sdrY + r r TIDE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4;1956 i YAGE a - IowaHomecoming leb Wverine Eleven Oklahoma Escapes Upset; Rally Tops Colorado, 27-19 Iaddock Stars on Drive To Winning Touchdown f BOULDER, COLO (A3-Trailing 19-6 at halftime, Oklahoma's top- rated football team struck for two third period touchdowns on the brilliant running of halfbacks Tommy McDonald and Clendon Thomas to defeat underdog Colo- rado 27-19 yesterday. The unranked Coloradans scored in the first four minutes on a blocked punt and sailed for two second quarter touchdowns with a furoius single wing assault. The touchdown trips coverei 55 and 70 yards. That shocked the Sooners, fa- vored to win by four tochdowns, r for only a period. They came roar- ing back after the halftime rest on touchdown drives of 80 and 48 yards. McDonald and Thomas de- livered the key gains behind the charged up Oklahoma line. Midway in the fourth period the Sooners wrapped it up with a magnificent 91-yard march capped by quarterback Jimmy Harris' 17-yard pass to Thomas in the end zone. Colorado bolted to a 7-0 lead after four minutes of play when guard John Wooten blocked Okla- homa fullback Billy Pricer's at- tempted third down quick kick on the Sooner 10. The ball bounced into the end zone with Colorado fullback John Bayuk recovering. Oklahoma struck back late in the first quarter with a 45-yard touchdown march climaxed with a 35-yard scoring pass from Har- ris to McDonald. (Continued from Page 1) one forget about their earlier dis-t appointments: After the Hawkeyes grabbed a 14-3 lead at halftime, 'Michigan bounced back for a third-period score. Late in the fourth quarter,. moving back Iowa's desperate de- fense, the Wolverines capped an 80 yd. drive that would have made Frank Merriwell jealous. With fullback John Herrnstean! bulling for short yardage when iti was desperately needed, and Mad- dock guiding the team with artis- try, the Maize and Blue droveE towardi the goal line. Time was running out. This hadl to be it. No mistakes could be1 made. Short gains brought thel ball to the Iowa 35. Shatusky lost two, but Maddock1 found Ron Kramer clear and hit him on the 18. Maddock faded' again, hit again . . . this time it FIRST SCORE-Ron Kramer se t \-w Drop into our store today ... thumb through a College Outline covering any of your courset... note its meaty compactness ... its telling paragraphs ... its newspaper. like efficiency in highlighting essentials and putting the story over. You'll be amazed that so mach tan be got info so liftle space. College Outlines are the best high-marks insurance obtainable. Prepare with them for exams nowl COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES Buy at Fol ott's State St. at N. University s field goal late in the first p tally proved to be the margin of v OSU Nipsl * MSU Rebou By The Associated Press EVANSTON, Ill.-Ohio State's ;. - Buckeyes, favored by 20 points, beat the halftime gun by 16 sec- onds for a touchdown yesterday and made it stand up for a 6-2 Big Ten football decision over " tenacious Northwestern. The conference victory was Syracuse E gw To Near Possl By The Associated Press SYRACUSE, N. Y.-Syracuse's alert defense gobbled up three Penn State fumbles and inter- cepted three passes to come from behind with a 13-9 victory yester- day in a rib-rattling battle be- tween two of the best teams in the East. Moving a step nearer a pos- sible Cotton or Gator Bowl bid, Syracuse punched over the win- ning touchdown with Chuck Zim- merman smashing over from the one in the final quarter after Dick Aloise had recovered a fumbled handoff by Al Jacks to Bruce Gil- moire. Penn State was assessed a cost- ly 15-yard penalty in the final minutes when Milt Plum, its triple threat ace, attempted to re-enter nds one through the uprights for period of yesterday's game. The victory. % rorthwestern, Sets Record; nds, 33-0, Over Wisconsin was Jim Pace on the 10. Less than two minutes were left. Shatusky picked up four for a first down. Herrnstein got two more and the pigskin rested on the Hawkeye two, Shatusky Scores Then Shatusky, on a play he'll, be telling little Shatuskies aboutI years from now, drove into pay- dirt. Kramer converted and Michi- gan was in. Moments later Ed Shannon intercepted an Iowa pass and Michigan rode the clock until it reached "0." Michigan scored its first six- pointer early in the third period. ending a 68-yd. march that started with the opening kickoff of the half. This time it was Jim Van Pelt at the helm striving to get his team back into the game. Shatusky drove through left tackle for the final three yards. The actual margin of victory was contributed by Kramer, who booted a 12-yd. field goal near the end of the opening stanza. Iowa came back in the second quarter to score twice and the scoreboard clock read 14-3 in favor of the home team. History Repeats Iowans were wondering if his- tory would repeat itself ... it did. Take nothing away from the Hawkeyes. They all but demol- ished the Wolverines in that sec- ond quarter. With Ken Ploen and Randy Duncan alternating the signal calling chores, Evashevski's eleven made its move. Duncan hit halfback Del Kloew- er with a 13-yd. scoring pass at 8:05 and Ploen raced 33 yards into the end zone less than five minutes later. Ploen gave the Wolverines head- aches all day, fading back to pass, sometimes doing so, but more often keeping the ball and running for long gains. Alex Karras, a huge tackle, led the rugged Iowa line. Michigan Coach Ben Oosterbaan tried everything he could think of, shaking up his line on many occa- sions. Al Sigman, Dick Hill and Mike Rotunno all played standout games despite being hampered by minor injuries. ILLINOIS, PURDUE TI Gopyhers Bell MINNEAPOLIS - Ailing Dick Borstad's dramatic field goal with ene from the r S7DELINES by Dick Cramer Same Old Story special to The Daily IOWA CITY, Iowa-Forest Evashevski spoke yesterday for the record Iowa-partisan crowd after his squad's defeat. "It looks like we just can't beat them." What else could the Iowa coach say after suffering another bitter defeat at the hands of Michigan. But, quite in contrast to his tight-lipped display of temper after last year's defeat at Ann Arbor, this was a calm, though terribly disappointed head coach. Last year he had issued a brief statement to the press and had returned to the dressing room, refusing to answer any further questions. Now he had learned to believe that anything could happen to his team when it plays Michigan and his bitterness was replaced by stoicism. "We just can't beat 'em," he repeated. It wasn't just fate, however, for Michigan. The Wolverines won the game by outplaying and outcharging Iowa in the crucial second half. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan decided early that depth might be the key to victory and substituted early to a much greater degree than he had done in previous games This left Michigan with a seem- ingly much fresher team when the time for the "big push" came in the late stages of the game. Most of the members of Michigan's first three lines saw plenty of action. Only second-string guard Jerry Marciniak was completely missing because of a chest injury. Pressure Mounts-. As the pressure mounted on the trailing Wolverines late in the game, key players were available for heavy duty. Michigan's line finally pushed the tired Hawkeyes. The openings were cleared for the necessary running yardage. especially for fullback John Herrnstein. Yesterday, Jim Maddock's passes were less spectacular than in last year's Iowa game, when he threw to ends Ron Kramer and Tom Maentz; but his throwing came at vital points when the climactie Wolverine drive threatened to stall. It was a different set of backfield heroes for Michigan yesterday. Terry Barr was reduced to an inspiring token-appearance in the final period, Jim Pace had fewer of his dazzling runs and Jim Van Pelt saw less action than usual. But Maddock, John Herrnstein and Mike Shatusky did more "than could be expected," according to Oosterbaan. Ron Kramer also played a rugged game, especially when the chips were down. Shatusky, a halfback from Menominee, had played only sparingly before-today's date, behind Barr and Ed Shannon. Yesterday he came into his own with spirited running which produced both of Michigan's touchdowns. With the Michigan victory, next week's Iowa-Minnesota and Michigan-Illinois clashes assume major importance in helping to settle the Big Ten race. Ohio State's 16th league decision in a row setting an all-time Big Ten winning streak. The hard-won triumph rubbed out the previous mark of 15 that first had been registered by Mich- igan in a span between 1946 and 1948. The aroused Wildcats cruised eS Penn Sta the game in an illegal substitu- otion. Penn Upsets Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Pennsyl- vania shook off years of frustra- tion to stun Harvard, 28-14, yes- terday with Frank Reipl and Rich Ross engineering the Quakers de- ceptive multiple offense. Penn built up a 14-0 first period lead in gaining its first road tri- umph since 1952. It also marked the first time in the season that the Quakers have managed four touchdowns in a game. Reipl, operating the option pass- run sweep, fired a four-yard fourth down pass to Ross early in the final quarter to clinch the victory. to the Ohio State 1 when they first got the ball in the opening period. Bobby McKeiver's 56-yard sa- shaying run set up the chance, but the Buckeyes held and took over. Punt Blocked Finally, Buckeye quarterback Frank Elwood was forced to punt from the end zone. The kick was blocked by Al Viola, the ball bouncing behind the end zone where it was pounced on by North- western's Cliff Peart. It went as a safety. With the clock running out be- fore halftime, Ohio State's Tom Dillman stole a Jack Ellis pass and the sixth-ranked Buckeyes prowled 63 yards in 7 plays for the game's only touchdown. Spartans Romp EAST LANSING - Michigan State's resourceful Spartans took out a full measure of revenge upon Wisconsin's inept Badgers yesterday hauling out their once- in-a-while passing strength for a 33-0 Big Ten football triumph before 53,647 fans. Striking back with a furious five-touchdown assault after last week's 20-13 upset at Illinois that, sent them spinning off the top of the collegiate heap, the Spartans combined a crisp offense and a never-yielding defense and nearly ran the ragged Badgers out of Macklin Field. Michigan State marched 68 yards in seven plays to score af- ter the opening kickoff, stopped a brief Wisconsin flurry and then went 65 yards for a second touch- down. r A r1 at Pitt, 9-6, on Field Goal - I ofi ces less than three minutes left, his second game-winning kick of the season, brought unbeaten Minne- sota a nerve-jangling 9-6 victory over hardluck Pittsburgh yester- day. Seconds after the injured Go- pher fullback came through with a bad-angle boot from the 23-yard line, Pittsburgh's brilliant end, Joe Walton, almost broke the hearts of the Minnesota home- coming crowd by speeding 77 yards into the end zone with the Go- pher kickoff. But Pittsburgh was caught clip- ping on the play and Walton's last-gasp bid for Pitt victory went down the drain. college career in the final period, to halfback Erich Barnes, from the Illinois 9. Dawson and Dick Miller of Illi- nois kicked the extra points that left the score in a knot. Miller missed a fourth-quarter field goal attempt from the Purdue 19. * * * Tough "Breather" BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Indiana almost ran out of breath in its expected breather with Marquette but went all-out in the fourth quarter for a 19-13 victory over the winless Warriors yesterday. The Hoosiers struck 1ike lightning for a touchdown on the. first play of the game, a pass from Steve Filipowski to end Norm Craft good for 64 yards and a touchdown. But Marquette almost short circuited the Indiana pass- ing attack after that. t * MAIN OFFICE 101-107 S. Main St. e NICKELS ARCADE 330 S. State Street * NEAR 'ENGINE ARCH' 1108 South University * PACKARD-BROCKMAN 1923 Packard * WHITMORE LAKE 9571 N. Main St. Ga. 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