Tech. Another freshman, halfback Flo Worrell, scored two TDs and lit the spark for two others as North Carolina ended an 11-game losing streak with a 27-19 score over South Carolina. Jimmy Campagna and Bob Clemens sparked Georgia to a hard- earned 13-7 win against fired-up Auburn. EAST Orange, Panthers Crush Opposition } , The two big eastern hopes for post-season game-Pitt and Syra- cuse-both crushed their opposition. Syracuse overcame Colgate, 20-14, and Pitt, one of the surprise teams of the season, blasted North Carolina State, 48-6. * * * * PRINCETON KEPT alive its chances of winning the Ivy League championship by walloping Yale, 27-21. If Penn loses a game in league competition, the Tigers could take it. Bob Unger, ably assisted by Homer Smith, passed and rahi Princeton to a wild and wooly win to give the Tigers their third consecutive Big Three championship. Two of Princeton's scores came at long range-one TD play covering 80 yards and the other 93 yards. TWO LIGHTNING strikes in the space of five minutes in the second period-a 60-yard run by fullback Guy Bedrossian and a 55- yard dash with an intercepted pass by Russ MacLeod-gave down- trodden Cornell a 13-7 upset victory over Dartmouth. Dartmouth salvaged its only touchdown in the last quarter when left halfback Russ Smale took a Cornell punt in mid-field and raced 50 yards for the score. ARMY, SPARKED BY Bill Purdue, Freddie Attaya and well- lubricated by mud, scored a touchdown in the final 44 seconds to upset Pennsylvania, 14-13. FAR WEST Trojans Remain Class of Coast Out on the West Coast, UCLA sat on the sidelines while Southern Cal walloped Washington, 33-0, in a warmup for the crucial test be- tween the two schools next Saturday. The Huskies were supposed to be USC's last big obstacle before the UCLA game, but they put up little fight after the first half. * * * * STANFORD DROPPED a 21-20 verdict to Oregon at Palo Alto in another Pacific Coast Conference engagement. A wide and low conversion attempt meant the difference. Oregon capitalized on Stanford fumbles, turning them into two of their three touchdowns. The biggest Oregon break came at the start of the second half when guard Jim Jacques recovered Bob Mathias' fumble on the opening kickoff, and Tom Novikoff drove to the Stanford end zone to give the visitor a 14-7 lead. Paced by reserve left half Bob Brooks, who scored touchdowns from nine and four yards out, the California Bears finally broke their three-game losing streak with a 28-11 victory over Washington State. A CROWD of 26,000 sat in the cold, windy Stadium to see the Bears cross the Cougar goal line in the first period, push over two more in the second, and clinch it with a touchdown in the fourth. Idaho made good on its last chance at a Coast Conference victory by cracking a tough Oregon State defense in the last half, 27-6. A Mississippi Final Quarter Aerial Stops TerpWinning Streak, 21-14 Kayoes Maryland Wisconsin Buries Indiana; OSU, Hawkeyes Advance OXFORD, Miss. - (om) - Mis- sissippi quarterback Jimmy Lear pitched a 42-yard fourth period pass today to upset mighty third- ranking Maryland, 21-14, and send the twice-tied Ole Miss Rebels into New Orleans' Sugar Bowl. Lear's storybook heave to end Bud Slay on the Maryland four yard line set up the winning touchdown that halfback Wilson Dillard rammed over two plays later from the three yard line. LEAR'S PASSING and the fe- rocious work of the ' Mississippi Unbeaten USC Trips Huskies In Sea of Mud Trojans Score, 33-0; Throttle Star Passer LOS ANGELES-QP)-Unbeaten Southern California drove through rain, mud and the University of Washington football team yester- day for a 33-0 victory to set the stage for next week's Rose Bowl- deciding battle In the Cost Con- ference with undefeated UCLA. Held to a 7-0 lead for two quar- ters by a surprisingly stubborn foe from the Pacific Northwest, the Trojans broke loose for two touch- downs in the third period and two more in the final quarter to turn the contest into a rout. * * * ENROUTE to their eighth tri- umph of the season, the Trojans handed the Huskies' All-America quarterback candidate, Don Hein- rich, the worst afternoon he's ex- perienced since UCLA wrecked Washington earlier in the sea- son, 32-7. Heinrich, the nation's lead- ing passer who was playing per- haps his final college game be- fore going into the army, had five passes intercepted-two for touchdowns - and completed only two throws out of 18 tries. They gained only 14 yards. It was the first time Washing- ton had been shut out in 44 games, dating back to 1949, and was a sad farewell for the Huskies' 1950 All- America star. * * * SOUTHERN CAL scored four' of its five touchdowns via the air --two by interceptions and two passes. Washington crossed the goal once, on a splendid 68-yard punt return to ace safety-man Sam Mitchell, but the play was called back on a clipping penalty. The first Trojan scoring drive was executed on nine running plays, by Jimmy Sears and Leon Sellers, and one pass for 20 yards, Sears to Ron Miller. Sellers plunged from the one on the final play. line stunned the nation's number three football team into submis- sion, and the Terps' first loss since Oct. 4, 1950 and 21 games. For the entire second half, Mississippi's keyed up offense dominated the play and knocked on the goal line three times be- fore the last payoff punch car- ried over. The game was a crushing ding- dong battle for the full 60-minutes but the hero of the day was the Mississippi line that bottled up All-America candidate Jack Scar- bath and held that pass-master to only two completed throws. 'IT TOOK the jittery Mississip- pians four tries to break the dead- lock and push over the game win- ning touchdown. After the lines of both Mary- land and Mississippi clogged the opposing backs most of the first period, the Terps got moving on the bruising running of half- backs Chet Hanulak and sopho- more Leland Liebold. Scarbath, doing his neat job behind the center, failed to find his passing range. Hanulak bounced over the last four yards for Maryland's first score on the first play of the second period after a scoreless first quarter. * ~* * THAT STARTED a dizzy chain reaction of offensive power. Mississippi stormed 83 yards on mixed running by Dick Westerman and Harol Lofton and Lear's clicking passes. The payoff came on a 31-yard pass to end Ray Howell in the end zone. Lightning struck Mississippi on its kickoff to Maryland. Defensive Maryland halfback Dick Nolan streaked from his own 10 where he took the kickoff straight down the middle 90 yards to a touch- down. Not a Mississippi hand touched him, and Decker con- verted to give Maryland a 14-7 lead at the half. By The Associated Press BLOOMINGTON - Wisconsin rode into a 'tie for the Big Ten lead yesterday on the broad back of fullback Alan (The Horse) Ameche, who scored three touch- downs in a 37-14 victory over In- diana. The 205-pound Ameche was more a stake runner than a draft horse when he got into the open. He started Wisconsin's scoring in the first quarter, and Indiana nev- er caught up. Ameche plunged one yard for the starter, raced 43 yards for a third-quarter touchdownaand 'ran 31 yards for his final six points in the fourth period. Wisconsin zipped 54 yards in 10 plays for its first touchdown and used only one four-yard pass in the process. Bill Hutchinson need- ed less time for the second Bad- ger touchdown. He caught an In- diana punt on his own 35 and twisted and looped 65 yards. * * * IOWA 39, NORTHWESTERN 14 EVANSTON - Iowa's, "injured" quarterback, Burt Br itzmann, scored one touchdown and flipped two touchdown passes in a blister- ing second half attack which jolt- ed favored Northwestern into the Big Ten cellar under a 39-14 past- ing yesterday. Britzman was pressed into ac- tion when the Hawkeyes' starting signal caller, Paul Kemp, was car- ried off the fieldwith a broken leg in the second quarter just be- fore Northwestern moved ahead for the last time, 14-13. IT WAS IOWA'S second victory in eight starts, the other also a corking upset in the form of an 8-0 spilling of Ohio State. Overconfident Northwestern now certain of at least a share of the conference basement with a 1-5 record, had one solace. End Joe Collier, who grabbed a 38-yard touchdown pass for the first Wildcat score, speared six passes to break the conference season record of 28 receptions set by Northwestern's Don Stonesifer in 1950. Collied now has grabbed 33 passes in six conference games. * * * OHIO STATE 27, ILLINOIS 7 CHAMPAIGN-Ohio State, com- bining smashing runs with aerial thrusts, shot pass-happy Illinois from the clouds 27-7 yesterday. Tommy O'Connell's throwing for the Ilini shattered three Big Ten records. OHIO STATE intercepted six of Tommy's tosses and used two of them to touch off touchdown surges, Two other Buckeye scores stemmed from recoveries of two fumbles. Ohio State, a 7-point under- dog, blasted 20 points in the third period to crack a 7-7 stale- mate and went on to its fourth Big Ten football triumph in six games. John Borton, the Buckeyes' split- T quarterback, mixed his passing with a stampede of ground power for splendid deception. He tossed six and 37 yard touchdown passes to end Dean Dugger. Ohio State slammed to the other two on the ground behind the ball-carrying of Bob Watkins, Fred Bruney, John Hlay and Howie Cassady. GOPHERS 13, NEBRASKA 7 LINCOLN, Neb.-Smart and rug- ged Paul Giel tossed a 74-yard scoring pass and ran and passed to 57 yards of a 60-yard drive to the goal line yesterday as Min- nesota defeated Nebraska 13-7 in a Big Seven-Big Ten inter-confer- ence football game. A Nebraska homecoming crowd of nearly 40,000 gasped as Giel threw the ball nearly 50 yards in the second quarter to end Tom Soltau, ,who was in the clear at about the Nebraska 35 and ran over. * * * WHEN GENO Cappelletti con- verted, it knotted the score at 7 to 7 where it stood at the half. In the third quarter, Giel, a pressure player of top grade, ran for 33 yards and passed for 24 yards as the Big Ten team went into the lead. Collegiate Cuts to please 8 BARBERS NO WAITING The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theater z -Daily-Don Campbell LOOK AGAIN-At first glance, it seems like Wolverine halfback Tony Branoff (17) is straight- arming team-mate Ted Kress (41). Actually he is being brought down by Boilermaker quarterback Curt Jones (18). TECH STILL UNDEFEATED: Engineers, Vols Continue Bowl March By The Associated Press ATLANTA-Two second-string backs, Pepper Rodgers and Duck Oretz, paired with regulars Bil- ly Teas and Glenn Turner and an impregnable defense yesterday to give Georgia Tech a squeaky 7-3 victory over a fierce, unexpected, ly strong Alabama. Tech's valiant defense, spear- headed by All-American lineback- er candidate George Morris, three times halted Alabama drives which could have changed the outcome and brought a repeat of Y 1947 when 'Bama knocked Tech from the perfect-record ranks. * * * I Bowl-Minded Pittsburgh Rolls Over North Carolina State, 48-6 IN THE FIRST quarter, with 12th-ranked Alabama ahead 3-0 on Bobby Lua's flield goal, 'Bama's Ralph Carrigan recovered a fum- ble on Tech's 21. Bobby Marlow, Corky Tharp and Tommy Lew- is, who showed the best running Tech's been up against this sea- son, moved the ball to the one. But Tech's defense wouldn't give and 'Bama lost the ball on downs. In the last quarter with about four minutes to play and trail- ing 7-3, Ed Pharo fell on Turn- er's fumble on the'Bama 23 and Alabama started marching. TENNESSEE 26,FLORIDA 2 KNOXVILLE - Andy Kozar, a Pennsylvania coal miner's son who doctors once said would nev- er be able to play football, ripped Florida's line to shreds yesterday to lead Cotton Bowl bound Ten- nessee to a 26-12 homecoming victory. The 210-pound senior fullback scored twice and reeled off 111 yards in 16 rushes before he was carted off to the hospital early in the third quarter with an injury. * * * THE BIG fullback scored Ten- nessee's first two touchdowns, plunging from the one in the first period and again smashing over from the same distance in the second. But Kozar was not the only weapon in Tennessee's single wing arsenal. He got plenty of help from tailbacks Pat Shires and Pat Oleksiak, who scored the Vols' third and fourth six- pointers, respectively. Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters W /C Tape &' Wire Recorders Steel Desks, Chairs, Files MORRI LL'S 314 S. State Phone 7177 ANNUAL MID-SEASON You will save plenty on each pair of Men's or Women's New Fall Shoes you buy at this sale. PITTSBURG---P)-Bowl-mind- ed Pitt turned loose its hard-run- ning backs yesterday to swamp North Carolina State, 48-6, in the Panthers' most impressive touchdown parade since the days of the late Jock Sutherland. There was no doubt of the out- come from the opening gun. The Panthers tallied twice each in the first, second and third periods and once in the final quarter. * * * TWO TOUCHDOWNS resulted from pass plays and five others came from ground-chewing at- tacks. The Panthers took the open- ing kickoff and marched 70 yards for their first score and tapered off the initial period with an- other 70-yard touchdown drive. Bill Reynolds, Bill Hoffman and Bobby Epps scored two touch- downs apiece and John Jacobs tallied once. Jacobs got his on a 21-yard heave from quarterback Rudy Mattioli in the second quarter and Hoffman snared a 26-yard pass from second string quarterback Pete Neft moments later for the other passing score. Open Saturday till 5 P.M. Except on Home Games Read and Use Daily Classifieds I I ....._... The Latest in Michi gan ovenirs Beer Steins ..1.50 Beer-Mugs-Pastic . . . . . . 1.50 china.. . .3.50 Stuffed Animals . . . . . . . . 1.00 up Salt & Pepper Shakers . . . . . . . 1.50 850 PRS. MEN'S SHO20/ O ES BOSTONIANS - WEYENBERG - PLYMOUTH - MANSFIELD Cut $790.$990.$ 900$4390 to 1250 Prs. Women's Shoes 10%, 20%, 30% off FLORSHEIMS - DOLMODE - FOOTREST - DAYTIMER - GOLO Cut $490 0 $690 $890 $1090 to 469 This is a real money-saving sale. The Shoes are from our regular stock. None bought for sale purposes. ., ..,; z'1 j? Eck .fr .a: c" "rk: : yrS K : Y F 1 r 1Q bri. ? Ci{ .+'*i' '. yi4 yJ,"}, .+fj ., f C,4 r l r: Y t 1. r t I i IN