THE MICMGAN DAILY 1'T'I T'11 A Q" ! ff"Y'f f'tYl1E 'o as e ert TH WCWAVIaTTY vtuw aw !Si U.NVAY, OVTOBER 23, 1955 Ranked Wisconsin, 26-16 Indiana Edges Wildcats; Irish Bowl Over Purdue EARL MORRALL ... paces Spartans Spartans Beat Illii,21-'7; Morrall Stars By The Associated Press EAST LANSING - Earl Mor- rall calmly passed and ran Michi- gan State to a 21-7 victory over Illinois yesterday in a pivotal Big Ten football game. Morrall's 30-yard pass to John Lewis set up State's first touch- down in the first quarter. His bul- let throw to Dave Kaiser was good for a 60-yard touchdown play that broke a 7-7 tie 56 seconds after the second half started. Pass to Jewett The tall senior from Muskegon; Mich., put the game' on ice with a 23-yard touchdown pass to Bob Jewett in the end zone near the end of the third quarter. He had set this one up with a 16-yard run when he couldn't get off a pass. In between this one-man ex- hibition, Illinois' fleet backfield, with Harry Jefferson the spark, kept up a brilliant attack, fre- quently from intricate spread for- mations. A capacity homecoming crowd of 41,851 saw the game, played in ideal weather. The victory gave Michigan State a 2-1 conference record and kept alive the Spart- ans' title hopes. Illinois now has been beaten twice and is out of contention. State scored its first touchdown with three plays that covered 55 yards the first time the Spartans got the ball. Jerry Planutis plung- ed for five, Mortall's 30-yard pass put the ball on the Illinois 20, and Walt Kowalczyk rode over left end on the next play to score. Illinois' second-period touch- down that termporarily tied the score was made on a sustained march from its 32, with Jeffer- son's 19-yard spurt through center the longest run. Ed Linbeck scored on an end sweep from the five. Michigan State was favored over Illinois by two touchdowns, de- spite the fact Clarence Peaks, the star Spartan halfback; was on the Still Unbeaten Ann Arbor High's Pioneers clinched the Six-A League title for the seventh straight year by defeating Lansing Eastern's Quakers, 32-7, Friday night at Wines Field. This win extended Coach Hank Fonde's charges' unbeaten streak to 37 games. bench with injuries. He got in the game for one play, a trick pass out of a fake quick-kick formation, that was good for five yards. By The Associated Press EVANSTON, ILL.--Indiana dropped winless Northwestern in- to the Big Ten cellar yesterday be- hind the power running of full- back John Bartkiewicz and the passing of Gene Cichowski for a 20-14 victory. The Hoosiers, in command most of the game, had to come from behind with a 69-yard touchdown march in the fourth quarter to nail down the victory. Northwest- ern moved out to a 14-13 lead in the fourth quarter but Bartiewicz, the workhorse throughout the game, scored the deciding marker for Indiana. Irish Trounce Purdue LAFAYEITI'E, IND.-Alert Notre Dame, raging after a defeat by Michigan State, turned Purdue's passing attack into a suicide weapon and avenged its only 1954, defeat, 22-7. Out-weighed by 25 pounds per man in the line, the Fighting Irish came up with its first unbal- anced line in modern times and pushed the hulking Boilermakers all over the field. Notre Dame turned a Purdue fumble and an intercepted pass' into third quarter touchdowns that broke a 7-7 tie. Irish quarter-j back, Paul Hornung also started the first scoring drive by recover-1 ing a fumble. Iowa Bows to UCLAN's LOS ANGELES, CALIF.-Iowa had more plays, more yardage, and more first downs but UCLA won the game Friday night by a solid 33-13 score. Sam Brown, who started the season as the Uclan's third string tailback, scored three touchdowns, one on a 67-yard punt return. He averaged 6.8 yards for each of the 11 times he carried the ball. Brown's other touchdowns came on plunges of two and four yards. He also set up the first Bruin score by moving 45 yards in seven carries. Army Ends Losing Streak WEST POINT, N.Y.-A spark- ling 72-yard run by substitute Pete Lash highlighted a cascade of Army touchdowns which smother- ed Columbia, 45-0, to break a two game losing streak for the Cadets. Army's varsity, stung by succes- sive losses to Michigan and Syra- cuse, played less than half the game. Colgate Upsets Yale NEW HAVEN, CONN.-Colgate's fast-charging line shook Frank Nardulli loose on a 15-yd. run early in the final period for a touchdown that gave the Red Raiders a 7-0 triumph over pre- viously undefeated Yale. U.S.C. Overwhelms Cal. BERKELEY, CALIF.-Southern California, with Jon Arnett set- ting the scoring pace, exploded for three last quarter touchdowns to trounce the California Bears, 33- 6, in a'Pacific Coast Conference game. The Trojan's offense, most powerful in the Conference, stut- tered through the first three per- iods of a dull game, but suddenly jelled in the closing period to slam the Bears into the ground. Pitt Rocks Duke DURHAM, N.C. - Pittsburgh's twice-beaten football team rose up to smash previously unbeaten Duke, the nation's fifth ranking team, 26-7. The Panthers held Duke, the nation's fifth ranking rushing team, to 92 yards on the ground and ran up 249 themselves as they spoiled Homecoming Day for a crowd of 31,000. Duke had a 7-6 halftime lead but thereafter the Panthers were, pretty much in control. They moved ahead in the third quarter when halfback Lou Cimarolli plunged over from a yard out and boosted their lead to two touch- downs in the fourth when half- back Corky Cost also plunged over from the one. Navy Romps PHILADELPHIA, PA.-Unbeat- en Navy, with star Quarterback George Welsh on the bench, its bag of tricks in the locker room, and a junior varsity quarterback directing the attack, sailed to its fifth straight victory, smashing downtrodden Penn, 33-0, before 34,543 fans at Franklin Field. Coach Eddie Erdelatz, confi- dent his deep squad could handle anything the peaceful Quakers could muster, used second and third string players most of the way and apparently ordered his quarterback to use nothing but simple run and pass plays. Top Ranked Teams Keep Clean Slate Maryland, Oklahoma Roll Over Opponents By The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N.Y. - Powerful Maryland, ranked No., 2 in the nation, bolstered its chances of an Orange Bowl trip yesteday by manhandling Syracuse, 34-13, be- hind a solid line that opened the holes for Ed Vereb, Phil Perlo and Jack Healey. Smashing over two touchdowns in the first period with Perlo blast- ing six yards for the first and Vereb throwing 17 yards to Russ Dennis ,for the second, Maryland was threatened seriously only once. The Syracuse team that upset Army last week clicked for an eye- popping 30-yard touchdown pass from Mark Hoffman to Don Alt- house early in the second period, but the strong Maryland line quickly closed the gap and helped Sewell to Pirates? PITTSBURGH, Pa. ().--The Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph said yesterday the "latest tip, right from the feedbox" is that Luke Sewell, former manager of the St. Louis Browns and the Cin- cinnati Reds, will be named manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Vereb score from the three for a first-half lead of 20-7. It was all Maryland in the see- ond half to the dismay of a sell- out crowd of 32,500 with Healey romping home twice from the three and seven yard lines in the third period. Oklahoma Runs Wild NORMAN, OKLA. - For three minutes Colorado lived in football heaven with a 14-0 lead over third- ranked Oklahoma yesterday. Then the Sooners exploded the dream with 21 points at halftime and wound up with a 46-21 vic- tory to roll on undefeated In 24 straight games. The game which keeps Okla- homa at the top of the Big Seven Conference was a thriller in the second quarter. Five touchdowns were scored in some fast, exciting action before a crowd of 59,000. Colorado turned two Oklahoma fumbles into touchdowns within five minutes of the first half in which appeared to be the making of the day's biggest football up- set. But the Sooners who had played listlessly in the first 20 minutes and didn't get past the 50, sud- denly awakened. The. BROWN JUG Restauran t i BASEBALL'S NEWEST: AL Dominates Rookie Team v By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - The American League, for the first time in four years, dominated the 1955 Rookie All-Star Team selected yesterday by the Sporting News. Eight of 11 The Junior Circuit placed eight of the 11 players on the squad in a poll of sportswriters conducted by the National Baseball Weekly. It was the first time since 1951, when Mickey Mantle, Minnie Minoso and Gil McDougald broke in, that the American League won more berths than the National. Washington, cellar club in the American and St. Louis, seventh- place team in the National, each placed two players on the team. The, squad lineup: Norm Zauchin, Boston Red Sox, first base; Hector Lopez, Kansas City Athletics, second base; Jose Valdivielso, Washington Senators, shortstop; Ken Boyer, St. Louis Cardinals, third base; Elston How- ard, New York Yankees, left field; Bill Virdon, St. Louis, center field; Carlos Paula, Washington, right field; Hal Smith, Baltimore Ori- oles, catcher, and Herb Score, Cleveland Indians, Frank Lary, Detroit Tigers, and Jack Meyer, Philadelphia Phillies, pitchers. The team batting average of .270 was the second lowest in the six years the Sporting News has named the rookie team but the home run total of 99 was seven more than the previous mark, set by the 1950 and 1954 squads. Virdon and Score were named rookies of the year by the news- paper recently. The Sporting News defines a rookie as a player who had not had more than 45 days of major league experience in a pre- vious season. 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