PAGE SIX THE MICMGAN DA11LY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1956 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1956 Five First Ho lf T Ds Highugh t zII-, ictory; Iowa Glinchies . o ,vl Bich; Gophers Edgy JlsU College Grid Scores Hawkeye Win over OSU Opens Door to Big Ten Title; Defense Thrown to Winds In High-ScoringEncounter (Continued from Page 1) BIG TEN *MICHIGAN 49, Indiana 26 *Minnesota 14, Michigan St. 13 *Wisconsin 13, Illinois 13 (tie) *Iowa 6, Ohio State 0 *Northwestern 14, Purdue 0 MIDWEST Notre Dame 21, North Caro- lina 14 *Baylor 26, Nebraska 7 Oklahoma A&M 25, Detroit 7 Kentucky 33, Xaxier 0 Oklahoma 67, Missouri 14 SOUTH *Duke 26, Wake Forest 0 *South Carolina 13, Maryland 0 *Georgia Tech 27, Alabama 0 *Tennessee 27, Mississippi 7 *Auburn 20, Georgia 0 *Tulane 13, Vanderbilt 6 EAST Dartmouth 27, Cornell 14 Brown 21, Harvard 12 *Pittsburgh 20, Army 7 *Yale 42, Princeton 20 *Syracuse 61, Colgate 7 SOUTHWEST *Arkansas 27, Southern Meth- odist 13 *Texas A&M 21, Rice 7 *Texas Christian 46, Texas 0 FAR WEST *Washington 34, Stanford 13 *Oregon 7, Southern Califor- nia 0 Oregon State 14, Idaho 10 Colorado 21, Utah 7 *Grid Picks Selections IOWA CITY, Iowa (M-Iowa's Hawkeyes soared right into foot- ball heaven yesterday with a 6-0 victory over Ohio State for at least a share of the Big Ten championship and a Rose Bowl appearance. Not since 1922 has an Iowa team" shared the title and never has Iowa shown in a Bowl game. The tremendous victory. wit- nessed by a crowd of 57,732, gave Iowa a 5-1 Big Ten record. The Hawkeyes would get an undis- puted championship if Michigan defeats Ohio State next Saturday. Ohio State came into the con- test with a 4-0 season mark and a record-breaking string of 17 conference victories. But the de- fending Conference champions, shooting for an unprecedented third straight undisputed title were licked by an Iowa squad that refused to lose. The only score of the brusingj battle was a 17-yard pass in the third. period from Kenny Pleon to Jim Gibbons just inside the end zone. The touchdown climaxed an Iowa spurt from its 37 after the kickoff. Bhe MINNEAPOLIS (M - Defiant Minnesota, firing one last supreme bid for a Rose Bowl trip that was snatched from them by Iowa'sF victory over Ohio State, slashed 70 yards in an all-or-nothing drive that upse Michigan State 14-13 yesterday knocked the Spar- tans out of the Big Ten title run- ning. Quarterback Dick Larson, tak- ing over for Bobby Cox in the fourth period, fused a Minnesota comeback which climaxed with fullback Bob Blakely's furious 27- yard touchdown run with six and one-half miutes left. Borstad Boots Deciding Point Dick Borstad, who twice before this season had propelled Min- nesota to fourth quarter victories with, field goals, kicked a game- winning extra point. SThe Gophers, apparently un- aware that Iowa's 6-0 victory had shattered their Rose Bowl dream, rolled back one final 'Michigan State passing offensive in the dying minutes before a chilled but dinning crowd of 62,478. For three quarters, Cox, almost alone as a Minnesota offensive threat, held off the manpower- rich Spartans. Twice he inter- cepted passes to either start Min- nesota goalward or blunt the Spartan onslaught. PRO FOOTBALL TODAY Baltimore at Detroit Chicago Cards at Pittsburgh Cleveland at Philadelphia Los Angeles at Chicago Bears New York at Washington San Francisco at Green Bay -Daily-Dick Gaskill PTACEK HITS SHATUSKY-Mike Shatusky scores Michigan's fifth TD of the afternoon on a pass from Bob Ptacek following Gary Prahst's Interception of an Indiana aerial. Also having a fine afternoon was Barr, who ripped off 61 yards in six rushes, threw one pass for 39 yards and caught one for 38 yards. Jim Pace, playing mostly in the first half, s-rked Michigan's first quarter march with some dazzling running. Herrnstein started the touch- down parade at 7:10 when he smashed through tackle for one yard. . Indiana, starting the second half with a 35-0 deficit, momentarily stopped the contest from becom- ing too one-sided by scoring twice within the first six minutes after intermission. After Jim Yore scored for the Hoosiers at 4:33, Bob Fee inter- cepted a Jim Maddock pass, and Indiana struck again, with Yore running the final five yards to the end zone. Michigan, temporarily stunned by the Indiana team, retaliated a little more than two minutes later when Barr scored his second touchdown, this time around left end from the Indiana 16. The Wolverines defenses were unable to contain the spirited Vis- itors, and Indiana again scored be- fore the third quarter was over. Third-string Hoosier quarterback Tom McDonald tossed an aerial to Dave Whitsell at 12:11, and the score stood at 42-20. Barr Ends Scoring Barr, aided by a beautiful down- field block by Tom Maentz, ended the Wolverine scoring when he Oh, Well!! Ind. Mich. First Downs ....... 21 19 Rushing Yardage ..149 275 Passing Yardage ...146 142 Passes Attempted ... 23 17 Passes Completed .. 11 6 Passes Intcpd. by .. 2 4 Punts .............. 3 2 Punting Average ... 38 36 Fumbles Lost ...... 1 1 Yards Penalized ... 20 110 ran around left end for 26 yards early in the final period. Maentz booted the ball squarely through the uprights, giving Michigan a perfect seven-for-seven p o i n t - after-touchdown record. With time running out in the game, sub,quarterback Norm Mac- kin completed a 50-yd. pass to Tom Aveni, whoisn't even listed on the Indiana roster, and the end came to a wild but enjoyable afternoon at Michigan Stadium. I L a The QUARRY, Inc. "Everything for the Amateur" I I (1'e4 toupan t 1204 South University SPAGHETTI AND MEALS OUR SPECIALTY 10:30 to 7:30 P.M. Daily Except Saturday -Daily-John Hirtzel DRAWS FIRST BLOOD-Michigan's John Herrnstein (36) dives over for the first touchdown of the game, aided by teammates Terry Barr (41) and Al Sigman (70). Indiana players pictured trying to halt Herrnstein are Dave Whitsell (45), Arnold Steeves (52) and Pete Piccirillo (58). I NHL SCORES Chicago 6, Toronto 3 Montreal 6, Detroit 3 Boston 4, New York 4 Next Week's Grid Picks FILM S LE Th University of Michigan 1. MICHIGAN at Ohio State 2. Arkansas vs. LSU 3. Baylor at SMU 4. Duke at North,'Carolina 5. Illinois at Northwestern 6. Indiana at Purdue 7. Kansas State at MSU 8. Kentucky at Tennessee 9. Maryland at N. Carolina St. 10. Minnesota at Wisconsin 11. Nebraska at Oklahoma 12. Notre Dame at Iowa 13. Oregon at Ore. St. (Thurs.) 14. Penn State at Pittsburgh 15. Southern California at UCLA 16. Stanford at California 17. TCU at Rice 18. Wake Forest vs. S. Carolina 19. W. Va. at Miami (Fla.) (Fri.) 20. Yale at Harvard BIG TEN ALSO-RANS: NU Subdues Purdue; Illinois, Wisconsin Tie e e e ' Monday &h esday, Nov. 1an 20 Only Kodachrome 25% All -Ekta chrome Kodacolor discount 120-620 Ektachrome, Kodacolor reg. 1.25-sale price 95c 135 Ektachrome, Kodacolor Regularly Sale Price 20 Exposures . . . . 1.85 1.40 36 Exposures . . . . 2.60 1.90 8MM Regularly Sale Price Roll . ......2.40 1.80 Magazine . . . . 3.75 2.75 16MM Regularly Sale Price Roll.......7.15 5.35 Magazine . . .. 5.95 4.45 Rg ELECTRIC RAZORS THIS RING, your University of Michigan Ring, carries an elegance befitting the pride and dignity of every undergraduate and alumnus. REMINGTON .............. . . SC HICK .................... NORELCO ....... . . . . . . . . ... "LADY" SCHICK ............. "LADY DUCHESS' REMINGTON With trade-in 12.95 12.49 9.90 5.00 8.25 Without trade-in 17.20 16.74 14.20 9.25 12.50 EVANSTON, Ill. (M)-Failing to cash in after four fumble recover- les and two pass interceptions, Northwestern yesterday overcame its frustration to score on a mis- firing fourth-down gamble by Pur- due and another captured fumble to defeat the favored Boilermakers 14 to 0. The victory before 32,000 chilled fans was the second Big Ten de- cision for Northwestern in a row -the first time the Wildcats, who defeated Wisconsin last week, ac- complished the feat since 1948. Wisconsin, Illinois Tie CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (IJP)-Sid Wil- liams, a little-known sophomore quarterback who started the sea- son as an end, passed and ran Wis- consin to a fourth quarter touch- down enabling the underdog Bad- gers to tie Illinois 13-13, yesterday in a Big Ten battle of also-rans. Illinois, capitalizing on Wiscon- sin fumbles, scored touchdowns in both the first and second quarters to grab a 13-6 halftime lead. How- ever, Illinois' attack bogged down in the second half which was domi- nated by Wisconsin. 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