THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1954 Powerhouse Outfights Game Wolverines *1 Cassady's 52 Yard Sprint Sets Up TD Penalties, Fumbles, Interceptions Hurt Sparkling Wolverine Offense Badgers Crush Minnesota, Gain Tie for Second Place (Continued from Page 1) From then on Michigan had plenty of scoring opportunities but none, of them materialized. Baldacci Intercepts Three plays after the touchdown Baldacci intercepted one of Dave Leggett's passes on his own 44. The Wolverines promptly drove to State's 36 where Baer's fumble put a temporary halt to their on- slaught. Midway in the second quarter, with the Buckeyes still owning but one first down, Michigan moved from its own 14 to the enemy's nine before an offside penalty set it back on the 14. After two passes fell incomplete, Ron Kramer tried a field goal from a bad angle on the right side of the field. It was off to the left of the goal posts and State took over on their own 20. Again the Buckeyes couldn't crack the Michigan defense and were forced to punt to Cline who returned to the Ohio 48. After one pass had fallen incomplete, Jim Maddock tossed a short one out in the left flat that Ohioan Jack Gibbs gathered in on the 45. He streaked to the Michigan ten before Mad- dock shoved him out of bounds. Leggett to Kriss-TD On the next play Leggett pitched a perfect pass to End Fred Kriss who gathered it in all alone in the end zone. Weed converted to tie the score at 7-7 with but 2:37 re- maining in the first half. In the third quarter, after State had still failed to gain, the Wolver- ines drove from their own 14 to Ohio's 23 before Baer again fum- bled and Hubert Bobo recovered for the Bucks on the 21. Three plays got Ohio exactly nothing and Bobo went back to punt on fourth down with still ten yards to go. Kramer crashed through to hurry the kick so much that it went straight up in " the air with Tom Maentz catching it for the Wolver- ines and driving to the 14. Four plays and some precise measure- ments gave Michigan a first down on the State four yard line. OSU Line Holds From there Michigan tried the middle of the line four times. Full- back Dick Hill got one, Cline got nothing, Hill got two to the one yard line, and on the next play was stoppedon the one-foot line. That did it, for after Ohio had moved for a first down on the 11, Cassady sprinted 52 yards through the center of the line to the Michi- gan 37. . From there the Buckeyes moved easily to the eight, where with third down and seven yards to go for a first down, Leggett ran to the left and passed to End Dick Brubaker who was standing all alone just across the goal line. Baldacci Recovers Fumble Michigan had its last real chance to tie the score when, with seven minutes to go, Baldacci recovered State's only fumble on Michigan's 43. But on the second play Cassady intercepted a long pass by Cline, and in ten plays the Buckeyes cov- ered 62 yards for another touch- down as Cassady went the final yard for another score. Statistically, Michigan beat the Buckeyes in practically every de- partment but scoring. The Wolver- ines picked -up 15 first downs to State's 13. 229 yards rushing to 196, and 74 yards passing tto 58 for Ohio. On the other hand it is signifi- cant to note that Michigan lost two fumbles to State's one, that Michigan intercepted one pass to Ohio's three, and that Michigan was penalized 86 yards while the Buckeyes were penalized only 35 yards. E .1; i] Z t b a e f c t t c -Daily-Chuck Kelsey LOU BALDACCI drives for a short gain against OSU Purdue Edges Hoosiers; Wildcats wallop Illinois 7- LAFAYETTE, Ind. (IP) - Pur-y due's Boilermakers kept the old oaken bucket yesterday by beat- ing their old intrastate rivals from Indiana, 13-7, in one of the rough- est games of the series that start- ed in 1891. Len Dawson's 15th touchdown pass.this year was the victory margin. Purdue finished sixth in the Big Ten, Indiana seventh. Fist Fights Rage Fist fights broke out in the crowd of 44,000, but state police had the situation under control when the game ended. Indiana was penalized 132 yards to 20 for Purdue. Purdue's victory ran its modern dominance of Indiana to seven straight, the longest string by ei- ther team in the 57-game series. Hoosiers Lead at Half Two 15-yard Indiana penalties set up a one-yard touchdown sneak by Dawn in the second quar- ter. He passed nine yards to Rex Brock for the winning score in the third. Indiana had a 7-6 halftime lead, 'I MADISON, Wis., ill-Wisconsin's"' Badgers, their offense hobbled by Alan (The Horse) Ameche's ach- ing ankle, cracked a pair of Big Ten pass interception records yes- terday and cashed in on enough breaks to rout Minnesota, 27-0, for a second-place tie in the confer- ence football race. Held to meager 23 yards in the first half, Ameche managed to close his collegiate career with two touchdowns, but was removed mid- way in the third quarter after he got up limping following a pileup. The 210-pound fullback received a standing ovation from the capaci- ty Camp Randall Stadium crowd of 53,131 as he left the field. Senior halfback Clary Bratt, who had been shunted to second string status a couple games back, intercepted four passes to set a new conference individual record. Other Badgers picked off three more to add up to a new team mark. Don Swanson, third string Minnesota quarterback, was the victim of six of the thefts, gaining the dubious honor of tying another Big Ten record. Badgers Lead at Half Minnesota, handicapped by the loss through injury of Geno Cap- pelletti, regular quarterback, never was in the ball game as Wisconsin rose to a 21-0 lead and coasted in. Ameche banged through the mid- dle for his two touchdowns in the second quarter after Jimmy Mil- ler had scored the first on a four- yard scamper in the opening pe- riod. Bratt wound it up in the third quarter with a four-yard sweep around end. Ameche completed his bid for all-America honors with 26 yards which gave him a four-year total of 3,212 yards-greatest total ever compiled by a college ball carrier. Despite the record number of in- terceptions, Wisconsin scored only once as a result of a pass theft. Bratt picked off a toss by Darrell QUARTERBACKS STAR: MSC, Notre Dame Trounce Opponents. EAST LANSING, Mich. ()- Michigan State, smarting after a season of six defeats-the second poorest record in Spartan football history-took out some of the sting by running up a 40-10 score today against overmatched Marquette. It was win No. 3 for MSC, the Big Ten co-champion and Rose Bowl winner of last New Year's Day. Michigan State's worst sea- son was in 1917, when the Spar- tans lost all nine games. Marquette ended with a 3-5-1 record. Quarterback Earl Morrall got Michigan State off to a fast start with a 59-yard touchdown pass to end John Lewis on the first MSC play of the game. Morrall hit Lewis with a 69-yard pass later in the first period and in the third quarter connected with a 62-yard throw to Jerry Planutis. Clarence Peaks scored twice for the Spartans on runs of eight and 65 yards. Marquette's Frank Scaffidi boot- ed a 41-yard field goal in the sec- ond quarter and Fred Connally scored the lone Warrior touch- down from 12 yards out in the final period. Marquette drove as far as the Michigan State 3-yard line in the scoreless first half but was set back to the 33. Then Scaffidi thanks to Florian Helinski's con- version following Borden's touch- down. Dawson missed his attempt after the first Boilermaker scene. * * * CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (MP - North- western, springing halfback Dick Ranicke to two first-half touch- downs and a lead it never yielded, yesterday piled up a 20-7, victory over a collapsed Illinois team, har- assed by a 122 yards in penalties and seven fumbles. The loss was the Illini's sixth of the Big Ten football season and buried them in last place without a conference win for the first time since 1941. It was the first time in 20 years that a Big Ten team finished last the year after it had won or shar- ed the title. The Illini were 1953 co-cham- pions with Michigan State. Michi- gan won the 1933 crown and end- ed in the cellar the following sea- son. NU Leads in Series Northwestern's triumph was its first in 12 conference games dat- ing back to 1952. The Wildcats, moving ahead in the series with Ilinois by one game-23 victories and 22 defeats -rushed on the field of the game and carried off their elated coach, Bob Voigts. Northwestern spotted Illinois a 7-0 lead early in the first quarter, then scored twice on short blasts by Ranicke to move ahead 13-7 at halftime. The Illini tallied in the first three minutes of the game after J. C. Caroline captured Frank Jeske's fumble on the Northwest- ern 31. Harry Jefferson drilled the final one foot. But the Wildcats soon gained deadlock. A major penalty set Il- linois back to its own 5. Then Car- oline lost the ball and end Jack Stillwell recovered on the 4. Ranicke Scores On the third play, Ranicke smashed across from the one. In the second quarter, a 15-yard infraction against Illinois for il- legal use of the hands helped the Wildcats move 38 yards to score on four running plays. Ranicke again barreled across, from the 6. Northwestern added its third touchdown in the third on Dale Pienta's 20-yard pass to Stillwell, who raced down the sidelines for 27 more to score. Illinois, behind the fine passing of sophomore Hiles Stout, moved to the Northwestern 14, 17, 10 and 12 yard lines in the last half, only to have two of Stout's passes in- tercepted and two more fizzle out. LEONARD WARREN (Shorty) Cochrane on the Minneso- ta 16 midway in the third period and the Badgers needed only three plays to score. Bratt got seven yards on the first, Bob Gingrass added five and Bratt swept wide for the final four. Paul Shwaiko added the second of his two con- versions. Miller Fills Ameche's Shoes Miller, taking up the sag in the Wisconsin attack left by Ameche's bum ankle, sparked the way to the opening touchdown, a 12-play, 70- yard drive late in the opening pe- riod. The slim junior, who looks more like a choir boy than a col- lege quarterback, accounted for 25 yards rushing and 23 more on two pass completions, skipping the fi- nal four into the end zone on an off-tackle play from the single wing. Buzz Wilson kicked the point. Ameche banked over a pair of second-quarter touchdowns, each on a short burst through the mid- dle. He got his first one on the first play of the period after Bratt's 24-yard punt return to the Gopher, 29. Miller was run out on at the corner flag on a slick buck lateral after making 28 yards and Ameche needed two tries to get the extra yard. Shwaiko's try for the point was wide. Wisconsin was back in the scor- ing zone two minutes later. Center Gary Messner blocked Dale Quist's punt on the Minnesota 11 and Guard Norm Amundsen recovered and returned to the three. Ame. che's slash was good and so was Shwaiko's conversion. The Gophers, helpless through- out the first half in which they gained only 19 yards, controlled the ball most of the time after the intermission but were hamstrung by the interceptions. They wound up with 69 yards rushing, all but one by Bob McNamara who alter- nated at fullback and halfback, and 108 yards passing. kicked his 41-yard field goal -- be- lieved to be the longest in Macklin Stadium since MSC's Paul Smith drop kicked 43 yards to beat Cen- tre College 15-13 in 1925. The single Marquette touchdown came midway in the final quarter, eight plays carrying 66 yards. Mar- quette was down to the Michigan State 10 in the closing seconds of BIG TEN STANDINGS Ohio State .... 7 0 0 1.000 MICHIGAN ... 5 2 0 ..714 Wisconsin...... 5 2 0 .714 Minnesota ..... 4 2 0 .667 Iowa .......... 4 3 0 .571 Purdue ........ 3 3 0 .500 Indiana ........ 2 4 0 .333 Michigan State . 2 5 0 .286 Northwestern .. 1 5 0 .167 Illinois ......... 0 6 0 .000 the game when the third string subs were in. MSC stiffened and was in possession of the ball as the 1954 season ended. MSC Coach, Duffy Daugherty was pleased with his team's performance., "It should make our winter a little warmer," he quipped. Michigan State ..13 7 13 7-40 Marquette .......0 3 0 7-10 Michigan State Scoring: Touch- downs, Lewis 2, Peaks 2, Plauntis, Musetti. Conversions, Planutis 2, Lowe, Musetti. CinemaScope Brings IAZthe Suspense Your System Can Take! 20th Century-Fox presents pI f isll I I djw C,14N EMASCOPg o aectWb NUNNAL.LY JOHNSON ": Marquette Scoring: Touchdowns, Connally. Field Goal, Scaffidi. Conversion, Girman. * * s Notre Dame Romps IOWA CITY, Iowa (IP)--Ven- geance-bent Notre Dame pounded Iowa, 34-18 yesterday and exact- ed rich revenge for the famous 14-14 tie that cost the Irish the national football championship a year ago. Notre -Dame, under the cunning leadership of Ralph Guglielmi, the passing genius, roared through Iowa for a 34-6 lead midway through the final quarter. There was not need this chilly, crisp day for the feigned injuries that stop- ped the clock last year to give the Irish the precious time necessary for tying touchdowns. Only in the late stages did Iowa ramble freely through Notre Dame to furnish some consoliation to the Iowans in the crowd of 52,756, a sellout gathering that had been assured when the tickets first went on sale last July. Coach Terry Brennan's Irish, lads were in command all the way until they were far out of danger and both squads were dominated by reserves in much of the late going. Terry did hustle in his first team when Iowa threatened a fourth touchdown, a maneuver that died with the final gun on the Notre Dame 5. Iowa ..... ........ 0 6 0 12-18 Notre Dame ......0 14 14 6-34 Iowa scoring: Touchdowns: Gil- liam, Stearness, Smith. Notre Dame scoring: Touch- downs: Morse, Heap, Shefer, Matz, Kapish. Conversions: Shaefer 4. Practice MTets Raise Grades psyohologists advise praotice on the exact task that you must later perform. It you want to do well on exams, practicean- sweri g exam questions. Flash- cards are good, so are outlines and self-recitation. But it's Ex- q you must take, so practice Typical Exams in FIRST YEAR " Psych * Zool * Botany *"Physics * Econ " Chem 0 Socol *:US Hit " US Govt (Pol Sci) "Eurmist LEADING BARITONE METROPOLITAN OPERA TON IGHT Hill Auditorium CHORAL UNION SERI ES Tickets: $3.50 - $2.50 $2.00 - $1.50 at UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY BURTON MEMORIAL TOWER A I, i i _A KUOHN'S TOPCOAT H EADQUARTERS Raglan or Set-in Sleeves Gabardine or Fancy Tweeds $3375 Imported Harris Tweeds $4950 WALK A FEW STEPS AND SAVE DOLLARS KUOHN'S 217 E. Liberty Phone NO 8-8020 Open Monday Evenings till 9 1:30 P.M. ORPHEUM 65c CkIClrUllt ' A v c"oor by DE LUXE - CinemaScope Prices Matinees 65c Evenings and Sunday 90c Extra! TOM & JERRY Cartoon ENDING :.l 1 / I VUA T immv Ii Coming Thursday "DANCING YEARS" DENNIS PRICE NtigARY MERRI~LL* JAN STINL. _______and SHIRLEY BOOTH ROBERT RYAN m HAL WALLIS'RoucnonM Coming Thursday "TALL IN THE SADDLE" I Cinema S L lidI4 m James Hilton's "LOST HORIZON" D Af a ot tI OM OftIEft "HIGHEST RATING! A Realistic and Powerful Drama ... Pulls No Punches! --N.Y. News Truly the Most Acclaimed Picture of 1954 ml I . I. NEW ARENA TNIHYLOriVER' TH EATRET NGH i as 'T HE MOON IN T HE YELLOW RIVER' I