SUNRAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1956 TI[ MCIIIGAN DAlI.Y PAGE THREE SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1956 THE MIChIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE 1, RL r 0 ' A e Ilini Score; Grid .Picks Scores 1MICHIGAN 17, Illinois 7 . More scores On Page 5 Alabama 13, Tulane 7 Ohio State 35, Indiana 14 Princeton 35, Harvard 20 Arkansas 27, Rice 12 Michigan State 12, Purdue 9 Oklahoma 44, Iowa State 0 Baylor 10, Texas 7 Northwestern 17, Wisconsin 7 Navy 7, Duke 7 Texas A&M 33, SMU 7 Iowa 7, Minnesota 0 Kentucky 7, Vanderbilt 6 UCLA 13, Washington 9 Yale 40, Penn 7 Tennessee 6, Georgia Tech 0 Oregon State 20, Stanford 19 Pittsburgh 26, Notre Dame 13, Clemson 6, Maryland 6 USC 20, California 7 Iowa Pace, Byers Net Tallies i', f . ? rya a,. 1 ;T nesota v 7-0 4- F UI Gopher Fumbles Prove Key to Hawkeye Victory For Victors (Continued from Page 1) engineered the, first touchdown drive, gave way a short time later to Maddock for the second Wolver- ine scoring penetration. Michigan had gotten the ball on a Woodson punt after Illinois failed to make a 'first down following the kickoff. From their 42 the Wolverines marched to pay dirt in 10 plays to take the lead for good. Maddock took advantage of openings in the Illini defensive formations to ex- plode for gains of 18 and seven yards on quarterback sneaks. Key Play But the key play of the drive was the ancient statue of liberty when Michigan was fourth-and- four-to-go on the Illini 12. Mike Shatusky, last week's hero against Iowa, took the handoff from Mad- dock for seven yards and a first down on the five. On the next play-only the third from the single wing for the Wol- verines-Byers dashed over right guard to score. Illinois' defense tightened per- ceptibly after that. Michigan was unable to capitalize when the Illini fumbled on their own 21 early in Scalped Ill. Mich. First downs .........15 19 Rushing yardage.....209 329 Passing yardage .... 26 49 Passes attempted ... 12 7 Passes completed ... 3 2 Passse intercepted by 0 2 Punts............... 5 2 Punting average .... 30 41 Fumbles lost......... 1 3 Yards penalized .... 20 25 the third period. Another promis- ing drive stalled pn the 15 from which Kramer booted his field goal. MORE YARDAGE-Michigan's excellent blocking yesterday shows up clearly as John Herrnstein dives for a short gain. Mike Rotunno (81), Jim Van Pelt (24), and Jim Orwig (72) lead the interference. Sparta29ns Ed OnTwo First- afS e MINNEAPOLIS OP)-Resurgent Iowa sent its Rose Bowl hopes soaring yesterday with a 7-0 upset victory .over Minnesota in a jungle-law battle decided by Hawkeye alertness in the face of game-long Gopher fumbling. The triumph left Iowa in posi- tion to march to Pasadena for the first time ever if it beats Ohio State next Saturday. And even if it loses Iowa can still get the Bowl bid should Minnesota or Michigan lose again. Previously Unbeaten Minnesota, previously unbeaten and ranked sixth in the nation, saw its own Rose Bowl ambitions virtually dissolved in a swarm of fumbles and intercepted passes. One of the bobbles led directly to Iowa's touchdown. Two more stymied Minnesota drives that were headed goalward. Iowa, all but counted out of the Rose Bowl sweepstakes after losing to Michigan last week, stormed 33 yards to a touchdown in the first quarter behind the line strikes of Don Dobrino and Bill Happel and the clutch pass- ing of quarterback Kenny Ploen. Fullback Fred Harris bucked over from the one on first down and Bob Prescott converted. It was a game of sustained vio- lence between two bulky lines which ultimately went to Iowa on sheer refusal to buckle before greater Minnesota r e s e r v e strength. Minnesota made one last over- ture to the 11-yard line in the fourth period but sophomore full- back Bob Blakley fumbled going for a first down and the play fell short. Right half Bob Schultz, consis- tently the Gophers' most reliable halfback, fumbled three times, the first of which led to Iowa's touch- down. Ploen kept the drive going with two pivotal passes, one a five yarder to Harris that went to the eight and a seven-yarder' to Jim Gibbons on fourth down which pushed the Hawks to the one. Billiards Champion Trick Shot Artist With: Instructions, Demonstrations, Exhibitions FREE! MICH IGAN UN ION BALLROOM All Day Coming: November 16, 17, 18 CHRI PETERSON B Read and Use Daily Classifieds H EAST LANSING (P)-Michigan State hung on to an edge of two first half touchdowns and fought off persistent and hard hitting but hard luck Purdue yesterday and won a narrow Big Ten foot- ball decision 12-9.- Purdue, operating without quar- terback Lenny Dawson, the top Conference passer, was within a foot of tying or winning the game in the third quarter. The Boilermakers staged a good 55-yard drive when threatening in the third period. They went down to the one but were pena- lized back to the six. State also just missed two touchdowns-both in the first half-one by a fumble andthe other by a valiant fourth down Boilermaker stand one foot from the goal. Both MSU touchdowns came af- ter short drives. One was on a 27-yardpass by JimnNinowski to Harold Dukes in the end zone. On the other, Don Arend carried over from the eight. He fumbled but Tony Koloziej jumped on the for the score. .d :{ I C T GT8:15 PANEL DISCUSSION TONIGHT Ann Arbor's PROFESSIONAL Arena Theatre 'I MATIC ARTS CENTER I Wolverines Impenetrable But the Wolverines were eq impenetrable as they kept Ill in its own territory during second half except for one f which was stopped on the Mich 10. Michigan's first two lines backs Barr, Byers and Herrn. starred in the job of holding Illini who could never be cou out of the game because of explosive runners. Perhaps the greatest satisfa in the aftermath of the Mich victory was that no serious inj were apparently incurred. should be able to return to ac during the week despite a re rence of his injury. Linemen. Rotunno and Al Sigman were only other Wolverines even t shaken up much yesterday. Big Ten Stand ings ually min. 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