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I 1425 Broadway Detroit 26, Michigan &e 'I * ,~ .o~of* s Ns r .s Be sure to see the "DA M O N RUNYON THEATRE" on TV By The Associated Press COLUMBUS, Ohio-Ohio State buried Northwestern's winless and crippled Wildcats under a seven- touchdown avalanche here yester- day, the Bucks remaining tied for the Western Conference leader- ship with a 49-0 victory. The powerful Ohioans, grinding out huge yardage with an unstop- pable ground attack, had the ball 10 times and scored seven times. All-America halfback H o w a r d "Hopalong" Cassady, who saw ac- tion in only a portion of the first two quarters, scored two touch- downs. Ohio tallied twice in each of the first, second and final periods and once in the third. Second, third and fourth stringers carried on in the last half. * * R MSU 27, Wisconsin 0 MADISON, Wis.-Mi c h i g a n State, with sophomore Walt Ko- walczyk gobbling up more yard- age than a runaway steam shovel, smothered Wisconsin, 27-0, and remained within striking distance of t'he Big Ten football champion- ship. The heads-up Spartans scored their four touchdowns-two by Kowalczyk--on just 14 plays in cold, stieady rain at Camp Randall Stadium before a capacity Badger Homecoming crowd of 53,529. The victory gave Michigan State a 3-1 conference record and vir- tually eliminated Wisconsin from contention. The Badgers have lost two of four Big Ten starts. Kowalczyk, a 5-11, 198-pound back, accounted for 172 yards on 10 carries-including the fantas- tic total of 140 yards in the first half when he raced 72 yards with a handoff for the touchdown that put the Spartans out in front. * * * Minnesota 25, USC 19 MINNEAPOLIS-Weather-hard- ened Minnesota reveled in a swir- ling snowstorm to beat heavily- favored Southern California, 25- 19, behind the sledgehammer Big Ten Standings W L T Pct.- MICHIGAN ....4 0 0 1.000 Ohio State .....3 0 0 1.000 Michigan State 3 1 0 .750 Purdue .......2 1 1 .625 Wisconsin ......2 2 0 .500 Iowa ..........1 2 1 .375 Indiana ........1 2 0 .333 -Illinois .........1 3 0 .250 Minnesota ......1 3 0 .250 Northwestern ...0 4 0 .000 set up another to take the thund- er from Southern Cal's great back, Jon Arnett. The Californians, beat previous- ly only by Washington, couldn't marshal a sustained drive until deep in the fourth quarter and stayed in the fight on the strength of long touchdown runbacks by Gordon Duvall and Ernie Merk. Purdue 13, Illinois 0 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-With their beef trust completely smothering Illinois' national-ranking attack the Purdue Boilermakers hooked up a pair of 80-yard scoring drives to wreck the Illini's Homecoming, 13-0. The Illini, whose total offense average of 375.4 yards per'game was fourth best in the country, were stymied by Purdue's huge line, averaging 220 pounds per man. Indiana 21, Ohio U. 14 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - M lit Campbell, Indiana University's for- mer national decathlon champion, took turns giving a football to Ohio Uiversity and then taking it away Saturday as his Big Ten team defeated the Mid-American Conference eleven, 21-14., "HOPALONG" CASSADY ... another big day blows of sophomore fullback Dick Borstad. A homecoming crowd of about 60,000, huddling in 33 degree weather, saw the 10th-ranked Cal- ifornians outpowered by a team which had won only one game in five tries but which was almost faultless in the face of wretched weather. Borstad slammed for two touch- downs and blocked a kick which , __ ,.._, t .f HUMBLES CAL., 47-0: k UCLA Still Undefeated In West Coast Conference Same Location 25 Years Reference: Bank of the Phone WO 3-5776 Commonwealth ' ' I r X By The Associated Press LOS ANGELES - The UCLA Bruins noved another stride to- ward the Rose Bowl, using their reserves in the main to smash California, 47-0, in a Pacific Coast Conference game. Registering their fourth confer- ence triumph against no defeats, UCLA unloaded three touchdowns in a big second quarter to clinch the game. Halfback Ronnie Knox, whose transfer from California after his freshman year stirred up an up- roar, took the field for the first time against his "alma mater" and turned in a fine performance. He scored two touchdowns and was the passing star of the game. * * * Oregon State 13, Washington 7 SEATTLE-Fullback Tom Ber- ry picked off a fluttering fumble, galloped 72 touchdown yards and before the stunned enemy could recover Oregon state had carved out a second touchdown and a 13-7 Pacific Coast Conference football victory over favored Washington. The victory was wrapped up in the space of 3 minutes late in the Varsity swimming practice will begin tomorrow. All men interested in trying out for the swimming team report to the varsity pool, I-M Building any time. --Gus Stager third quarter and it was Berry who set up the second touchdown by recovering Washington's fumble of the kickoff that followed the first OSC tally. Up to the moment of the deci- sion Washington had pushed the Beavers all over the sloppy field and scored its one touchdown on an OSC miscue in the second period. U. mmmmmmmmw I Wed esday, November 2 FIRST CHANC 1956 MICH AT THREE, CONVENIENT LOCATIONS' Qn. 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