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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 26

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Detroit, Michigan
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4 Sc mmv. Oct. 26, 1S52 DETROIT FREE PRESS WEST ITrojans Take Stride toRose Bowl by Beating Bears, 10-0 TERRY TERRIBLE iij.n. wfwwwmwiwi ji, ii ww. mmw -mrr- -r -ot Qw't 4 cr i Wings Tortured, 9-0, as Montreal Romps It's 16th Straight for Victors Sears' 69-Yard Dash Highlight 1 The Canadiens turned the game into a complete rout in the second period, scoring three times to make it 7-0.

Montreal broke loose shortly before the eight -minute mark. Sawchuk came out of his net to push the puck away from Richard, who was chasing it in from the blue line. It bounced over to the left boards, and Olmstead swirled in with it to fire the rubber be tween Sawchuk's pads. Aft Saarlal to tha rrac Praaa MONTREAL A young, aggressive team of Montreal Canadiens poured it on the champions of the National Hockey League, Detroit's Red Wings, 9 to 0, before 14,538 delighted Forum fans Saturday night. Montreal drilled through the Detroit defense repeatedly in the first period to take a 4-0 lead.

Tom Johnson opened the Ca-nadien barrage at 6:25, smashing between Red Kelly and Benny Wolt after taking Ken Mosdell's pass. a a a TWENTY-FOCR seconds later Floyd Curry made it 2-0 with, the first of two consecutive goals. He took Dick Gambel's pass and skated right through Kelly for a short shot. Currv's ncrond poal came four I MICHIGAN STATE LOCKERS 5I0VE OUT FRONT OF LEROY BOLD EN AS LIKE A COVEY OP DESTROYER-ESCORTS. SPARTAN minutes later when he took 4 passReay.

wno 'ired hot acros the in front of the net from Mosdell goalmouth. Bernie Geoffrion bat- Wayne Dances to Tune of Little Brandeis, 31-19 'ia 7 JS ft SL U-D FRUSTRATED, 21-6 Titans No Match i for Oklahoma Spcrlkl to the Free Prno STILLWATER, Okla. Oklahoma completely thwarted the University of Detroit's ground and aerial game Saturday to defeat the Titans, 21 to 6, in a Missouri Valley Conference football game. A crowd of 13,000 fans witnessed the i j. -t in Lewis Stadium.

The victory was the Aggies' third of the season and their first against one defeat in MVC play. Detroit now owns a 2-3 mark and stands 1-1 in the conference. QUARTERBACK Ted Marchi-broda fired 34 passes but completed only nine. The Titans gained a meager 84 yards passing and did little better on the ground, finishing with 102 yards rushing, A blocked punt set up first touchdown in the second quarter. Elmer Stout blocked Tom Ins.

rt's and waited until Terry Sawchuk went down before firing the puck over his body. Rocket Richard made It 4-0 with the 322nd goal of his career, at 13:46 on a breakout play with Bert Olstead.and Elmer Lach He took Lach pass and skated Into the defense, firing his shot low and to Sawchuk's right as he was checked. Hockey GGA Montreal 10 21 15 8 16 17 8 IS 15 8 28 24 7 19 21 5 9 9 2 13 19 Chicago Montreal DETROIT Toronto Boston New York SATURDAY'S RESULTS Montreal 9. DETROIT 0. Boston at Toronto, Incomplete.

SUNDAY'S GAMES DETROIT at New York. Boston at Chicago. for the new THROUCHJ TRADE mow rre Prm Photo by DICK TRIPP HE RACES TO FIRST DOWN Nittany Had MSC Bothered BY DICK PETERS Pre Praat Staff Writer EAST LANSING Worry ap parently brings results for these State Spartans. Coach Biggie Munn was the first to admit that MSC had some anxious moments after Penn had taken a 7-0 lead Saturday. "Until that point," Biggie said; "we hadn't done a thing couldn't get organized and Penn State was playing rugged, good football." Munn, of course, admitted just as quickly that the Spartans took all worry away when they got organized.

Doug Bobo, who caught the pass for MSC's tying touchdown, was given the game ball. "WE THOUGHT he should get it," Munn said, "because it was his catch that got us back in the game and on the way." "This one," Biggie chuckled, "was a real nice one to win, I hope It made the Alumul as happy as it did me." Penn State's Rip Engle felt his team had played as well as it could, although "we did give away some awfully bad touchdowns." Added Engle: "But it takes a good team like Michigan State to get those touchdowns, don't forget." On Penn State's first-ouarter touchdown, it was hard to be- lieve that a young man could be so alone in a stadium nnckerl with 51,162 fans. But there was End Don Malinak all by himself like Eisenhower in Kansas City. Tonv Rados Ditched to him so easily that it may have been one of the greatest sucker-plays since Tom Sawyer whitewashed his fence. The Nittany Lions started the game with a decided advantage on the Spartans.

They had co-captains, Joe Gratson and Stew Scheets, to MSC's single leader. Don McAuliffe. Penn State won the toss with this decided manpower advantage, and you know what happened after the game began. a The pass-Docket which Penn Ctata crai'M Rata aorln 4m 4 Via game reminded you of the "old" Detroit Lions, even to his No. Detroit 22 same But tl 22 same as Bobby Layne's.

the first time the "pock- crumbled, late In the second Rados was plastered by Dohoney and fumbled on the Penn State 11, Charles Frank recovering for the Spartans. Penn State held, however. a MICHIGAN STATE'S third touchdown sortie, a 63-yard ground maneuver, was an awesome display of power-running by McAuliffe and Billy Wells, but an alert Spartan tackle kept it moving. Yewcic, unable to find a receiver for his pass, started to run and, as he was hit, the ball spurted some 30 feet in the air. Larry Fowler was tha MSC tackle on the spot to grab it and McAuliffe immediately hit to the Penn State 21 for a first down.

From there Wells trucked over on the next play. Before the game, Engle uttered this hope: "I only hope we can play a good enough game to justify 52,000 people coming out." For one quarter, the Lions STATISTICS OHM. DKTROIT A.AM. lanln ru.hlnr 15 1.13 Fa.Ml attrmutrd IH Para roninlftrd Paiiiiea hitprerptrd 4 3 larilt Daln S4 16 Otu. fumhlri nwonrtd .1 I'untlnc imin S.

43 Tarda penaJlied 118 1 il I STATISTICS F1rt downt Pushltix fanfare aulnc Trdtf PaM fomnllrd Ptuit tntfept4 si font; ntf ntlnc avfraaa ls.7 I'm 4i rumbira lint '4 Varda penallaed 9 84 LOS ANGELES VP) Southern California's Trojans got off to a winging lead on an explosive 69-yard touchdown run by halfback Jimmy Sears and went on to knock the Gol den Bears of California off the Rose Bowl trail and out of the ranks of the nation's unbeaten football teams. The still-undefeated Trojans blanked the favored Bears, 10 to 0, with fiery but brief scoring bursts in the first quarter Sears' spectacular return of a punt, and a field goal booted from the 14- yard line by Sad Sam Tsagalakis Twice later Coach Jess Hill's Trojans struck close, once to the three, once to the five, but each time the battling Bears beat them off as a crowd of 94,677 roared. The victory was the sixth straight for the Trojans this season and kept Intact their chances for the Rose Bowl assignment against the Big Ten's best on New Year's Day. They still must dispose of an old and bitter foe, Stanford, and an even hardier and still undefeated rival from across town, the UCLA Bruins. The triumph was the second straight for Hill over Lynn O.

Waldorf and was the first time a Waldorf team has been shut out since the Bear coach went to Berkeley in 1941. It ended a string of 60 games in which California had scored. Wash St. Rally Defeats Ore. St.

PULLMAN, Washington State blasted four last -period touchdowns two of them 19 seconds apart to come from behind for a 33-20 victory over Oregon State. Montana Ties Oregon on Lone, Completion EUGENE, Ore. () Montana completed Just one pass Saturday but it brought a fourth-period touchdown and a 14-14 tie with favored Oregon. Quarterback Dick Heath threw the ball 30 yards to Halfback Dean Brott, who gathered it in on the Oregon 6 and raced into the end zone for the tying touch down with 3 minutes remaining. Washington Whales Stuff in Out of Stanford PALO ALTO, Calif.

U.B With Don Heinrich passing for two touchdowns, the Washington Huskies scored in every period to defeat Stanford. 27 to 14. The Pacific Coast Conference clash drew 28,000 fans to Stanford Stadium Saturday. Running up a 21-0 advantage in three periods on a Stanford club which was undefeated until last week, the Huskies had complete control throughout One Count Runs Aivay ivith Gold Cup NEW YORK (jipv Mrs. Walter M.

Jeffords' One Count ran off and hid from five rivals In the $75,000 added Empire City Gold CupSaturday, romping home by nine lengths over Alerted in the marathon of a mile and five furlongs. The three-year-old son of Count Fleet was timed in 2:44. He picked up the 52.950 purse to hike his season winnings to $229,925. Once Jockey Gorman gave One Count the word, the race was over. In the first sweep past the grandstand, Alerted and Lone Eagle fought head and head duel before One Count rolled to the lead three furlongs from home.

Then, he increased his lead with every stride, going under the wire eased up. Alerted won the place by a length and a half from La-Fourche Solid choice with the crowd of 34,877, One Count returned $3.20. Green Wave Spills Auburn MOBILE, Ala. (U.R) Tulane's Green Wave burst the dam of Auburn's defense for two touchdowns within two and a half minutes of the third period Saturday and rolled on to a 21-6 victory before 22,000 fans. It was the first Southeastern Conference victory for Tulane and buried Auburn in the cellar.

The Inexperienced Tigers, who started the sesson against Maryland, went down to their fourth defeat I 4 VK AMBLE MADE the score 6-0 three minutes later. Richard skated in from left wing for a low drive that Sawchuk kicked out. But the puck went right to Gamble, and he blasted it into the twine. The Canadiens scored again with seven seconds left in the period. Sawchuk tried to trap the puck behind the net, but Paul Meger scooped it out to Billy ted it in when Sawchuk was slow getting Into position.

Reay scored the Canadiens' eighth goal at 6:41 of the final period on a passout play, with Geoffrion and Meger Sawchuk was nicked for the ninth goal when Curry stole the puck from Marcel Pronovost and passed over to Gamble, who scored from close range. FIRST PERIOD! 1- Mnntrrftl. Jnhnann (Mc.kdrlh. 6: 3 Montreal, turrr rlll. .1 Mnmrrai, urrr iicl.ll 1 Montrral.

Klrhard (Olmitrari- .1 Mnntrra I. urrr I M.H. i. Lach). Prnallln Bouchard.

Kki. SKCOND PKRlODt Montrral, Olra. trad (KIcharri-MrCormark), 7:44. Montreal. (iainhlt 7 Montrral.

(iroflrinn 10:113. Penalties Kkhard. John, on, Sinrlalr, Farrllrh, ilartrjr. TIIIHO PRRIORl 8 Montrral. Rrar (Mrarr-nrnrrrcoal.

:41. Montrral, (iambla urr No arnaltlra, Two Birds on One Stone BUFFALO, N. Y. (U.PJ John W. Baker of suburban Kenmore, killed two birds with one stone figuratively speaking, that is.

While hunting near Batavia, he spotted two pheasants leave the ground at the same time. He fired, and much to his surprise, bagged his quota with one shot. He 'waa accompanied by Jerry Hyder of Clarence. 760-15 800-15 820-15 U.I 5 17.85 17.85 a TIRE CO. GRAND RIVER WE 3-8440 It- 4 i.

I 1 f' V'-'V i If r. 'IK 1 i Ex-Titari Sets Pace for Judges Tartars Lose 4th Straight on Road WAWi BRANflKtS Flrt downs IH Tmi ran ruthlng attempted Iairit Intrrrrptr4 nrd. nnia.inr tKI V'uliTinK ftvrrate "0 ardu oenallard 00 Waint 8 7 Bmnririfl It motid. Johnvlon. Poind mtlr toiirhdimni LUtilirth (ronvrlon frittn plnrrnienO.

mi, Ktrhlln, Haldmann. ronU. rnintt (eonTcriioa airr lourndfrani Voatnj from placements. Sjirrlal to tha Frea Fraaa WALTHAM, Mass. Little Brandeis University was voted New England's beat small-college football team by sports- writers last week.

Wayne Uni versity is ready to agree with the experts. The 'Judges, led by a former University of Detroit quarterback. Jim Stehlin. handed Wayne its fourth straight road defeat, 31 to 19, before 2,000 fans at Brandeis Field. Stehlin, who also played briefly at Georgetown University before transferring to Detroit and now Brandeis, completed 17 of 24 pass es for 232 yards.

He threw two: TD aerials, lateraled for a third and scored a fourth himself. It was the fourth straight vic tory for the Judges, coached by Benny Friedman, former Univer sity of Michigan star. WAYNE LED briefly in the first quarter. The Tartars took the opening kickoff and marched 60 vards in 11 nlava. with Hal Bcardsley scoring on an end-1 arouna piay irom ine nve-yara line.

After an exchange of punts following the kickoff, Stehlin took to the air and engineered Brandeis' first touchdown. The payoff pitch, good for 17 yards, was to Bill McKenna. The Judges went ahead to stay in the second quarter after Wayne had marched to the Judges' and two-yard lines on succeeding drives. Stehlin passed 12 yards McKenna at the Wayne 47. On the next play Stehlin hipped the ball and took off on a bootleg run.

At the Tartar 30 he lateraled to Pet-roth Tyson, who galloped the rest of the way. BRANDEIS MADE it 18-6 in the first three minutes of the third quarter. The Judges took the sec- ona-nan kickoii ana scored in nine plays. Stehlin completed two passes and ran twice in this series and tallied on a quarterback sneak from the one-yard line. Two minutes later Brandeis had another marker.

Gary Baillar-geon's fumble set up this score with the Easterners recovering on the Wayne 39. Three passes moved the ball to the 8. Tyson lost three and on fourth down Stehlin passed to Art Waldmann for the touchdown. WAYXE GOT BACK in the game briefly late in the third period. Brown completed three passes, the last a 28-yard heave to Elbert Richmond for a tally.

Sam Cronis put the game out of Wayne's reach at the 11-min-ute mark of the fourth quarter when he dashed 19 yards to score after taking a pitchout from Joe Gnerre. Wayne chalked up its final touchdown as the game ended, moving 57 yards in 11 plays with Dick Brown passing the final two yards to End Jim Johnston. Tf OA.l HIS -Ulll lCtir This is Charle (Chick) Wer ner's 20th season at the helm of a member ot the Olympic staff Penn State cross-country. He was I lit tit ne i llf tern 7 Stroh, Leading Pack in Pin Trials ST. LOUIS Stroh and of Detroit, were running; 1-2 at the end of the first three roudi in tb, National team elimination bowling ierlei here Saturday.

The competition will determine a challenger for the National match-game champions, Ffelffer, also of Detroit. Paced by Tom Hennpy and Buzz Fazio, Stroh piled up a 3012 count to hold a 19-pln lead over their hometown rival. Stroh had a mnner-up tally of 2993. Behind them were J. Dapter, of Akron, 2948; Jockey Cooper, of Chicago, 2935, and Fox Deluxe, of Chicago, 2907.

Three other Detroit teams were in the eliminations, but they were lagging far behind. They were Stempien, 2792; Coca-Cola, 2788, and Pepsi-Cola, 2731. STROH'S THREE games were 966, 956, 1101. posted lines of 1034, 993, 966. Hennessy 'contributed 645 and Fazio 621 to the leaders' tally.

Ed IUbanski added 557, Tony ninnn 598 and Lee Jouglard 591. IFor Hank Gavle hit 572, Charles Jonson 640. Len Torrise 5C9. Bob Hitt 568 and Bob Goike Additional rounds were slated lata Saturday night and Sunday. SATURDAY.

NOVEMBER 1 DIRECT TO STADIUM No reservations ndd! Cat aboard at Datrott Gray hound Tarmlnal. Raturn hnmadlataly attar gam a. U. of vs. ILLINOIS at ANN ARBOR $20i rW.

ROUND S3UU TRIP Wot avary hot! haw Irwa YyXi u. 1 li5S jav GREYHOUND TERMINAL Watttngtoo Blvd. at Grand River Pbooe: WOodward 1-9000 i 4 a'i'" 'C v' $fA A v' Mhl 18 Zang's punt and recovered for the Aggies on Detroit's five-yard line. Bill Holcomb battered over center from the one-yard line on fourth down. Ben Davis kicked the first of three conversions and led at halftime, 7 to 0.

MARCHIBRODA engineered Detroit's only sustained drive early in the third quarter. Staying on the ground, the Titans moved to the 18. Marchibroda then passed to Pete Bonanni at the five. Marchibroda carried the ball over in two plays. A 64-yard punt return by Dor- sey Gibson set up the Aggies' second touchdown early in the final period.

Gibson lugged a Zang punt back to the Titan 22. Two plays later Quarterback Don Ba be is mt End Ken Weigie with a pass in the Detroit end zone. i Four minutes later, put the game out of reach when Halfback Bob Green collaborated with Ken McCullough on a 70-yard pass play. The Aggies made one more bid, moving 57 yards to the Detroit five-yard line, but the Titans held for downs and took over. Detroit Oklahoma AM iti Detroit: Totirhdoira -Marrhlbroda.

Aklahnma AIM: Tnnrhdowna Hat tJB7erI7ona roinh. Halalr, MeCauoujin. DavU 3. General Staff Wins Pimlico Special Easily BALTIMORE (U.PJ Larry MacPhail's General Staff lived up to advance billing in the 16th run- ning of the J25.000 Pimlico Special Saturday when he scored an easy two and a quarter length victory over Greentree Stable's One Hitter in the two-horse race. Although there was no betting on the winner-take-all Special.

General Staff had been expected to thwart One Hitter's attempt to become the second horse to win the fall classic twice. Cballedon won in 1939-40. THE GREENTREE racer won this race two years ago, but Saturday he never threatened General Staff. The MacPhail colt took the lead the first time through the stretch and held it the rest of the way to score his eighth vie-' tory in 17 starts this year. i Jockey Glen Lasswell rode Gen- era! Staff over the mile and three- sixteenth in 1:57 25 to raise the; colt's earnings for the year to ,,122,150.

New HEAD: i lit ti ALL ALONE except for an official Is Penn State's Don Malinak as he waits for a Tony Rados pans to come down to earth. And when the aerial did come down, Malinak grabbed It and rambled unmolested for the Nittany Lions' only score against the Spartans. 'Bama Brawls to Victory TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (JP) Great work by Halfbacks Bobby Marlow and Corky Tharp led Alabama to a 42-19 homecoming victory over Mississippi State Saturday in a game that ended in a brawl. A fight involving many players came 12 seconds before the end.

'Bama Linebacker Ralph Carrigan and State Tackle Joe Cimini tan gled in front of the State Officials and coaches finally got 1 'hem and a score cf other players untanrled. Carriesn and Cimlni were elected and the contest end- 600-16 $11.90 650-16 13.80 670-15 13.45 710-15 14.90 WHITE SIDE WALLS M.00 EXTRA Now you can have the sensational new suburbanite tread" put on your present tires for the safest, easiest winter driving you've ever had. Nearly two thousand knife-like edges in the broad flat tread bite in snow fake hold on ice to give you up to 9 IV. more "start-abilityM 39 more "stop-ability." Stretch your motoring dollar further. Come in today and put on the finest snow treads money can buy.

USE OUR EASY PAY PLAN! NO MONEY DOWN TRADE NOW did. The fact that MSC came from behind and won No. 20 should have more than satisfied the crowd. a TOO BAD this one wasn't on television, because the officials really put on a big humpty-dumty act in the fourth quarter that would have given enough time for several commercials. Three flags went down on the field and the whistle-tooters caucused a half dozen times at various sites on the field.

They did everything but go over on the bench to dls- CUNS it. When it was all over, they decided Penn State had been offside and MSC guilty of clippingno play. HARDING 9736 i this summer. led one play later..

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