SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN Purdue ..... 20 Oklahoma,...21 Duke. ......14 Southern Cal . 31 UCLA ...... 14 Maryland .. .13 Texas ......28 Penn State . . . 20 Colorado . . . . 21 So. Methodist . 7 Northwestern . 0 Texas Christian 0 Auburn . . . . . 7 North Carolina 7 California ... 28 Missouri . . . . 14 Notre Dame Ties Penn; Princeton Blanks Columbia Quakers Outfight Irish' To Gain 7-7 Deadlock * * * * * Bloke A PHILADELPHIA, VP) - Penn's bruising Quakers roundly out- played a below-par Notre Dame team for the final three periods at Franklin Field yesterday but were forced to settle for a 7-7 tie when the Irish defense refused tos fold under heavy pressure. The green clads from South Bend set off the scoring early in the contest and for a few mo- ments threatened to make a run- away. But they subsided as quickly and for the remainder of the rug- ged duel a capacity crowd of near- ly 75,000 was treated to the rare spectacle of a Notre Dame eleven fighting desperately to fend off defeat at the hands of an Ivy1 League team. NOT UNTIL the very closing minutes did the Irish recover the x fire and poise which enabled them to orll 89 yards down the field for their touchdown in the open- ng quarter. Then, with the minute had running out on the big clock, they put on last-gasp passing at- tack which carried well into Quaker ground. But the brave ef- fort came to naught when their fine halfback, Johnny Lattner, fumbled after snagging a pass on the Penn 25. In between the big Penn team held almost complete sway. Not only did the Quakers swoop to the tying touchdown on the wings of a 65-yard pass play early in the second half, but they kept the ball inNotre * Dame territory almost contin- uously and threatened to score time and again. Once, in the second quarter, they .were thrown back after reaching the Irish two-yard line on a bril- liant passing offense sparked by Glenn Adams who hit his receiver like a man knocking off ducks in a shooting gallery. AGAIN in the same period, Ad- ams just failed to hit his man with a fourth-down throw from the seven. In the third period, after Ad ams had passed to end Ed Bell for the tying counter, the Quak. ers were held for downs 20 yards from the goal line. Early in the fourth, they charged down to * the Irish 15 and appeared to be ripping to the winning score be fore their fullback, Don Zim. mer, fumbled. In other words, the Red and Blue did most of the playing but couldn't pick up the marbles. The Irish, off yesterday's per- formance, are no threat to the mythical national championship this year. THE MAN WHO kept Coach Frank Leahy's boys from taking a licking was Lattner, the same who made the unfortunate fuble toward the end. It was his ability to skip through the Penn defense which provided the Irish with their touchdown. Twice while his team was pounding a total of 89 yards in 14 plays, Lattner got away and almost went to the goal. The first time it was for 21 yards, the next for 23. Fittingly, he was permitted to smash across from one yard out for the score. That was at 11:14 of the first period. Immediately after that was when the Irish threatened to go away and hide. Only moments later, Dave Flood, a Notre Dame halfback, recovered a fumble on the Penn 49. Ralph Guglielmi faded back and fired a beautiful pass down the middle to Joe Heap, who romped across the Hajor League Standings line for what appeared to be a touchdown that might open the flood gates. But some Notre Dame man had used his hands improperly and from that instant the game took a radically different turn. * * * BEFORE HE knew it, Penn had come back and was taking charge. With Adams throwing his bullseye pitches to Beuber and other receivers, and the Notre Dame offense stalled deep in its own end of the field, the going became completely one-sided. This was the closest Penn ever came to beating a Notre Dame team. Back in 1930-31 the Irish won by scores which were fright- ful. There was one game which be- came famed in song and story when an Irish halfback. named Marty Brill earned a handful of bonds from his father by scoring touchdowns in clusters against the Penns. Harty, now a sedate -salesman in California, was on hand as a spectator yesterday. He must have felt pretty let down. IGrid Scores MICHIGAN Michigan State 27 MICHIGAN 13 Western Michigan 44 Illinois Wes- leyan 6 Albion 13 Wabash 12 Louisville 19 Wayne 12 MID WEST Illinois 33 Iowa State 7 Ohio State 33 Indiana 13 Otterbein 26 Hiram 13 Wisconsin 42 Marquette 19 Kansas 21 Santa Clara 9 Great Lakes 33 Crown Point (Id.) 0 Earaham 13 Manchester 0 Hanover 25 Anderson 0 Indiana State 0 Valparaiso 0 (tie) Depauw 27 Carrol (Wis.) 13 Dayton 34 Drake 13 Miami (O.) 42 Bowling Green 7 Ohio University 20 Morris Harvey 6 Central State (.) 21 Morgan State 6 Coe 22 Knox 6 Albion 13 Wabash 12 EAST Notre Dame 7 Penn 7 (tie) Princeton 14 Columbia 0 Colgate 14 Cornell 7 Pittsburgh 26 Iowa 14 Holy Cross 27 Dartmouth 9 Army 28 South Carolina 7 Muhlenberg 19 Rutgers 19 (tie) N. Y. U. 10 Lehigh 7 Navy 31 Yale 0 Coast Guard 41 Norwich 20 Purdue 20 Penn State 20 (tie) Harvard 27 Springfield 14 Connecticut 47 Buffalo 7 Massachusetts 39 Bates 6 New Haven Tchrs 13 Kutztown Tchrs 12 Rochester 20 Kings Point 7 St. Lawrence 20 Union 19 Hobart 48 Brooklyn College 12 Maine 13 Rhode Island 0 Tufts 35 Bowdoin 20 Trinity 20 Dickinson 0 Washington and Jefferson 13 Deni- son (.) 7 Northeastern 34 R. P. I. 27 California (Pa.) Tchrs 27 Carnegie Tech 21 American International 21 Amherst 0 Vermont 35 Champlain 0 Adelphi 19 Penn Military 13 Allegheny 40 Oberlin 33 SOUTH Georgia 21 Tulae 16 Mississippi 13 Kentucky 13 (tie) Texas 28 North Carolint 7 Georgia Tech 17 Florida 14 Furman 22 West Virginia 14 Washington and Lee 33 Davidson 14 Maryland 13 Auburn 7 Texas 28 North Carolina 7 Tennessee 14 Mississippi State 7 Virginia 27 Vanderbilt 0 Villanova 14 Clemson 7 Houston 17 Arkansas 7 Wake Forest 28 William and Mary 21 FAR WEST California 28 Missouri 14 Washington 19 Minnesota 13 Wyoming 14 Montana 0 Idah'o 21 Utah 21 (tie) Oklahoma 21 Colorado 21 (tie) U. C. L. A. 14 T. C. U. 0 Stanford 14 Washington State 13 Idaho State 40 Western (Colo.) State 0 Blocked Kick Nets Indians 1413 Win PULLMAN, Wash.-W)-Stan- ford's Dick Monteith broke through to block a third quarter conversion attempt yesterday and saved the Indians a 14-13 upset victory over crumbling Washington State. Monteith, a 20-year-old junior halfback, smothered Ed Barker's kick after the Cougars had fought back from a 14-0 halftime deficit to within range of at least a tie. * * * HIS RUSH through the WSC line not only protected the slim Stanford margin, but saved Bob Mathias, the Olymoic hero, from being a football goat before 25 - 000 Pacific Coast Conference fans. Mathias, instrumental in the two long drives that provided the Stanford touchdowns, fumb- led twice in the third quarter deep in his own territory. The Cougars recovered both times and turned the miscues into scores. WSC, once favored as a"Pacific Coast Conference title contender, looked listless in the first half but played Stanford off its feet in the third period and almost pulled the game out in the fourth. * * * THE INDIANS struck for their first score after 8 minutes of the opening period with a sustained drive that carried 52 yards in nine plays. They went 78 yards in 15 playshin the second quarter for another score. Quarterback Bob Garrett con- verted both times. Garrett's passing and the run- ning of Mathias, Ron Cook and Frank Crist accounted for the yardage rolled up by Stanford in the two scoring drives. GARRETT passed for both scores, 15 yards to Cook for one, nine yards on fourth down to Sam Morley for the second. Halfback Al Charlton, who re- covered Mathias' first fumble on the Stanford 31, and Dwight Pool did all the running in WSC's first touchdown drive, Pool skirting the final 11 yards. Barker's kick was perfect. Tigers Shut Out Lions, 14-0 for 23rd Straight NEW YORK M)-Princeton ran its football victory string to 23 straight games, yesterday by de- feating Columbia, 14 to 0, on two short touchdown passes by Rob- ert Unger and William Tryon. Frank McPhee, the big Prince- ton end playing both offense and defense, led his team in a smooth exhibition, nationally televised as the game of the week. ** * PRINCETON'S last defeat was Oct. 22, 1949 when Cornell won, 14-12. The Tigers now have the longest winning streak among ma- jor teams. Columbia, with quarterback Mitchell Price doing all of the passing and most of the running, thrice threatened but each time Princeton held inside its own 5-yard line. Princeton scored at the very start on a 73-yard march with Unger passing seven yards to Rich- ard Yaffa in the end zone. In the fourth period when Columbia's under-manned team tired badly, the Tigers scored again, this time going 46 yards with Ralph Willis counting on Tryon's pass from five yards out. * * * PRINCETON, Eastern Champi- ons two years running, lacked the sparkle it had when All-America Dick Kazmaier was in the back- field, but it appeared to be a team of considerable promise. Kazniaier graduated last June. In the second period Columbia punched to Princeton's two and at the start of the second half went just inside the five. At the very end of the game Columbia reached the Princeton five again but Princeton's big line was too much for the smaller Columbia team. MC PHEE WAS outstanding in victory. The towering end rushed Price mercilessily and on offense caught several passes at critical moments. The longest run of the day was made by Mercier, who went 49 yards in Columbia's fourth quarter drive, to put the ball on Princeton's 31. A moment later he took a 16 yard pass from Curtis. Princeton's remarkable victo- ry string is unmarred even by a tie. After that 1949 defeat by Cornell, Princeton won four games. In both 1950 and 1951 the Tigers won nine and this was the first game of 1952. In Princeton's first period scor- ing drive, the Unger-Yaffa passing combination worked effectively, once for 19 yards. The second- touchdown march found Tryon do- ing the passing, both for the touchdown and for key gains on the march. --Daily-Don Campbell MICHIGAN'S TED TOPOR RACES DEEP INTO SPARTAN TERRITORY EARLY IN THE GAME BIG TEN TEAMS IN ACTION: Illini, Wisconsin, OSU Open With Wins I. Headquarters for ESTEB BROOK Fountain Pens CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-(,P)-A 72- yard touchdown run by a defen- sive end and spectacular passing by quarterback Tommy O'Connell powered Illinois to a 33-7 victory over out-manned Iowa State yes- terday. Illinois, undefeated in a football season opener since 1943, delighted a crowd of 47,338 yelling fans with a triumph so simple that it didc most of its work under wraps. O'Connell was superb, connect- ing on 11 out of 16 tosses for 191 yards in less than three quarters of action. He hit John Ryan, a six foot, one inch junior end from To- lone, Ill., for a 49-yard scoring play and set up two other touch- downs with his aerial work. * * , MADISON, Wis.-(A')-Sopho- more quarterback Jim Haluska passed for three touchdowns and scored another as he led Wiscon- sin's football team to a brutal 42-19 victory over Marquette yes- terday. It was the season's opener for both teams, traditional rivals siuce 1904. Haluska, who connected on 14 of 21 aerial tries for 237 yards, passed 53 yards to Harland Carl, 13 yards to Kenton Peters and 44 yards to Roger Dornburg for touchdowns. * * *I COLUMBUS, O.- (AP) -A red- haired freshman fireball flashed across the gridiron firmament yes- terday and the kid's three-touch- down splurge was the margin by which Ohio State defeated In- diana's Hoosiers 33-13 in the sea-j son's opening Western Conference' game. Howard (Hopalong) Cassady, 168-pound frosh from Columbus Central High School, was the df- ference in the bitterly contested1 fray which Ohio broke wide open in the final quarter with a three-] touchdown barrage, two by Cas-1 sady. THE OUTWEIGHED and un- der-manned Hoosiers gave the fav-1 ored Buckeyes a tussle through the first three periods and were on even terms at 13-13 well into the fourth session. The Buckeyes turn- ed two intercepted passes and a recovered fumble into three quick touchdowns to avenge last year's 32-10 loss to Indiana when the Hoosiers almost duplicated yes- terday's Ohio effort by cashing in on two Ohio fumbles and an intercepted pass. Cassady's three - touchdown performance was one of the most outstanding feats ever of- fered by a first-year man on the Buckeye field. Last fall he was a member of the Ohio high school All-State first team, and became eligible for varsity play with the University by entering college last January. He is 18 years old and stands five feet ten and his hair is as red as a firebrick. Ohio State, operating from its newly-adopted Split-T formation, drove to a touchdown in the first three minutes when Fred Bruney intercepted one of Lou D'Achllle's passes on Indiana's 38 and carried it back to the 17. Two plays later quarterback John Borton, Ohio's sophomore signal caller, hit Bru- ney in the end zone with a 15-yard touchdown pass. * ** PITTSBURGH 26, IOWA 14 PITTSBURGH- () -Fullback Bobby Epps and halfback Bill Rey- nolds punched the Iowa Hawkeye's line full of holes yesterday in a brilliant display of open field run- ning to launch the University of Pittsburgh to a 26-14 victory in the seasonal opener for both teams and their new coaches. There was just no stopping Rey- nolds and Epps. Between them and the smart engineering of quarter- back Rudy Mattioli who stepped into the vacated shoes of Bobby Bestwick, the ground-hungry Pan- thers moved 75 and 72 yards for two scores in the second quarter. 23A and *280 Complete Stock of Extra Points 35c & 85c ULIUCH' S Ann Arbor's Busy Bookstore ! i I NATIONALl ° Brooklyn New York St. Louis Philadelphia Chicago Cincinnati Boston Pittsburgh AM] New York Cleveland Chicago Philadelphia Washingtoai Boston St. Louis Detroit w 96 92 88 86 76 68 64 42 * * ERICAN w 95 92 81 78 77 76 63 50 LEAGUE L Pct. 57 .627 61 .601 65 .575 67 .562 77 .497 85 .444 89 .418 111 .275 LEAGUE L Pct. 58 .621 61 .601 72 .529 75 .510 76 .503 77 .497 90 .412 103 .326 GB 4 8 10 20 28 32 54 GB 3 14 17 18 19 32 45 NEW STOCKS ARRIVING DAILY I Our shelves are now refilled I WELCOME with titles sold out at the hpninninn of h-hp ewiL II 1®