PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31t 1954 PAGE SIX THE 1~IICIIIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31. 19~4 v ....---I vv awai-- a, -- va Notre Dame Ekes Out 6-0 Triumph Over Midshipmen BaerMakesLone Helinski, Campbell, Bartkiewicz Lead Underdog Hoosiers to Win BALTIMORE-(A)-A penalty- plagued Notre Dame team cashed1 in on a perfect pass play and the traditional luck oft the Irish to bury determined Navy 6-0 in the! mud of Baltimore Memorial Stad- ium yesterday.' The payoff pass, a 46-yard toss from Ralph Guglielmi to speedster Jim Morse, came after five mm- '500' King Killed In Airplane Crash DECATUR, Ind. (P) - Wilbur Shaw, 52, president of the India- napolis Motor Speedway and three-time winner of the 500-mile race, and two companions were killed in a plane crash near here late yesterday., The men had goneto Detroit, to take part in a car test. Shaw flew the plane to Detroit and Ernest Roose, also killed, was to have flown it back, the ad- vertising man said. The plane left Ann Arbor airport at 4 pm. utes of play in the second quarter. The luck, which had been going against Notre Dame's Irish, turned in their favor at a crucial moment in the third period and prevented a Navy score. Second-Half Comeback The Midshipmen, refusing to waver although they took some- what of a manhandling in the first half, came back with a bril- liaht passing attack with George Welsh throwing the muddy ball. Eventually, after a series of mis- haps and fumbles, Navy got first down on the Notre Dame one. On the second play, Bob Craig pounded across the goal line but he fumbled as a horde of Notre Dame tacklers hit him and Gugli- almi came up with the ball for a touchback. Navy never got another real chance. Although Notre Dame had been favored, the victory didn't do much to enhance the prestige of the Irish, voted the sixth-ranking team in the nation in this week's Associated Press poll. Notre Dame .....0 6 0 0-6 Navy ............0 0 0 0-0 (Continued from Page 1) After Baer picked up a first down, McDonald again went back to pass and threw into the end zone. Barr went high in the air with a defender right next to him and got both hands on the ball only to have it jar loose as he hit the ground. On the .following play, Helinski intercepted in the end zone and that was it for Michigan. In the third quarter, the Maize and Blue had moved to to the In- diana 24 and 20 only to be thwarted by interceptions. Early in the fi- nal period, the Wolverines lost the ball on 'downs after reaching the victors' 18. The only thing that Michigan got out of these marches was a safety which came about when Tom Maentz blocked Helinski's punt in the end zone and the pigskin rolled over the end line for two points. However this may have been a break for the Hoosiers since it gave them a free kick from their twenty and they were able to punt the ball out of danger. The losers' only touchdown came in the first quarter as they cov- ered 66 yards in a sustained drive -M' Out of Bowl? MICHIGAN LE-Kramer, Rottunno LT-Walker, Kolesar LG-Cachey, Fox C-Bates, Goebel, Snider RG-Meads, R. Hill RT-Geyer, Morrow RE-Maentz, Brooks QB-Baldacci, Maddock, McDonald Knickerbocker LH-Cline, Barr RH-Shannon, Brannoff, Corey, Hickey FB-Baer, D. Hill --Daily-Dick Gaskill GOING NOWHERE - Wolverine's Lou Baldacci (27) drops Hoosier halfback Don Domenic (23) in the second quarter. -Daily-Dick Gaskill INCOMPLETE-Brad Bomba (88) breaks up an 'M' pass attempt to Tom Maentz (85) on the last play of the first half. UICLA defeats California for Seventh Victory; Army, Duke Edge Foes by Identical- 21-20 Scores 0 INDIANA LE-Aloisio, Fee, Fellinger LT-Skoronski, Rauchmiller LG-Hall, Gentilo C-Vesel, Amstutz RG-Farras, Leo RT-Rorden RE-Romba, Maglich, Roberson QB-Helinski, Cichowski LHT-Stone, Domenic RH-Campbell, Bell FB-Bartkiewicz, Kun 1 I E4 -9 -13 I Score by Period: MICHIGAN.......7 0 INDIANA ...,.....0 13 n C 2 0 0- 0- I No Extra Charge FOR PICK UP AND DELIVERY a that was highlighted by three com- pleted tosses to Kramer. Freddie Baer, who played an- other terrific game at fullback, took it over from three yards out on fourth down. The way that Michigan scored their first touch- down the first time it got its hands vi the ball made it look like the ! A1olverines were out to do a re- ieat performance of last week's Minnesota game. Such was not to be. mir igan Bail SPORTS DON LINDMAN Night Editor BERKELEY, Calif. (M - Primo Villanueva, shifty left halfback, raced to two touchdowns and en- gineered two more to give the UCLA Bruins a 27-6 victory over the California Bears yesterday in their annual Coast Conference "football clash. Passing Paul Larson, enjoying his greatest performance in the air, established a California game Washington State Upsets Favored Stanford, 30-26 STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Calif. {g)-The Washington State Cougars, blanked by Idaho last week, rode back with a vengeance yesterday and squelched Stanford's Rose Bowl hopes under a shower of four touchdowns and a field goal, good for a 30-26 Pacific Coast Confer ence victory. All the scoring was packed into' the first three periods with the lead tied or changing hands nine times. The Cougars played the last three periods without fullback Duke Washington, the conference's leading ground gainer. record of 25 completions and led California 62 yards for a second period touchdown. * * * WEST POINT, N.Y. W-Army's reputation as a national power suf- fered a rude shock yesterday when the Cadets had to fight desper- ately for a come-from-behind 21-20 victory over an inspired Virginia team that wasn't supposed to come close. A missed' conversion try, by Stan Knowles after the first Virginia touchdown in the second period proved to be the margin of de- feat. Ralph Chesnauskas' three conversions saved the day for the Cadets. S* s DURHAM, N.C. (P)-Duke, be- hind 20 points in the third period, climaxed a whirlwind rally by scoring in the last 30 seconds to defeat Georgia Tech, 21-20, yes- terday before a cheering crowd of 33,000. Guard Jimmy Nelson's three conversions proved the difference. The Blue Devils, on the defen- sive most of the first half, saw Georgia Tech score twice in the second period after the Yellow Collegiate Grid Scores Jackets had twice been stopped inches short of the Duke goal. Georgia Tech scored with four minutes remaining in the second period when reserve quarterback Bill Brigman passed 43 yards to halfback Paul Rotenberry. In the last minute of the sec- ond period Georgia Tech scored again when Dickie Mattison went Greene's Pick up and Deliver your over from the one. An 18-yard pass play from quarterback Wade Mitchell to end Bill Sennett ac- counted for the last Tech touch- down in the third quarter. Duke roared to life by taking the next kickoff and rolled 66 yards with quarterback Jerry Bar- ger passing to Jerry Kocourek from the 11 for the tally. EAST Harvard 27, Ohio University 13 Colgate 6, Princeton 6 Cornell 26, Columbia 0 Yale 13, Dartmouth 7 Army 21, Virginia 20 Syracuse 25, Holy Cross 20 Penn State 35, Penn 13 Oklahoma 13, Colorado 6 MID-WEST Indiana 13, Michigan 9 Purdue 28, Illinois 14 Minnesota 19, Michigan State 13 Ohio State 14, Northwestern 7 Iowa 13, Wisconsin 7 Nebraska 25, Missouri 19 Kansas State 28, Kansas 6 Notre Dame 6, Navy 0 SOUTH Duke 21, Georgia Tech 20 Maryland 20, South Carolina * Georgia 0, Alabama 0 Tennessee 26, North Carolina 20 Kentucky 28, Villanova 3 Pittsburgh 13, West Virginia 10 Auburn 27, Tulane 0 Clemson 32, Wake Forest 20 Mississippi 21, LSU 6 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma A&M 12, Tulsa 0 SMU 13, Texas 13 Rice 34, Vanderbilt 13 Baylor 12, TCU 7 Arkansas 14, Texas A&M 0 FAR WEST USC 34, Oregon State 0 UCLA27, California 6 Washington State 30, Stanford 26 Oregon 26, Washington 7 garments (shirts too) any where at no addisional charge. U I Call NO 23-23-1 DAY or NIGHT I. DEPT. 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