TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1953 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG1E TTREE Mentor Says 'M' To Drill nlocking By IVAN N. KAYE Daily Sports Editor Coach Bennie Oosterbaan did not think the blocking of his Wol- verines in Saturday's 26-7 victory over Tulane was good enough for upcoming Big Ten games. Consequently the Michigan coach has ordered a review of blocking assignments for this week of practice. The coach was par- ticularly disturbed by the third period let-down suffered by his team. After leading at halftime, 14-0, Michigan seemed listless in the third quarter and the Green Wave scored a touchdown to get back into the game. * * * THE TULANE score was made on a defensive play, (recovery of a Ted Kress fumble which had roll- ed into the Michigan end zone), but the Southerners had been driv- ing the Wolverines back toward their own goal line all through the period. Michigan's main trouble in the period seemed to be hanging onto the ball. Several fumbles could have been disastorous if Tulane had been better able to take advantage of the Michigan mistakes. The Wolverines are now con- cerned with the opening of their conference schedule this week-end against t.he University of Iowa. The Hawkeyes, coached by former Michigan quarterback and block- ing star Forest Evashevski, rolled over Washington State College last Saturday by a score of 54-12. Iowa's defense held the Pacific Coast team to only 13 yards rush- ing. At the half Washington State had a minus 21 yards on the ground and was trailing 35-0. SPORTS Ho-Hum!! B R O O K LY N A l lR H 0 A Gilliam, 2-b 4 0 o 4 4 Reese, ss 4 0 1 1 4 Robinson, If 4 1 2 3 0 Campanella, c 4 0 1 4 0 Hodges, lb 4 0 0 7 0 Snider, cf 3 1 0 4 1 Furillo, rf 4 1 3 2 0 Cox,3b 4 0 1 0 1 .Erskine, p 1 0 0 0 0 a-Williams 0 0 0 0 0 Milliken, p 0 0 0.. 0 0 b-Morgan 1 0 0 0 0 Labine, p 1 0 0 0 1 Totals 34 3 8 25 11 a-Walked for Erskine in 5th b-Flied out for Milliken in 7th x-One out when winning run scored NEW YORK AB R H O A Woodling, if 4 1 2 1 0 Collins, 1b 3 0 1 5 1 c-Mize 1 0 0 0 0 Bollweg, lb 0 0 0 0 0 Bauer, f 3 2 1 3 0 Berra, c 5 0 2 10 0 Mantle, cf 4 0 1 5 0 Martin, 2b 5 0 2 1 0 McDougald, 3b 4 0 0 0 0 Rizzuto, ss 4 1 2 2 2 Ford, p 3 0 1 0 1 Reynolds, p 1 0 1 0 0 Totals 37 4 13 27 4 e-Grounded out for Collins in 8th Brooklyn 000 001 002--3 New York 210 000 001-4 E-Gilliam, Erskine, Cox. RBI-Ber- ra, Martin 2, Woodling Campanella, Furrillo 2. 2B-Berra, Furillo, Mar- tin, Robinson. HR-Furillo. SB-Rob- inson. DP-Cox, Gilliam and Hodges. Snider, Gilliam and Campanella; Labine, Gilliam and Hodges. Left- Brooklyn 6, New York 13. BB-Ford 1 Williams, Reynolds 1 Snider, Erskine 3 Woodling, Mantle, Bauer, Milliken 1 Collins, Labine 1 Batter. SO-Ford 7 Snider 3, Cox, Erskine, Campanella, Gilliam, Reynolds 3 Campanella, Cox, Labine, Erskine 1 Collins, Labine 1 McDouigald. HO- Erskine 6 in 41 Milliken 2 in 2, Ford 6 in 7, Labine 5 in 2 1/3, Reynolds 2 in 2. R-ER-Erskine 3-3, Milliken 0-0, Ford 1-1, Labine 1-1, Reybolds 2-2. Winner-Reynolds. Loser-Labine. U-Bill Stewart NL plate, Ed Hur- ley AL first base, Art Gore NL sec- ond base, Bill Grieve AL third base, Frank Dascoli NL left field, Hank Soar AL right field. T-2.55. A-62,370 paid. Receipts net $372,048.44. I Gomberg Wallops NEXT ON STADIUM CARD: Iowa, Northwestern Display Power cott House, 25-0 Megysi Tosses for Four Markers; Michigan, Williams, Ramsey Win By DICK BUCK victory over the Cadets at Evan-: The Wolverines looked impres- ston. NU backs Bob Lauter, Gerry sive in their second victory of the Weber, and Dick Ranicke kept By TED KAUFMAN Gomberg House led by the su- perb passing of Lou Megysi rolled over Scott House in I-M Residence Halls football yesterday 25-0. Megysi tossed to Jim McClurg for the first Gomberg tally and Jack Cuipak was on the receiving end of Megysi's second touchdown toss with a Megysi-Bob Woschitz pass adding the extra point. * * * MEGYSI COMPLETED his aft- ernoon's work with good passes to Bill Land and Earl Kaufman. Four overtime contests feat- ured yesterday's results. Michigan House, led by Ray Tam, defeated Williams House 12-6 in the first of these extra per- iod games. Tam passed to Phil McCarthy in a regulation thirty minute period and then hit him again in the overtime. * * * WILLIAMS HOUSE'S marker came on a sweeping end run by Frank Verbeke in the second half. Allen-Rumsey house register- ed an overtime victory over Greene House by the score of 1-0. Ivan Kushen aided the West Quad team with an eleven yard end run in the overtime period. The IM procedure for games that end in a tie is as follows: Each team is given four plays with the ball and the side gaining the most yardage in those four plays is awarded one . point. If a team scores a touchdown however, it is scored as six points as usual. This accounts for a one to nothing score. * * * ANDERSON House won a wierd 6-1 decision over Van Tyne House in overtime. Dick Christianson passed to Don Highway for the TD. Van Tyne's one point came by virtue of the fact that they amassed more yardage than An- derson but Anderson scored a touchdown for six points. Wenley House behind Bill Mueller topped Hayden House 7-0. Mueller tossed to Phil Oles for the score with a Mueller to Barry MacKay pass adding the extra point. Lloyd House won their game from Reeves House by the score of 6-0. Jack Watson completed a pass to John Murray in the end zone for the margin of victory. In another 1-0 overtime contest, Cooley House came out the wirn- ner over Kelsey House. Soccer Loss Indiana's soccer team whip- ped the University of Michigan last Saturday, 4-0. The Hoosiers scored once in each of the first two quarters and added the final pair in the third stanza. The two clubs will engage in a rematch this Sat- urday at 11:00 at Ferry Field. There will be a meeting for all men interested in playing soccer this evening at 8:00. It will be held in Room 247 of the Architecture building. season Saturday but the teams they will face on the coming Sat- urdays also chalked up impressive scores. Of seven remaining Michigan opponents six squads gained tri- °umphs while Minnesota, the only loser, was trampled by the Spar- tans, 21-0. * * * STATE'S Leroy Bolden, over- shadowed last season by the great Don McAuliffe, finally came into his own as he ripped off all three, MSC tallies. The Gophers mustered an in- spired series of goal line stands to keep the first half scoreless ...: on both sides but Bolden gal- __ loped 69 yards in the third per- iod and continued in the final ALLIE REYNOLDS chapter with 11 and 9 yard TD ... wraps up finale runs. Meanwhile, Minnesota's highly W riters Pick touted back Paul Giel was con- tinuously thrown for losses by the Spartan defense and his hurried op passes flew wild. It was MSG's twenty-sixth con- tosecutive win. * * * NEXT OPPONENT on the list By KEN COPP for the Wolverines, Iowa, showed Senior end Bob Topp of Michi- plenty of scoring punch as it com- gan and Tulane nalfback Max Mc- pletely outclassed a Washington Gee were named Players- of-the- State eleven, 54-12. Week in a poll of Daily sports Ending the first half with writers last Saturday. 35-0 edge, the Hawkeyes piled Topp managed to be a thorn up their highest point total in the side of the Green Wave of- since 1947's opener when they fense throughout the game cli- sined1N4t'sopShntey maxing his work with the block- downed North Dakota State, ing of a Tulane punt early in the Coach Forest Evashevski, who fourth quarter. - Army playing a ground-wary game while Thomas connected on fourteen of nineteen aerials, corn- piling 209 yards and two touch- downs in this department. Army held a 7-0 advantage after the first period but the Wildcats exploded for three TDs in the second stanza and .continued on for their second non-conference win of the sea- son. Pennsylvania, Michigan's home- coming opponent, eked out a 13-7 triumph over Penn State for itsj second consecutive win, having downed Vanderbilt the previous week. , * * * BOTH QUAKER markers were gathered on passes from Walt Hynoski to receiver Gary Scott as Penn took to the air in the blus- tery-hot weather. Outside of State's lone touch- down, a pass from Tony Rados to Jim Garrity, the Lions were never inside Penn's 31 yard line. Two squads which furnish the Wolverines with traditional bat- tles, Illinois and Ohio State, had little trouble in capturing laurels rom opposing contingents. * * * A 33-21 VICTORY over Stan- ford's Indians was the first of the year for the Illini. Second-string quarterback Elry Falkenstein and sophomore halfback J. C. Caroline sparked Illinois to the win. The Illini racked up 19 points in the final quarter to put the game on ice. End Rocky Ryan gathered in two of Falkenstein's heaves for tallies. Ohio State back Bob Watkins battered across the California goal line four times to account person- ally for 24 of the 33 points that OSU recorded in downing the Bears, 33-19. ENGINEERING SENIORS... North American Aviation Los Angeles wll interview here FRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1953 BROWNS ROLL OVER CARDS: 49ers Edge Rams on Field Goal DAVE BAAD Sports Night Editor , * UP TO THAT TIME, the Wol- verines were maintaining only a seven point tdge over the visitors from the South. However, the Tu- lane eleven was now deep in its own territory and was forced to punt. Les Kennedy of Tulane step- ped back and kicked, but short- ly Topp was in the Greenies backfield. He managed to block the kick with his cohort from the other end of the line, Gene Knutson, falling on the ball for a cinching six points. This act was definitely the turn- ing point of the game and aided to restore confidence in the Wol- verine eleven. McGee was selected as the Tu- tlane standout because of his ver- satility on the football field against the Wolverines. In his previous two games against Georgia and the Citadel he had established himself 'came to Iowa from a Washington State coaching job just a year ago, was well versed in methods to beat the West Coast eleven. Six sophomores were in his start- ing lineup but Evashevski cleared the bench before the end of the rout. *? THE ACCURATE arm of North- western's quarterback Dick Thom- as fired the Wildcats to a 33-20 Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES By WARREN WERTHEIMER A dramatic' 13-yard field goal with six seconds left to play gave the San Francisco Forty-Niners a 31-30 victory over the Los Angeles Rams as the NFL moved into its second week of action. Gordon Soltau kicked the win- ning three pointer which was set up by a brilliant 71 yard fun by Hugh McElhenny after he caught a short pass. The Forty-Niners overcame a 20-point deficit to gain their second win and a tie with Detroit for the lead. Los Angeles Mimmm S*** V.'.. . . All styles of ARROW WHITE SHIRTS are always available at a WILD' SA State Street on the campus was knocked from the ranks of the unbeaten. * * * - THE RAMS had led through- out the contest until six minutes remained in the game when San Francisco went ahead for the first time, 28-27. Three minutes later Ben Agajanian put Ios Angeles back in the lead with his third field goal of the game and set the stage for the thrilling climax. Lou 'The Toe' Groza had his string of consecutive points aft- er touchdown broken at 121 as the Cleveland Browns scored their second win, rolling over the Chicago Cardinals,, 27-7. Groza, who hadn't missed an extra point in four years of play, had his conversion attempt after Cleveland's third touch- down blocked by Chicago guard Volney Peters. Otto Graham continued his sen- sational passing of a week ago for the Browns as he hit on 15 of 22 attempts including touchdown tosses of 34, 38 and 55 yards. The Cards only score was recorded by Charley Trippi on the end of a forward and lateral play which covered 28 yards. A 16-YARD pass from George Blanda to Jim Dooley in the last three minutes gave the Chicago Bears a 17-13 triumph over the Green Bay Packers. Blanda also booted a 40-yard field goal as tha Bears evened their season's record. Green Bay, sparked by a 60- yard return of a punt by Gib Dawson good for six points, had a 13-3 lead late in the first half. However, John Dottley scored for Chicago just before the half end- ed and the Packers went on to suffer their second loss. In games that were played Sat- urday night, the Detroit Lions beat the Baltimore Colts, 27-17, and the Pittsburgh Steelers hand- ed the New York Giants their sec- ond loss by scoring a 24-14 win THE LIONS came from behind to gain their triumph sparked by a spectacular 49-yard touchdown PERSONALITY HAIRSTYLING: * 9 BARBERS * NO WAITING " WELCOME The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater run by Bob Hoernschmeyer and a 74-yard 'paydirt jaunt by Yale Lary. The Steelers came up with 14 points in the last period to pull their record up to .500. A pass from Jim Finks to Elbie Nickel put Pittsburgh ahead and it1 scored again on a last second recovery and 13-yard run with a Giant fumble. In a game played on Friday night, the Washington Redskins and the Philadelphia Eagles fought to a 21-21 standstill. The Redskins went ahead in the third quarter on a 61-yard pass play from Jack Scarbath to Hugh Taylor. 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