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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 45

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I FINANCIAL I SPORTS i mm 104th Year. No. 205 Sunday, November 25, 1934 Free Press Want Ads Bring Best Results Notre Dame 12 6 Yale ...14 Harvard- 0 Princeton ....38 Dartmouth 13 Ohio State ...40 Iowa 7 Illinois 6 Chicago 0 Indiana ......17 Purdue 6 Michigan State 6 Kansas 0 Detroit 13 Marquette 6 Minnesota Clinches Big Ten Grid Title as Purdue Loses Michigan Ends Worst Season, Losing to Northwestern, 13-61 Wisconsin Is Crushed Only a Few Inches Away but Wolverines Couldn't Make It by Powerful Gophers U. of M. Tallies Badgers Wage Game Fight but Bow as Foe Closes with Furious Drive, 34 to 0 By Tod Rockwell MADISON, Nov.

24 The Thundering Herd from the University of Minnesota stampeded with a mighty roar in a packed stadium here this afternoon, swept aside a stubborn, ewven, 34-0, and captured th fighting University of Wisconsin championship of the Western 4 -Situs' H'A Purdue, was being eliminated by Indiana. More than 35,000 persons saw the Gophers finish their season undefeated with a record for power, deception and stamina probably unmatched in the land. By their victory today the Gophers not only won undisputed possession of the title in the toughest football league in America, but in the opinion of many observers, stamped themselves as the No. 1 team of the Nation. The Herd stampeded today.

Capt. Francis (Pug) Lund set the pace for the champions in the first quarter, scoring two touchdowns. But during the next two periods, the Badgers, fighting back savagely, stopped the key men in the Minnesota attack, Stan Kostka and Sheldon Beise. They even threatened to score in the latter part of the on Two Field Goals by Ward Wildcats Come from Behind to Score 2 Touchdowns By M. F.

Drukenbrod ANN ARBOR, Nov. 25 Michigan closed its most dis astrous football season today just as it began it, with a de- leat. BUT. it. jookcu uuieicuc in this defeat.

It forced North western to show all the fight it possessed and come from behind once before the Purple won, 13 to 6. The Purple gained its margin of victory over a determined and at times quite efficient band of Wolverines midway in the fourth quarter, when Hugh Duvall, a powerful line smasher, crossed the Michigan goal line on a plunge from the one-yard line. The score climaxed a march from Michigan' 35-yard line, every foot of which was desperately fought, with Walter Cruice and Robert Kwisher, Purple halfbacks, collaborating with Duvall In the drive. Michigan almost halted it at Its own 15-yard line, where Duvall marie one of the first downs only by Inches. Ward Kicks Fair Before this score came these old rivals were in a 6 to 6 deadlock.

Willis Ward, Michigan's stellar NegTo end, playing in his last game, pave the Wolverines their six points by a pair of field goals. A 23-yard run by Swisher, who today was a great back, produced a touchdown for the Purple in the third period and gave it a temporary lead of to 3 as it was sandwiched between Ward's two successful kicks. Ward's first goal was from the 32-yard line in the last minute of 1he second quarter and put Michigan in front. 3 to 0. His second, booted from the 14-yard line, came late In the third quarter, after George Bolas had set the stage for it with the moat sensational play of the game.

Leaping into the air and matching one of Steve Toth'a kicks on Michigan's 30-yard line, Bolas lan 64 yards, most of the way down the centej" of the field, before Swisher brought him down from behind on Northwestern's six-yard lino. Pulling them down from behind as one of the fleet-footed Swisher specialties this season. He did the same thing three times against Statistics of Game Michigan N'rferii CHRIS EVEIIHARDUS STOPPED A GOOD STRETCH SHORT Ramblers Stop Army on Foot, Beat It in Air 80,000 See Dan Hanley and Three Mates Unite in Bombardment to Win, 12-6 1 By Grantland Rice NEW YORK, Nov. 24 Eighty thousand people saw Notre Dame leave the turf and go into the air at the Yankee Stadium this afternoon and so beat Army, 12 to 6. These 80,000 people, packed and jammed in the vast arena, got their big thrill from two tremendous heaves by Bill Shakespeare and Andy Pilney that carried the ball 86 yards over all to provide the winning margin in one of the fastest and best of all the Army-Notre Pame wars.

The Army's lone touchdown came on a pass from Buckler to Shuler, leaving the battle tied in a hard knot until Pilney, of Notre Dame, broke the deadlock late in the fourth period on two passes to Hanley. Notre Dame's first thrust was one of the most spectacular efforts of the season. Her fast, big backs had been cut down and thrown for big losses at the running game by a savage Army defense. So just before the first period closed, Bill Shakespeare faded far back on a whirl and a twist vith Army rushers all around him. He First downa By mailing l' By He nrnulllra iinU axiiicd Ity ruithlnr 7 117 A HrtlR gained ny liumttng VI attempted i't iimplded 2 Intercepted Yurria lout br 10 Average of nnnta itti Average, return of punt.

J'i Own liimblca recovered Opponent, fnmblea recovered Conference while its only rival, Hoosiers Beat Purdue Team Score 2 Touchdowns Early in Game LAFAYETTE. Nov. 24 (A. An Indiana University football team that struck with bewildering swiftness in the second period buried Purdue's Western Confer ence title hopes deep In the Old Oaken Bucket today under a 17 to 6 upset victory in the annual Hoosier classic. The Crimson eleven, held without score in four previous Big Ten encounters, opened up suddenly with two perfect playg to produce two touchdowns, and score i's first victory over Purdue since 1930.

Wendel Walker, pile-driving 188-pound back, completely befuddled the Purdue secondary by starting to skirt his left end, only to turn and heave a 25-yard toss to Ettors Antonini who ran 20 yards to score unmolested. A few plays later Don Veller, shifty little halfback, dashed around the Purdue left end and ran 82 yards for the second touchdown. Reed Kelso, big guard, place kicked both points after touchdown, and then added a 25-yard field goal from placement In the third period. Sub Score for Purdue The Boilermakers, with the game lost, produced a substitute back-field that scored in the last two minutes, on a forward pass from Orville Anderson to Fred Stalcup, from the 12-yard line. The famed Purdue "touchdown twins," Duane Purvis, candidate for Ail-American honors, and Jim Carter, making their final appearance, were bottled up by a fast charging Crimson line backed by a hard tackling backfield.

Carter was injured late In the first period, and Purvis was the power in the Boilermakers line-up through the rest of the game, but the alert Indiana players stopped his running and sifted through to hurry his forward passes. The victory, hailed by thousands of Indiana fans in the crowd of 24,000 that nearly filled the Ross-Ad bowl, capped with success the first coaching year of Bo McMillin, former Center College All-American quarterback at the Big Ten school. The Crimson eleven won three, lost three and played to ties with Temple and Iowa. Winner Strike Suddenly His unorthodox five-man back-field formations, aided by an alert, fighting spirit, clicked in the final game to roll up the worst defeat Indiana has handed it Hooeier rival since 1917. The Boilermakers, who came back fast after early season defeats by Rice and Notre Dame to win three straight Conference victories, were overwhelming favorites today, only to run into the football dynamite carried in a wild running Indiana backfield operating behind a heavy, fast line.

McMillin' underdogs struck sud-Plcase Turn to Page 2 Column 7 Hockey NATIOrAL LEAGUE AMERICAN DIVISION GF GA Boston 4 1 0 13 8 Chicago 1 0 Detroit 0 IS 14 Ranger 2 3 0 13 15 INTERNATIONAL DIVISION GF GA Toronto 7 0 0 JS Maroon 0 IS 8 St. 1 7 6 9 S3 Americans ..1147 Canadlens 4 0 5 12 SATURDAY'S RESULTS Toronto 3, Detroit i. Maroons 3, Canadiens 1. Boston 3, St. Louis SUNDAY'S GAMES St.

Louis at Detroit, Boston at Chicago. Rangers at American. 14 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE GF GA London 4 Windsor 3 Syracuse 3 Buffalo 3 13 It 7 15 14 7 7 1 4 It 17 13 tetroit 2 Cleveland SATURDAY'S RESULTS London Cleveland 1. Detroit 3. Buffalo S.

SUNDAY'S GAMES Detroit at Syracuse. Toronto Adds Wings to List Leafs Win, 3-2, for Seventh Straight By Jack Carveth TORONTO. Nov. 24 The Detroit Red Wings wound up a disastrous four game road trip before a capac ity crowd of 13,000 spectators nere tonight by dropping their third straight game when they were out-scored by the high-powered Maple Leafs, 3 to 2. It was wide-open battle waged between two well matched teams and the Leafs won because they had a trifle more finish around goal while the Wings found the veteran George Hainsworth virtually unbeatable.

Hainsworth never played better than he did tonight, especially in the first period when he handled what looked like three sure Detroit goals. Harvey Jackson, the leading scorer of the League, fattened up his average again tonight when he bagged two goals and was credited with an assist on the other, scored by young Nick Metz, up from the St Michael's College Juniors. Aurle Score One Larry Aurle scored the first of the Red Wings two goals early in the third period and helped in the play that permitted Yank Boyd to count with little more than five minutes to play. There was little to choose between the teams over the last 40 minutes of play, but the Wings had a decided edge in the lirst period and only the brilliant work of Hainsworth prevented them from taking a commanding lead. Ebbie Goodfellow of the Wings drew a 10 minutes misconduct penalty in the third period for some thing he said to Referee Billy Bell after the official had penalized Aurie for holding Clancy.

Good-fellow was in the cooler when Mtz scored the goal that won the battle. Two other goals were scored while the opposition was playing a man short Jackson's second tally, scored Please Turn to Page 3 Column 1 second Quarter after Lund wasf- injured. The Gophers were not the same team without their great leader. He was put in the game in the1 second half only to be hurt again on the first play. But the Minnesota reserve strength began to tell on the Badgers in the final period and the Bierman eleven chalked up three touchdowns.

Fake Tlace Kick Works The first came after a 13-yard run by Verne Lavoir on a fake place kick, A long pass, George Roscoe to Dick Smith, tackle, netted the 37 yards and the fourth touchdown. The same pass, used a few minutes later, placed the ball on the Wisconsin three-yard line, from where Whitman Rork smashed over for the final score of the game. Bill Bevan, Gopher guard, who strengthened a claim to ail-American honors today made three place-kicks for points after touchdowns. Beise also kicked one point after a score. Dr.

Clarence W. Spears' Badgers made a stand against the power of the Herd as commendable as that made for 30 minutes by the Wolverines several weeks ago. The Badger line, particularly, Guards Mario Pacetti and Milton hummer, smashed into the Minnesota offense and bottled up completely the Gopher fullbacks. It was the first time Beise and Kostka con sistently had been stopped this autumn and it was a sight to see. Badger Line la Great The young Wisconsin line charged with an abandon which stamped it as a great one, playing The Gophers' Record MAllISOV.

Not. n-t Thia record ta claim to the mythlral National olleire Fnnt-ball ChHmplonfthip: Minneol N. I. Slate it Minnenot 'J Nehra.ka I I'lll. burr.lt 7 Iowa 15 Minnesota.

Micllirao Mlnilcaota thlrano 7 Minnesota Indiana illuneioU :4 iu-oiiain ToiaI. Opponent! IIS far over its head. Ed Christian- son and Paul Jensen, Wisconsin tackles, also clayed a whale of a earns against great odds. Throughout most of the game these youngsters stopped the Gopher plungers with the sharpest tackling this observer has seen this season. But Lund's speed In racing to the sideline and cutting back battled even sucn anarp nu determined tackling.

Lund smashed over the left side of the Badger line for one yard and the first touchdown following a 68-yard march through the bat tling Badgers. The drive was made possible by the off-tackle slants of Alfonse, a short gain or two by Beise and the ileet Lund. Pug's second score was a sensational 60-yard dash around the Wisconsin left end, during which the Badger tackier were strewn about the gridiron by the best blocking Minnesota displayed duN ing the entire game. Three Gopher blockers were in front of Pug as be raced down the west sideline. Fontaine, Badger safety man, was cut down before he could get within 10 yards of tb Minnesota captain.

Big Ed Christlanson changed the complexion of the game considerably midway in the second period PIcaite Turn to P3ge 2 Column 4 pas In stride at the Jayhawker 20-yard stripe and raced unmolested over the goal line standing up. The try for extra point by Arthur Brandstetter, a sophomore doubling for the injured fullback, McCrary, waa blocked by John Peterson, but the touchdown lead was enough against the Jayhawkers, who count scoreless ties with Iowa State and Colorado among their high marks this season. The scoring play followed an orthodox punt exchange between Warmbein and Fred Harris, whose kicking is the main cog of the Kansas defense. monotony of the punting duel was broken in the second quarter when BianJstetter intercepted one of Quarterback George Hapgood a several passes and raced down the sideline on a 40-yard jaunt that Please Turn to Page 3 Column 2 a OF LAST WHITE STRIFE Illinois Given Tie for Title by Dickinson CHAMPAIGNt Nov. 24 Minnesota and Illinois "tied for the Big Ten championship" according to Dr.

Frank E. Dickinson's football statistical system. Dr. Dickinson, University of Illinois professor, ranked the Illini with 20 points equal to the Gophers, "because Minnesota's victories were over second division teams teams that lost more games than they won." He placed Minnesota, Illinois, Ohio State and Purdue in the "first division" as the only Conference teams winning more games than they lost "Illinois got 30 points for giving the great Ohio State team its only defeat of the season, counterbalanced by 10 points for the defeat by Wisconsin," said Prof. Dickinson.

"Minnesota' (cores are much more impressive than the Illini record but the Gophers did not meet the boys from Columbus. At least Illinois is entitled to the fumbling championship." Chicago played the toughest Elg Ten schedule, Dickinson figures. "It is probable that Minnesota's national ranking will be higher than Illinois," he said, expecting to release nationwide Zigures in two weeKj. Dickinson rating of Big Ten fol lows: Team T. a so jlinneaois, 0 ilhiola ft 3 1 Ohio estate i 17.8 IK 1 14 14 10 rnmae Wl4consIa Indiana Nnrthweatera fhtcafo i Iowa Mirliifan 1 0 Lehigh Surprises Lafayette Foes EASTON, Pa, Nov.

24 (U1. P) Lehigh pulled an upset today by defeating a favored Lafayette team, 13 to 7, in the sixty-eighth game between the two traditional rivals. It was vjrtnrv since 1929 and the second in the ian IS years. Fairbanks and McCoy were the stars for Lehigh, Lafayette being unable to stop this passing Titans Go Over Hilltop, 13 to 6 Win ttrst in twe as Fortune Smiles By Lewis H. Walter MILWAUKEE, Nov.

24 University of Detroit shook off the shackles of misfortune here today and won a football game from Marquette University, 13 to 6. It was the Titans' first victory in five starts. Detroit scored Its touchdowns In the first and third quarters and Marquette got its tally in the second. Johnny Wieczorek, sophomore fullback, plunged for the first touchdown after a short Titan march. Bill Pegan missed the place kick for the extra point but for the first time in three games this error failed to cost Detroit the game.

Marquette also failed to kick the point after scoring its touchdown on a 35-yard pass from Ray Buivid to Roy McMahon, and Detroit went on to win on the touchdown scored by Dick Lutz after another drive in the third period. The misfortune which had been Detroit's in the last four games was Marquette's today as the Titans scored their fourth successive victory over the Milwaukee eleven and gained an edge of five victories against two in the rivalry between the two schools. Breaks Against Them The Hilltoppers could not capitalize on the breaks given them by the Titans and suffered from penalties, fumbles and bad breaks of almost every description. Detroit showed the confidence 't displayed in the State game and, depending almost entirely on its running attack, held the upper hand throughout most of the game. Doug Nott, the Titan co-captain, was the major ground gainer of the day with 86 yards in 18 tries.

His running passing and kicking were factors in the Detroit victory. Ray Buivid, the brilliant sophomore halfback of the Hilltoppers' was everything he had been pictured by Detroit scouts. A shifty, fast running back who galloped right through many a Titan tackier, Buivid was the flashiest performer on the gridiron but a hard-charging Detroit line held him in check when he got near the goal stripe on two occasions and his mates failed him at other times. Unlike Marquette, Detroit wasted few opportunities. The Hill-Please Turn to Page 5 Column i Dumbjohn phosed into Mr.

Ducrot and Mr. Dumbjohn, those two famous numbskulls that all plebes are said to resemble. Particularly in the first period, did Master Will Shakespeare, about whom I promise you I will not make a single, solitary pun, heave a wild, long pass high into the air. This pass carried on it several "Hail Mary's," not to mention the special blessings of Rome. It was fired with devout faith, as I say, by Master Shakespeare who was at the time greatly harassed by Army rushers.

Far down the field, 30 yards, to be exact stood a Notre Dame end by the name of Dominic Vairo, the captain of the team. On either side of Mr. Vairo stood two West Point students, Mr. Ducrot and Mr. Dumbjohn, I suspect Football Results COLLEGE BIG TEN Northwestern .13 Michigan A Minnesota ,...84 Wisconsin 0 Illinois 6 Chicago 0 Ohio State ....40 Iowa 7 Indiana 17 Purdue 6 EAST Notre Dunie ..12 Army 6 Hmknell 13 Penn Stats 7 Yalo 14 Harvard 0 Lehigh 13 Lafayette 7 .13 7 0 0 0 0 Princeton 38 Dartmouth Providence ...21 R.

I. State Columbia 12 Syracuse Tufts a Mass. State Maryland 6 Georgetown Duquesne 14 Catholic V. Colgate 14 Rutgers 0 N. 21 St Ansclms ...14 SuKqtichaniia .20 Swarthmore 0 Temple 22 Villanova 0 Penn Military ,31 Baltimore 0 Dickinson 9 3 La Salle 41 Mt.

St. Mary's. 3 Wash. Coll. ...29 Delaware 7 Lock Haven Shlppensburg 0 Dover 13 Downington 0 Bloomslmrg ..18 Slippery Rock.

12 Davis-Elkins 9 St. Vincent 6 Gallaudet 7 Shenandoah 6 Waynesburg ..20 Muskingum 6 Geneva 6 Westminster 0 Concord 17 Potomac 14 Juniata 24 Vpsala 13 SOUTH Florida .......13 Georgia Tech. 13 Roanoke 13 Haskell 0 Centre 16 Mercer 13 Catawba 39 Cullowhee 0 Wofford 17 Presbyterian 7 Bluefield 20 St. Paul 0 Morris Harvey. 27 Glenville 0 Bluefield 59 New River 0 Randolph-Ma- Hampden-Syd- con 0 ney 0 Cheney 9 Bordentown 0 Georgia 18 Auburn 0 Alabama 0 Rust 0 Union Coll.

(Ky.) 7 Louisville 0 Tenn A. Wllberforce 2 Tenn. State ...33 Sunflower 0 Tenn. Union U. 0 Blrm-Southern 21 Howard 0 Maryville.

7 Carson-N'man. fl Mars Hill 34 Wlngate 0 Charleston ....18 De Kalb 12 Ky. State 2 L'vllle Muny 0 Tenn. Belmont Abbey 0 Morris Brown. 9 Florida Clarke SMorristown 7.

MIDWEST Kansas State. .20 Iowa State 0 Ohio Ohio 0 West Reserve. 61 Oberlin 7 Akron 13 Mt Union 0 Wooster 34 Heidelberg 0 Case S3 Toledo 13 Nebraska 13 Missouri 6 Grinnell 23 Cornell 0 Drake 6 Crelghton 0 Please Turn to Page -Column 1 Ducrot and By Paul Gallico NEW YORK, Nov. 24 What can you say, dear, after you say that you're sorry? The Army must be humming that charming lyric to itself tonight For after one hour of atrocious quarterbackipg, general lack of cerebration and an amazing collection of mental lapses on the part of both teams, the team representing the University of Notre Dame was able to win the famous annual football game from West Point by the score of 12 to 6. before 80,000 in the Yankee Stadium today.

It won chiefly, I suspect because at two specific instances in the game when Notre, Dame pitched forward passes into the clear, November ether the West Point defenders were suddenly metamor appeared to be cornered as finally broke loose and shot a pass for 41 yards far down the held. Vairo, the Notre Dame end, was waiting for the ball, but Vairo was surrounded by King and Grove, two Army defenders. Both missed the pass as Vairo gathered the ball in his arms, paused half a second and then swung for the Army goal line 19 yards away. There was no one to haul him down and the Notre Dame contingent turned on a double bedlam of noise. In that first period seven Notre Statistics of Game Xot.

Dame Army ft 97 ft 1 mi 9 1 10 Tfrtt dnfrna YarilB br rachitic 81 Fniira attempted PaHMtft completed 3 raRes Intercepted 1 Yard by palns 98 I'nittin average. Mt Yardage of punt return! SM Opponent fumblea recovered Tarda lot by penalties 20 Dame rushes had resulted in a net loss of 11 yards. But that one mighty heave by Shakespeare had made up the deficit A fine kicking duel between Buckler and Shakespeare followed this first score until Buckler, the Waco wasp, planted a 70-yard kick on Notre Dame's one-foot line. After Notre Dame's kick, a forward pass from Buckler to Shuler, the Army's star end, picked up 20 yards. A moment later from Notre Dame's 16-yard line Buckler threw another pass to the able Shuler to tie the Bcore at 6 and 6.

From this point on the two teams fought out a bitr ter, almost even duel with Notre Plea Turn to Page 5 Column i Irk Gallico "He Is yours, Mr. Ducrot," said Mr. Dumbjohn. "You do me too great honor, Mr. Dumbjohn," replied Mr.

Ducrot "He belongs to you, I am certain," insisted the other. At this juncture. Captain Vairo leaped into the air, caught the football and ran it over the goal line, a distance of some 20 yards from the point of the catch. Here was prosperity beyond Its wildest dreams because up to that point Notre Dame had suffered greatly from the speed and energy of the Army ends, Schuler and Edwards, as as of the line which was chasing Shakespeare over backward with the football. Notre Dame promptly celebrated this burst of luck by going com-ricase Turn to Tage 6 Column 2 both Stanford and Notre Dame to prevent touchdowns.

Ma is a uprinter In track. Improved but Not Enough Michigan was a greatly improved team today, even though it wasn't good enough to score what would have been its first Big Ten victory the season. There was more snap and dash in the Wolverines' play and their tackling and blocking were better. They played intelligent football and were guilty of few mechanical errors. Favored by the excellent kicking of Regeczl before he was forced out in the second quarter with a leg Injury, never to return again, the Wolverines set up several openings for touchdowns.

Again, though, the inquired running and passing attacks -when within scoring range Jore missing and they had to fall hack on Ward's right foot to score. In the second quarter, while holding a decisive advantage over the Purple despite the brilliant kicking of Toth, the Sophomore find, the Maize and Blue barely missed a touchdown on a forward pass by Regeczi. Two Michigan receivers were under it almost alone on the Northwestern five, but they seemed to interfere with each other and the ball fell to the ground, incomplete. Keeps on Trying Michigan came right back, and, aided by Everhardus' dash for 13 yards, the first first down of the game, made another bid for a touchdown on a forward pass which fell incomplete jin Northwestern'a five. Following an exchange of punts, Michigan reached the Pur-Ple'a 23, and failing here Ward Please Turn to Page 4 Column 3 How Big Ten Teams Finished CHICAGO, Nov.

24 (A. The final Western Conference standings. Conference games only: I. TP 181 181 44 8S J7 75 45 17 12 OP 19 27 29 43 (W 08 1O0 108 90 125 Minnesota hto UlinoW Purdue Northwestern Wisconsin I'nlcago 1 Indiana 1 Michigan 0 State Uses Pass to Beat Kansas on Muddy Field Surprise Toss By Warmbein Fools Jayhawks When Running Game Becomes Mired LAWRENCE, Nov. 24 (A.

With it speedy attack mired by a muddy, treacherous gridiron, Michigan State used an aerial surprise in the first period to defeat the Kansas Jayhawkers, 6-0, In their interactional football game here today before a crowd of 6352. The only score of the game was made on a pass from Kurt Warmbein, punting mainstay of the Spartan team that ha been beaten only by Syracuse, to the injured end, Kddie Klewicki. The scoring play had a perfect buildup. Running to the right as though he planned to smash off tackle or try to sweep end, Warmbein drew the Kansas safety and defensive left halfback into the line and slipped a 20-yard flat pass spinning over the incoming halfback. Klewicki a diagonally through the secondary, took the.

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