AG SIX TfhE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1953 Illinois . . . 27 Mich. State . 47 Ohio State. . 12 Wisconsin . . 28 Iowa . . . . 21 Alabama . . . 0 Notre Dame . 23 Minnesota . . 7 Indiana . . . 18 Penn . . . . 6 Purdue . . . 19 Wyoming . . 7 Tennessee . . 0 Pitt . . . . . 14 Stanford . 21 1UCLA. . . .20 Notre Dame Powers Past Pitt, 23-14 ND Trails 14-7 State Rips: Wisconsin Illino is, -0* ' ScO l t" OSU Soccer Ow oes Team Beats Illini Wallop Gohers 27-7;Michigan,3-1 The Ohio State soccer team downed a determined Michigan Sophomores Pace Winners club3"l yesterday at Stadum i AnnArbor to initiate Indiana, 47-18; i At T., Ie { 1 i I 1 1 1 1 j i °r i i i 1 ; 1 c t 1 i i t i x i s f ,a r i .. x i Y 1 Y a s d c. _v ri a '"t1 11 b la e. a t C SOUTH BEND, Ind.-(')-No- By The Associated Press tre Dame, sagging in the first half EAST LANSING - Michigan ball-stealing act and a "sucker State used its own platoon system. shift," shook off the effects Sat- -platoons of fresh backs working urday with a 16-point burst in the in relays-to power to its 28th con- 14-7 after being victims of a Pitt secutive football victory by a 47-18 last half to trim the pent-up Pan- margin Saturday in a high-scoring thers 23-14. Big Ten game with Indiana. The nation's No. 1 team, look- The win kept Michigan State, ing like sandlotters.at the start of rated No. 2 nationally behind Notre the game, set 58,000 frenzied fans Dame in the Associated Press poll, to cheering by scoring a safety and still in the lead in the confer- converting a fumble into a touch- ence championship race. down for a 16-14 lead in the third * * * period. A HOMECOMING overflow * * * throng of 51,698 fans saw Indiana, THEN, after a 74-yard thrust a 19-point pre-game underdog, go failed at the outset of the fourth, ahead briefly 6-0 in the first the Fighting Irish cinched their period. third triumph of the season on a But MSC Coach Biggie Munn 37-yard surge in four plays that ran in his so-called "second was capped by quarterback Ralph string" backfield to relieve the Guglielmi's 9 - yard touchdown starters and the fresh troops jaunt. Guglielmi also tallied No- scored two touchdowns and set tre Dame's third quarter touch- up a third in nine minutes of down on a 1-foot sneak. the second quarter. Pittsburgh appeared headed By the third quarter Munn let for duplication of an upset it in his third-string backfield to pulled in beating the Irish 22-19 romp, and the avalanche'of man- a year ago by taking a 7-0 first power was too much for game but period edge and holding on for a weary Indiana. 14-7 margin at the half. Indiana scored in the first three Bob Epps barrelled eight yards periods but Michigan State's pla- for the first Pitt touchdown, end- toons of backs gave the Spartans ing a 66-yard drive in nine plays. a 19-12 lead at the half and a 33-. In the second, Henry Ford stole 18 edge after three quarters. the ball from pass catcher Paul g * s Matz' arms and raced 47 yards to WISCONSIN 28, PURDUE 19 the Irish 9. Pitt's "sucker shift" Wisconsin's Badgers ran up a pinned a 5-yard off side penalty three - touchdown margin and against Notre Dame and Dick Mc- wound up playing for time Satur- Cabe sped the final 4 on a pitch out day in a 28-19 victory over Purdue, from Ford. their co-champion of the Big Ten; last year. O s Sophomore Jim Miller scored two of the touchdowns that gave Wisconsin its fat advantage be- 2 7fore Purdue-winless in four games this season-went to work. JJ HIS SECOND, a 50-yard gallop Y] onin the third quarter, left Purdue tacklerssprawled all over the field after his spin through right tackle IOWA CITY, Iowa-(P-Brand- Froncie Gutman, another soph- ed 7-0 by a first quarter Wyoming omore quarterback, tallied two of touchdown, Iowa broke away from Purdue's touchdowns on short the Cowboys' lasso to crunch out plunges. a 21-7 football victory Saturday The game, witnessed by 36,500 over the previously undefeated sweltering fans, opened the West- westerners. ern Conference campaign for both1 Chunky Joe Mastrogidvanni, the schools. - 5-6, 190-pound Brooklyn, N. Y., OHIO STATE 12, PENN 6 Cowboy who went into the con- Fumbling Ohio State finally hit test as the nation's leader in total its stride in the last period to nip offense, guided Wyoming to its underdog Penn, 12-6, Saturday only touchdown in a drive from with Bob Watkins smashing home the 50-yard line. Joe handled the to climax a 93-yard drive. scoring personally with a smash For three periods the Ivy League from the 2-yard line and the kick Quakers, supposedlyhbeing led to for the extra point, slaughter on their suicide sched- ule, outplayed the visitors from the A BIT BATTERED and worn at Big 10. Five times Penn threat- the finish but still in there punch- ened deep in Ohio territory, only ing, Mastrogiovanni finished the to have its own mistakes and a game with a total of 135 yards, 40 desperate Ohio defense close the by rushing and 95 on 8 pass com- door. pletions in 19 attempts. His 5- -_ game total is 872 yards. Except for a brief unsuccess- ful flurry at game's end, it was A ir1t all Iowa as George (Dusty) Rice, the sophomore hero of 1951, capped three long marches with SPI RTS short touchdown spurts. DICK BUCK Iowa picked up 14 points in the Night Editor second quarter to ease the upset fears of the Iowans in the crowd of 29,000. The Hawks, using only one pass, G o g a Tech B rumbled 65 yards for the first score or g in 13 plays and shortly thereafter toured 66-yards in the same num- Hardeman Rom ber of plays. The final touchdown in the third period was an 89- yard affair done in 19 plays. ATLANTA--()-Georgia Tech's, hot-and-cold Engineers, sparked by Leon Hardeman's running, Navy Rom ps... singed Auburn 36-6 Saturday. f PRINCETON, N. J.-(IP)-A tall, A crowd of 40,000 saw the vic- young opportunist from Brooklyn, tory push Tech's unbeaten string John Isaac Hopkins, crashed into to 31 games, the longest among1 stardom Saturday as he led a well- major college teams. drilled Navy football team to a * * * crushing 65-7 victory over pre- H viously unbeaten Princeton. HARDEMAN got Tech out in The score was the biggest ever front with a 15-yard touchdown run up by an opposing team run when the game was less than against Princeton, which played six minutes old. He struck again the first intercollegiate game in 1869. The previous high was 51-14A by Yale in 1931.A TT E Hopkins caught two touchdown basses, intercepted one Princeton oss, recovered a fumble, threw a N couple of key blocks and gener- ally made himself a nuisance to to get more pay fro" the Tigers, who lost for the sec- nd time in their last 35 games. There are exciting opportu teats Purdue, THEN THE Ohio State club, still smarting from last week's upset by Illinois, began to roll with Wat- kins churning yardage and Dave Leggett hitting his mark with passes. It was a startling comeback for Penn, which had been hu- miliated, 40-0, by California last week. Only two weeks ago Ohio State bombed California, 33-19. Bob Felver scooted home from the 4 for the Penn touchdown early in the first period after Leg- gett's fumble had been recovered by Quaker John Lavin. Howard (Hopalong) Cassady put Ohio State back in the ball game with one dazzling thrust, a 61-yard run after taking a pitchout from Leggett at 10:19 of the second period. As both teams missed their conversion attempt they fought it out in a 6-6 tie until Ohio finally hit its stride with less than six minutes to go. CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - (A") -Illi- nois' pair of rambling rockets, J. C. Caroline and Mickey Bates, ig- nited to erase a 7-0 deficit and pace the unbeaten Illini to a 27-7 Big Ten football victory over Min- nesota's rugged Gophers Satur- day. The sensational sophomore duo proved their splendid per- formances against Ohio State last week was no flash in the pan. They cracked the Gophers wide open in the third period. BATES BEGAN a second half Illini outburst which produced 21 points by battering 16 yards for a touchdown. Then, in the fourth period he fought across for his second score with a 26-yard pass from quarterback Elry Falken- stein. The other Illinois touchdown came on a 21-yard dart by full- back Stan Wallace as the Goph- er defenders were caught con- centrating on Caroline and Bates. Paul Giel was a heroic, but in- sufficient performer for the Goph- ers whose only touchdown came the second time they had poses- sion on a 1-foot smash by quarter- back Gino Cappelletti. * * * BATES' two touchdowns gave him eight for the season, thus far marked with previous victories over Ohio State and Stanford, and a tie with Nebraska. The Illini season record is 13 touchdowns, scored by Red Grange and Buddy Young. Caroline, who really set the Il- lini in motion-as Bates did last week against Ohio State-has four touchdowns for the season. In every Illinois scoring drive, it was Caroline, unleashing his ter- rific getaway speed and phantom change of pace, that unbalanced Minnesota's defense. It took 30 minutes before the up-the-middle power of the 205- pound Bates asserted itself. a new rivalry between the two schools. The Buckeyes needed two goals in the second half to overcome a one-one tie resulting from a sec- ond quarter goal by Michigan's Allan Cassels. Ohio State had opened the scoring in the first quarter when Bill Keethler put the ball into the nets. * * THE OTHER Buckeye goals were scored by Gene Yang and Bill Shively. The Michigan squad undoubted- ly missed the services of their two top .players, Kuo-Chiew-Quau and Stan Thorley, who were both laid up with injuries. The next soccer engagement will be next Saturday at Eastlawn Stadium with Ohio Wesleyan furn- ishing the opposition. The game will start at 11 a.m. I 40 -it -Daily-Malcolm Sbatz UNTOUCHED-Northwestern end John Biever t80), gathers in a Dick Thomas aerial and gallops for a substantial gain, pursued by Michigan tackle Art Walker (77). TURKEY DINNER daily 699 daily STATE DRUG State and Packard I_ Stanford Edges UCLA 21-20 in Stunning Upset U By The Associated Pressa ' PALO ALTO--Big Bob Garrett,1 Stanford bullet-throwing quarter- back, passed and kicked Stanford to a 21-20 victory over the UCLA Bruins Saturday in the most spec- tacular football upset on the West Coast this season. The 6 foot 1 inch T-formation skipper tossed three touchdown passes and kicked every conver- sion. * * * GARRETT outshone UCLA's fleet tail back, Paul Cameron, whoM directed the Bruins to their three touchdowns before 45,000 specta- tors. In the end, it was the accurate point kicking of left-footed Gar- rett that told the tale. The Bruins, ranked 4th in this week's Associated Press national poll and hitherto undefeated, were 5 where 'Bama's Corky Tharp fum- about the outcome after the first mann bled after a 40-yard run. That quarter as Oklahoma made three throug drive had started on the Alabama touchdowns in the opening stanza, LSU nine. . scoring each time it got the ball. Zeke Immediately after this disas- Grigg broke away for runs of 35 covere ter to Alabama, guard Charlie and 66 yards during that period as scoring Eckerly came within inches of Kansas' line was demoralized by nect v registering a safety for Alabama. the crushing Sooner power. A bad snap from the center to Oklahoma added one touch- Tennessee's Bob Brengle, back down in the third quarter and AF to punt, was run out to the one substitutes added three more in punts before Eckerly slammed him the fourth to round out the tained consistently made gh the Georgia line. gains kept bulldog quarterback Bratkowski's receivers well d and only on Georgia's lone g drive was he able to con- with regularity. rER A DOUBLE exchange of LSU put on a 66-yard sus- drive from its own 34 with hand plunging over from the Cliff Stringfield kicked the and in 12 minutes of the eriod the Tigers led 7-0. back into the end zone. Eckerly and other 'Bama play- ers protested that he had been tackled back of the goal line but the officials ruled otherwise. Alert Tennessee backs, with Jimmy Wadeain thecvan, stopped Alabama's passers cold. Sopho-a more Bart Starr, a fine airman in, previous games, could complete only three tosses for a net of just 8 yards. slaughter. * * R LSU 14, GEORGIA 6 March. two. point first p STUDENTS TOP Quality - GOOD Service Bring your Dry Cleaning and Laundry to ACE HAND LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 1120 South University or HOME HAND LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING 503 Liberty Louisiana State, using mostly c straight power plays, rang up a Shortly after the kickoff the 14-6 victory over injury-riddled Bulldogs marched back and Georgia Saturday. Bratkowski sneaked across for Fullbacks Jerry Marchand and the touchdown. Sam Mrvos Tommy Davis, and halfbacks missed the extra point attempt. Charley Oakley and Lou Ieutsch- LSU got its second touchdown in the fourth quarter with BIG TEN STANDINGS Deutschmann and Davis moving' W L T Pct. the ball on the ground from the Michigan State .3 0 0 1.000 Georgia 43. Davis went through! Michigan......2 0 0 1.000 the middle for the score and Illinois ........2 0 0 1.000 Stringfield again converted. Wisconsin .. 1 0 0 1.000 - ---- strong favorites. * * * * * * OKLAHOMA 45, KANSAS 0 THE BRUINS, pre-season choice' Larry Grigg, Oklahoma's elusive to go to the Rose Bowl, failed in senior halfback, scored one touch- a last minute attempt to come down and pitched two more as he from behind. The last gasp drive sparked Oklahoma's crushing of- failed when the fighting Stanford fensive to a 45-0 victory over Kan- Indians throttled Cameron's pass- sas in the Sooners' opening de- ing attack :and got the ball on fense of their Big Seven Confer-' downs on the Indian 46. ence football title. Stanford froze the ball for the last few seconds. A SHIRTSLEEVED Dad's Day Stanford scored in the first, crowd of 42,500 had no doubt +.l-NirA w"A . .-A .1 .......4...... T7I0T.A I - - *----- - .. ..VI1 . .. .Z V .V Ohio State .....1 1 0 .500 Minnesota .....1 2 0 .333 Indiana ........0 2 0 .000 Northwestern ..0 2 0 .000 Iowa..........0 2 0 :000 Purdue.........0 1 0 .000 x;x ..:. ,., .,. ;... .:, ,,.,, sM thirdt a nd, nn.i quar ers. uuLA , counted touchdowns in the first three periods. ALABAMA 0, TENNESSEE 0 Underdog Tennessee combined a perfect pass defense aid alert ball hawking Saturday to gain a 0-0 tie with Alabama in a slam bang Southeastern Conference game. Many millions of television fans and 40,000 in Legion Field saw 'Bama roll up 287 yards on run- ning plays only to fumble awayj its major chances. ONE OF THESE came in the third period on the Tennessee five, teats Auburn; 1ps in 36-6 Win on a beautiful 39-yard scoring gallop in the third quarter. Burton Grant kicked a 13-yard field goal, freshman Wade Mit- chell passed 23 yards to end Bill Sennett for another score, Bill Brigman threw to end Sam Hens- ley for 26 yards and another and George Humphreys plunged two yards for the final Tech counter. Quarterback Joe Davis went 13 yards for Auburn's only touch- down at the end of a 50-yard drive midway in the fourth. RECORD DANCE... TONIGHT! FREE! UNION TERRACE ROOM 0 Ai tento Se1 Vlft c0 E N D SCHOOL m your working-day nities for advancement today, women. Each added skill can N FORMING hursdays, 6:45 to 9 P.M. This is YOUR LAST CHANCE to make pIC- I Fountain Pens Greeting Cards Stationery Office S applies Typewriters P for business-trained mena and add to your pay check. CLASSES NON Sessions: Tuesdays and T ture appointments! The photographers wi l l remain through Wednesday, Oct. 21. Sign r tin Ot the Studelnt Po~hl irntinriR Riilrlinn on r I {U ,._ r.REIC: F CIIA THA n A LlA II U rlEU 'E I I II I eII C;4Y 7 / nil %Atnnl fnl F Rlnr^tr h A Zl oo I i