TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Illini Smash 'M' Gridders OSU; State !Win Scribes' Nips Texans Recognition By DICK BUCK Several upsets and one near upset Saturday left clouded un- certainty in Michigan's football future. Ohio State, picked by some as top team in the nation on pre- season polls, and Northwestern, the Wolverines' foe next Saturday, both absorbed stunning defeats while the Spartans hung on the brink of disaster at East Lansing. THREE touchdown tosses by Texas Christian backs threw a scare into MSC and it entered 7. the final period with a 19-7 defi- cit. Only the tremendous play of Evan Slonac enabled the Spartans to continue on the victory road with their 27th straight triumph. After Leroy Bolden scored to cap off a 69-yrd drive, making it 19-13, quarterback Tom Yew- cic threw to Slonac, whose fine running brought a tally on a play covering 34 Bards. With the totals knotted 19-19 Slonac cooly booted the extra point to give MSC the edge. it was Slonac again setting up the insurance tally as he intercept- The University golf course will close for the season Sunday night, October 18. Please clean out all lockers. -Harry Kaseberg ed Ray McKowan's pass. Ten more plays carried State 65 yards to another touchdown. * * * ILLINOIS PROVED itself a team to watch, showing more promise than it has all year in thrashing power-packed OSU by a 41-20 margin. Two sophomore discoveries, Mickey Bates and J. C. Caroline, supplied the Illini punch as they riddled Ohio State's line for a combined total of six touch- downs. Helped by three intercepted passes and one fumble Bates help- ed himself to four tallies while his running mate Caroline recorded two. - . e AT EVANSTON, a one-two punch of Paul Giel and Bob Mc- Namara handed Northwestern its first setback in three contests. The Gopher duo ran through the Wildcats at will while Minnesota's 't defense held Northwestern, the na- tion's offense leaders, to 292 yards total offense. Although it had won its first two games Pennsylvania was com- pletely ineffective against a stam- peding California herd which trampled the Quakers, 40-0. Al Talley, Cal's right halfback, paced a. varied attack with two TD runs. No one scored until the final minute of the first quarter when the Bears shook loose for their first score. AP Poll By The Associated Press Upsets took a severe toll of the nation's ranking college football teams last weekend. However, Ohio State which was one of the leading contenders dropped from third to a tie for 17th as a result of their 41-20 drubbing received from Illinois. Maryland moved into third place after a 40-13 victory over Georgia. The top ten (first place votes x. in parentheses): 1. Notre Dame (74).. ....1226 2. Michigan State (14) ... 977 3. Maryland (21) ,,.,... 961 4. UCLA (8) ............. 755 5. Michigan ............ 537 6. Georgia Tech .......... 490 7. Duke (3) ............. 485 8. Baylor ................ 397 9. Illnois................ 284 10. West Virginia.......... 191 , I _ _ Team Comeback Receives Praise By DAVE LIVINGSTON While it is the custom for Daily sports' scribes to designate one Wolverine gridder as the "Player- of-the-Week" after every football game, nothing would be more out of place this week. In fact, it would pose an almost impossible task after the way every man on Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's squad fought back in the second half against Iowa Saturday to salt away Michigan's first Big Ten triumph. ONE WOULD immediately think of sophomore quarterback Lou Baldacci, who passed for the first Maize and Blue score and came through perfectly on those two all- important conversions, as well as his understudy Dunc McDonald, the man who spearheaded the 56 yard drive to the winning touch- down, climaxing the drive by toss- ing a perfect fourth-down strike into the end-zone for the score. But then how could anyone overlook the amazing pass re- ceiving turned in by end Bob Topp, or slight his running mate Gene Knutson, who caught Mc- Donald's climactic toss. And what about that fellow who filled in so well at center for the injured Dick O'Shaughnessy? Sophomore John Morrow, the Ann Arbor boy, drew the praises of both coaches for the job he did as linebacker, as well as his un-erring work at the offensive pivot post. * * * THEN THERE was' the time in the second quarter when Don Dug- ger crashed through the stout Iowa line to 'pull Iowa's passer, Jerry Reichow, down for an eleven yard loss. And it would be a mistake to forget the punishment Dugger and his fellow guards, Dick Bei- son, Ron Williams, Jim Fox, and Ted Cachey gave (as well as absorbed) in the middle of the line. By the same token, mention would have to be made of the un- heralded but indispensible play of tackles Jim Balog, Dick Strozew- ski, Art Walker, and Ron Geyer, and of course the hard-running backs such as Tony Branoff, Ted Kress, Bob Hurley, and all the rest. * * * * AND THEN we come to the one man the average spectator might overlook, but the guy every man on the squad knows played a sig- nificant part in the victory- O'Shaughnessy. The injured Captain, although making only a token appearance in the game, was very much in evidence as he ran back and forth along the bench encourag- ing his mates with that spirit and will-to-win only a Michigan Captain like O'Shaughnessy can inspire. There they are-every man on the Michigan squad a star in his own right. The Daily salutes them all as the "Players of the Week." - -1 Student Supplies TYPEWRITERS REPAIRED ' . RENTED SOLD BOUGH T Fountain Pens repaired by a factory trained man Webster-Chicago Tape and Wire Recorders MORR!L'S 314 S. State Ph. 7177 Open Sat, 'til 5 P.M. except on Home Games-Open 'til 12 Noon Gomberg g's Passes Rip Foes,_22-0 By TED KAUFMAN Gomberg House continued its murderous ways on the football field with a 22-0 trouncing of; Hinsdale House yesterday. Gomberg's passing star, Loul Megeysi, passed for three touch- downs and two extra points to ac- count for twenty of the twenty- two points. Bill Land was on the receiving end of the first Megeysi toss with the try for the seventh point being no good. * * * MEGEYSI then pitched twenty- five yards to Bob Woschitz for the TD with a Megeysi-Ted Knatt pass accounting for the extra point. Megeysi completed his day's work with a scoring pass to Jack Cuipack for the TD Gomberg tallied two points when Bill Hamil tagged the Hinsdale quarterback in the end' zone for the safety. A sensational punt set-up the situation which gave Lloyd House a 2-0 win over Cooley House. Lloyd's Tex Kranner booted the pigskin 35 yards and out of bounds on the Cooley five yard line. Two plays later, Dick Mikton tagged the Cooley tailback in the end zone to give Lloyd House its margin of victory. * * * ADAMS HOUSE scored a one touchdown victory over Kelsey House. Dave Meyers passed to Frank Arens for six and then ran I Second String By WARREN WERTHEIMER Before a record Briggs Stadiumj crowd of 58,079, the Detroit Lions whipped the San Francisco Forty- Niners, 24-21, to take over first place in the Western Conference 3 of the National Football League. The Lions bottled up San Fran- cisco's star runners, Joe Perryt and Hugh McElhenny, and when 1 Y. A. Tittle, the Forty-Niner'st star passer broke his jaw in the] third-period, the westerners' of- fense was shattered.1 DOAK WALKER put Detroit ahead, 10-0 in the first quarter. when he first fired a 23-yard touchdown] pass to Cloyce Box and two minutes later kicked a 23-yard field goal. The Forty-Niners struck back to take a 14-10 lead on a Tittle toGordieuSoltau pass and a ten-yard run up the middle by~ Joe Archas. However the Lions regained the lead just before the half ended as Bob Hoernschmeyer went over from four yards out and they lengthened their lead early in the third period as Bob- by Layne found Leon Hart for 49 yards and a touchdown. The west coast eleven closed the gap to 24-21 when Tittle went one yard on a bootleg play to score. * * * IN ANOTHER Sunday contest, the Pittsburgh Steelers scored 17 points in the final quarter to over- take the Chicago Cardinals, 31-28. It was a 28-yard field goal booted by Tackle Nick Bolkovac that gave Pittsburgh its winning margin. Jimmy Finks threw twice for scores and Fran Rogel bucked across twice to account for the winners four touchdowns. The Baltimore Colts took the Chicago Bears into camp for the second time this season as they won,'16-14. GEORGE BLANDA accounted for all of the Bears points by pass- ing twice for scores to Bill McColl and booting two extra points. The Los Angeles Rams got back to winning ways after last week's defeat at the hands of San Francisco as they rolled over Green Bay, 38-20. After Fred Cone gave Green Bay an early 3-0 lead by booting a' field goal from 38-yards out, the Packers were never in the game. The New York Giants absorbed their third loss in a row as the Washington Redskins edged them 13-9. Two consecutive passes by Jack Scarbath good for 88 yards and a touchdown, and two three- pointers by Bill Dudley gave the 'Skins' their win with the Giants lone touchdown coming on an in- terception. On Saturday night, the Cleve- land Browns won their third straight by beating the Philadel- phia Eagles, 37-13. Otto Graham completed 20 passes in 30 attempts and Chick Jagade went across twice from the 14 yard line as the Browns held on to first place in the Eastern Conference. EASTER Cleveland Washington Pittsurgh Philadelphia Chicago Cards New York WESTER Detroit San Francisco Los Angeles Baltimore Chicago Bears Green Bay .N CONFERENCE w 3 7 0 0 L 0 0 1 2 3 3 T 0 1 0 1 0 Pct. PF 11.000 91 1,000 58 .667 76 .000 55 .000 48 .000 30 PA 20 43 80. 89 sq 82 58 59 75 5 12 82 DETROIT ENDS SAN FRANCISCO JINX, 24-21: Lions Overhaul 49ers Before Record Crowd __ RN CONFERENCE 3 0 0 1.000 2 1 0 .667 2 1 0 .667 2 1 0 .667 1 2 0 .333 0 3 0 .000 89 84 84 46 40 33 ri It's Nlaoc I ''C I. w. How quickly you can solve your laundry and cleaning problems the EASY, FAST and ECONOMICAL WAY at the WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDROMAT 510 East Williams - 3-5540 Also Featuring a I LA~v;; fL A~lULMA a~aat ~ff ~ ,,, f7 /- 2-DAY SHIRT SERVICE and SAME-DAY DRY CLEANING SERVICE i s r-- w Dick Balzhiser, senior full- back on the Wolverine football squad, became a father for theI second time last Sunday. The new addition is another boyI and weighs seven pounds, six ounces. around right end for the extra point Wenley House duplicated the Adams-Kelsey score in beating Allen Rumsey 7-0. Bill Mueller caught a Phil Oles pass for the touchdown and then Oles threw to Barry MacKay for the sev- enth point. Scott House, by virtue of a first half pass from Denny Ormond to1 Barry Stulburg, beat Williams House 6-0. HTUBER HOUSE beat Taylor House 6-0. A Bill Booth to Do McCullen pass provided the win.j Joe Schneider passed to Jim Reinstra in the first period to gives Winchell House a 6-0 win over Greene House. Strauss House beat Anderson House 7-6 as the Gilbert Rupp- Leon Greenblatt combination ac- counted for the TD and extra point. PERSONALITY HAIRSTYLING:: " 9 BARBERS * NO WAITING f WELCOME The Miascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater Seniors and Graduate Students ?:ir :; , 1'. ;; F.i':- ':; : t?", ;' t "W Openings available for: ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS s CHEMICAL ENGINEERS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PHYSICISTS R AYTHEON is a pioneer and a leader in the electronic industry ... its horizons are unlimited ... engineers of imagination and skill can reach the peak of their chosen field and enjoy professional status here. Raytheon's geographical location, 10 miles from Boston, Mass., provides you a choice of urban or rural living in a sec- tion of the country that is noted for its natural advan- tages for health, cultural, recreational, industrial and research facilities. Raytheon employs about one-fourth of the total elec- tronic workers in Massachusetts and produces electronic products for both civilian and military use. We're able to provide assistance in securing reasonably priced and de- sirable housing accommodations. ALL CLUBS, organizations, and activity groups that desire to have their picture in the 1954 Michiganensian, should notify the contracts manager at the Student Publica tions .Building -- Phone 2-3241. i Raytheon Manufacturing Waltham, Massachusetts Company CAMPUS INTERVIEWS Tuesday, October 20 Call your College Placement Office for appointment i # ~ .4 . : . . 82" -. CAREER QUIZ FOR ENGINEERING SENIORS We want you to give us this quiz - then make comparisons. You could call this testa Career Quiz, for it represents the questions most frequently encountered by our representatives in interviews with several hundred young engineers in recent years. This large group of graduating engineers felt that these questions explored the more important areas of. consideration when evaluating the career opportunities of a business organization: S What various types of work does your firm offer men with my degree? What would be my job with your company? What opportunities are ahead for me in your organization? 2 When will I begin to be noticed by management? [Z] Whatare the engineering problems likely to be encountered? What are the end products of your firm? ED What about living conditions in your community? - Our engineering representative will visit your campus in the near future. He will be glad to answer these and other questions about the McDonnell Aircraft Corporation of St. Louis, Missouri. Those interested in obtaining a Master or Doctor of Science Degree should inquire about the McDonnell Graduate Study Plan. nAi iir 1 V-I 1 11 ITI 1AITLJ AA rkAAtrAnIMA V e t4w.-I 7 ""0'aowv The world's most famous towers are, left to right, the Eiffel Tower, the Tower of London and the Leaning Tower of Pisa. But in America, the tower-come-lately (ex- treme right) may rapidly become as familiar as the old landmarks of Europe. It is one of the Bell System's radio-relay stations which speed telephone calls and television programs coast to coast. In May, 1948, these towers connected only five Eastern cities. Five years later the TV network included 95 towns and more are being added all the time. Being the first network of its kind in the world, the planning, research, engineering and construction requirements are providing real opportunities for the kind of people who like to pioneer. If working on new developments appeals to you, check with your Placement Officer for the details on employment with the Bell Sys- tem. There are positions open for electrical, 7o" am o r. You're the man most likely to succeed! ... in Van Heusen Shirts Girls cut in on man! Why? Look at that Van Heusen Shirt! Admire that smart sewmanship ... that low-set collar (in many new models) ... that action-tailoring.. . that figure