'"'4_ STX~ THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1952 Cress, Perry Score Lone ill' Tallies * * Volverine Defenders Fail . Stop Spartans' Passes ALL IN A DAY'S WORK: Spartan Gridders Take Win in Stride (Continued from Page 1) Led by its crafty field general Yewcic, Michigan State knotted the score early in the second quar- ter. After Michigan's attack fizzled on its own 37, Bill Billings booted to Ellis on the State 19 who rated it back to the 31 before being run out of bounds. A third down screen pass from Yewcic to halfback Le- Roy Bolden gave the visitors a first down on the Michigan 45. YEWCIC first sent fullback Wayne Benson into the line to 'draw in the Maize and Blue de- fense, and on the next play found Bolden all alone in the Michigan secondary and hit him with a bulls-eye pass on the 15. Bolden was bowled 'out of bounds on the three yard line by safetyman Perry. On the next play, Bolden copied Kress' earlier jaunt by sweeping right end for the touchdown. The extrapoint try misfired to give the Wolverines a short lease on life. * * * WHAT MAY well have been the turning point of the game followed iinutes later. Taking the subsequent Spar- -tan kickoff, Michigan marched 55 yards in five plays for a first- down on the State 23, the key effort being a 22-yard fourth down dash by rushed kicker Bil- lings. An off-tackle thrust by Kress moved the ball to the 19. The fol- lowing play all but ended Wolver- inekhopes. Howell, who did a work- horse job all afternoon, took a handoff from Topor and flashed into the Spartan secondary only to have the pigskin squirt out of his arms and into the eager hands of State's Ellis. HAVING ENDED Michigan's threat, the Spartans engineered a sustained drive which carried them 86-yards to what proved to be the winning touchdown. Yewee and McAuliffe passes and shifty reverses by hard.. running Wells moved Michigan - State to the Michigan five in nine plays. Wells applied the coup de grace on a quick-opener up the middle, scoring stand- ing up. The extra point made it 20-13, the score at halftime. The second half was almost all State. Michigan's sole serious threat ended on the Spartan 14 when a hurried jump pass by Kress was intercepted by Ellis. * * * A RECOVERED FUMBLE led to MSC's insurance touchdown. Re- covering a bobble by fullback Fred " Baer on the Michigan 36, the vic- ,"tors moved quickly downfield and Best Baseball Stars Named ST. LOUIS- (IP) -Hammerin Hank Sauer and Robin Roberts of the National League and Luke Easter and Bobby Shantz of the American yesterday were named by the Sporting News as the out- standing players and pitchers of the 1952 Major League season. 'The weekly sports newspaper, self-styled Bible of Baseball, in- "itiated its dual selection method; in 1948 as "The fairest method of naming top stars." ISauer, the slugging outfielder of the Chicago Cubs, was the National League player choice for "his pow- erful contributions to the club's rise from last to fifth place." Sauer currently is leading both leagues with 37 home runs and 121 runs batted in, Cleveland's Easter earned his award for a late season batting surge, after two weeks in the minors, that "Sparked the Indians' pennant fight more than any other factor." The big first baseman shares the American League home run lead with teammate Larzy Doby with 31. Read and Use Daily Classi fieds scored on a short Yewcic to Bol- den flat pass. Slonac's extra point ended the day's scoring. Apparently the greater Spar- tan depth wore Michigan down in the second half. Several Wol. verines, notably Topor, Perry and guards Dick Beison and Bob Timm, were forced to perform on both offense and defense. Michigan State Coach Biggie Munn substituted freely through- out the game, on both offense and defense. It was not until the final three minutes that Oosterbaan was able to substitute liberally. Sophomore quarterback Duncan McDonald appeared in the waning minutes long enough to compiete a 38 yard throw to end Bob Topp. FRANK HOWELL . . . sparks runners By JOHN JENKS Michigan State's Spartans, who only recently "arrived" as a big- time football power, bore a Yan- kee-like air of victory acceptance in the aftermath of their thrilling win over Michigan yesterday af- ternoon. Although Coach Biggie Munn admitted he was stunned by the Wolverines first quarter outburst, his players appeared to take the triumph as a matter of course. * * * THE GREEN and White locker room was the scene of very moderate celebration. The men exchanged congratulations and dressed quickly to escape from the oppressive heat of the room. Across the aisle the Wolver- ine dressing room was blanketed under a cloud of gloom. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan sat in a cor- ner and mulled the results over and over in his mind. "The boys gave it their all and never quit" were his words when asked his opinion of the game. The Michigan mentor also stated that pass defense would be stress- ed this week in preparation for tlje Stanford contest. * * * MUNN, on the other hand, was understandably loquacious in his press interview. In his opinion the turning point of the tilt was Don McAuliffe's 70 yard dash for State's first score. "That started us on the come- back trail," stated the Spartan head. An aide pointed out that MSC has seemingly made a habit of coming from behind during its win skein. When questioned about the ef- fect the win would have in the national ratings, Munn replied that he doesn't believe in polls, ratings, and other press pastimes. LOWELL PERRY and Ted To- por were singled out by Munn as the outstanding Wolverine play- Sad Story FIRST DOWNS......... 14 13 By rushing............ 9 6 By passing............ 5 7 By penalty ............0 0 RUSHING YARDAGE .161 223 Number of rushes .. 38 45 PASSING YARDAGE ...151 210 PASSES ATTEMPTED .. 24 16 PASSES COMPLETED 10 8 PASSES INTERCEPTED 1 1 PUNTS................. 5 6 PUNTING AVERAGE.. 40.2 36.6 FUMBLES LOST........ 2 0 YARDS PENALIZED.. 35 45 LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB MICHIGAN Perry, Green, Bates, Dingman Strozewski, Zatkoff, Bennett Timm, Dugger, Williams O'Shaughnessy Beison, Matheson, Cachey Stribe, Balog, Walker Staaford, Knutson, Topp Topor, Zanlagna, Billings Kress, Oldham, Tinkhani Howell, Witherspoon, Branoff Baer, Rescorla, LeClaire, McDonald MANSFIELD'S .- Acep Army Navy Begin Campaigns With ThumpingGrid Victories MICHIGAN STATE LE Bobo, Luke, Duckett LT Serr, Fowler, Frank LG Kush, Bullough C D. Tumburo, Weaver, Neal RG Breniff, Morgan, Schiesswohl, Ad- ams RT Klein, Cutler, Hallmark RE Dekker, Dohoney, Qunlan QB Yewcic LH McAuliffe, Wilson, Bolden, Boyd, Corless RH Pisano, Ellis, Vogt, Wells FB Panin.,Timmerman, Slonac, Leken- ta, Benson Score by Periods: Michigan's offense was vastly im- proved over the impotent team that succumbed to his charges a year ago. "They really had me worried at the start this time, though," he said. LINEUPS By The Makers of Bostonians Casual slid-on, snug fatting! MANSFIELD'S smartest answer to carefree casual wear anywhere. Handsome smoked elk and a cush-n-crepe sole that springs you along with zest. CAMPUS BOOTERY 304 South State WEST POINT, N. Y.-(IP)-Dis- playing, sporadic flashes of explov sive power reminiscent of its fam- ed predecessors, the supposedly en- feebled Army football team surged to a convincing 28 to 7 victory over a slightly favored South Carolina eleven yesterday. The Michie Stadium crowd of 23,474, expecting the worst from a team still in the process of re- construction, was brought to its feet within seconds as Jerome Ha- gan snared the opening South Carolina kickoff, sprinted to his right, swiveled away from one tackler, and raced 84 yards for a touchdown. * * THAT SURPRISING develop- ment was followed almost immed- iately by another flash of offen- sive strength as Pete Vann passed to Lowell Sisson for a 57 yard gain and a second score. The Carolinians- fought back gamely and soon after the sec- ond period opened Johnny Grambling passed 32 yards to Clyde Bennett, who stepped into the end zone for the lone Game- cock touchdown of the day. The Cadets, taking full advan- tage of South Carolina fumbles, added a third touchdown late in the second period after John Krause had intercepted a desper- ation pass on the Carolina 14. Meyer Quits After Pirates' Worst Season CINCINNATI-(P)-Billy Meyer, oldest National League manager in both age and service, finally gave up yesterday after five years of trying to nurse a pennant con- tender out of the rookie-studded Pittsburgh Pirates. The 59-year-old Meyer handed in his resignation, effective after today's game with Cincinnati, as the Pirates prepared to take the field against the Reds. He blamed ill health. Meyer has managed the Pirates since 1948 when he was named manager of the year for directing the Bucs to a fourth-place finish. Then the Pirates hit the skids-- finishing sixth in 1949, lastin 1950, seventh in 1951 and last again this year in one of the poor- est seasons in the club's history. ers. As for his own charges, Munn I Paul Schweikert plunged from the two for the score. * * * .I over IT WAS Schweikert again in the third period, the stocky back driv- ing over from the two after carry- ing the ball four successive times from the 19. The drive had started on the Army 26, where A. W. Johnson's fumble had been re- covered. * * * NAVY 31, YALE 0 BALTIMORE-(I)-An assort- ment of offenses from practically every football book and then some made up by Coach Eddie Erdelatz finally jelled in the fourth quar- ter to carry Navy to a 31-0 thump- ing over Yale in Baltimore Sta- dium yesterday. A crowd of 25,000 fans watched the Navy sweat out a 10-0 three quarter lead and then breeze to three touchdowns in the last 15 minutes. THE NAVY attacking with ev- erything except the Statue of Lib- erty play, going from the Split T, Single Wing, Double Wing and Box. It ran up scads of yardage but couldn't score until the sec- ond period and then began to smooth out as the game progress- ed. The Navy thus got off its first winning start since 1946 when it whipped Villanova, then coached by Jordan Oliver who was guid- ing Yale yesterday. While the offensive platoon was getting used to its new attack like a kid with a Christmas toy, the Navy defense stood impregnable, holding the opposition to a mere 6 yards on the ground. * * * YALE TRAVELED 16 yards by air, once to the Navy 17 in the second period. That was its only threat. Yale didn't get past mid- field in the second half. Two seniors making their first appearance on the varsity, Steve Schodephek of Duquesne, Pa., and Bill Robinson of Arlington Heights, Ill., added to Navy's new look by scoring the last three touchdowns. Schoderbek, substitute quarter- back, sneaked over twice from a few yards out. He threw a 30-yard pass to set up the other score by Robinson from four yards away. The Navy running attack chalk- ed up 254 yards and passes ac- counted for 102 more. Penalties of 112 yards and four fumbles helped slow up the offense. expressed satisfaction at the workman -like performance of quarterback Tom Yewcic. Yewcic, cast in the unenviable position of replacing Al Dorrow, who achieved considerable fame in leading State last year, spear- headed the Spartan attack with his signal-calling and pass throwing exploits. According to the MSC mentor i - MICHIGAN " 13 0 0 0 - 13 MICHIGAN STATE 7 13 7 0 - 27 Touchdowns: MICHIGAN-Kress, Perry MICHIGAN STATE-McAuliffe, Bol- den (2), Wells. Conversions: MICHIGAN-Rescorla MICHIGAN STATE-Slonac (3) ~ BRING QUICK RESULTS DAILY CLASSIFIEDS - I Your 1953 I i I U SALE SECOND HAND STANDARD TYPEWRITERS up to $20.00 discount on some machines. (the 'Ensian) OFFERS YOU- z.o Complete Yearbook Coverage- mz ALL-AMERICAN RATINGS* / Fraternity, Sorority and Dormitory Sections t-' All Activities and Campus Social Events ~'~ Coverage of Every University College and Department ~. A Complete Pictorial Coverage of the' Entire Campus More than 50 Pages of Graduates o Complete Football Coverage and All Sports borALL THIS AND MORE IN THE'ENSIAN FOR Only 5_a - Since 1908 MORRI LL'S 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 U munwo FOR FUN AND RELAXATION .. Golf Practice The Modern Machine-Way . of taking dictation l Iii - .- -1 Jill