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October 26, 1958 - Image 7

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1958-10-26

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

Pitt Ties Army, 14-14;
Tifers Rebound 20-7

........ _.- MCI IIOM _.... IIIII MMMM M II IM MMMM MM

DAL

-ML- -MEL-

By The Associated Press
PJTTSBURGH - The Army
football team, rated first in the
national rankings and the na-
tion's leader on offense. turned
into a stubborn defensive squad
yesterday and barely escaped with
a 14-14 tie against a fired-up
Pittsburgh team rated second only
to the Cadets in the east.
Pitt, trailing. 14-0, after nine
minutes and 36 seconds of the
second quarter, came back to get
one touchdown just before the
half ended and another with an.
all-important two-point conver-
sion just after the third quarter
started. From there on, it was a
battle in which neither team
could get the breaks it needed to
w,
Auburn Overcomes Maryland

fumbling Georgia Tech yesterday.
It was the first time SMU has
beaten Georgia Tech in eight
years.
Syracuse Breaks Jinx
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -
Syracuse shattered a 24-year jinx
at Beaver Field yesterday by out-
p l a y i n g and outmaneuvering
Penn State's football forces, 14-6,
on a rainy afternoon.
Chuck Zimmerman and TomF
Stephens provided the scoring
punch to back up a superior;
Orange line that controlled the
play most of the way.
* , .*.
Cal Downs Oregon
BERKELEY, Calif. - Joe Kapp
engineered two touchdown drives
and raced 92 yards for the third
yesterday as California beat fa-
vored Oregon, 23-6, to remain un-
beaten in Pacific Coast Confer-
ence play.
* * *5
Navy Swamps Penn
ILADELPHIA - Joe Mata-
,e. a hard-running sopho-
.ore, led a corps of second and.
third string Navy Midshipmen to
a 50-8 victory over Penn yester-
day on rain-soaked Franklin Field.
Quarterback Joe Tranchini, suf-
fering a lame left shoulder, and
his first-string mates played only
20 minutes of the one-sided game,
a warmup for Navy's game next
Saturday with Notre Dame.
* * *
Oregon State Wins
PORTLAND, Ore. - Oregon

AUBURN - Maryland out-
played Auburn for 15 minutes
yesterday, then paid the penalty
as a rugged Tiger defense pounced
on Terrapin fumbles and inter-
cepted passes to open the way fr
a 20-7 victory.
It was the 19th game wit)
defeat for the fifth-ranked T .
who bounced back with a ven-
geance after last week's 7-7 tie
with Georgia Tech.
, * *
Tech Fumbles to Defeat
DALLAS - Southern Methodist
got the breaks and followed the
passing of Billy Dunn, the run-
ning of Jim Welch and a grand
exhibition by end Henry Christo-
pher for a 20-0 victory over
College I
GRID PICKS SCORES
Michigan 20, Minnesota 19
IliUnois 16, Michigan State 0
Iowa 26, Northwestern 20
9Ohio State 7, Wisconsin 7
Purdue 29, Notre Dame 22
Army 14, Pittsburgh 14
Mississippi 14, ,Arkansas I? '
Alabama 9, Mississippi State I
California 23, Oregon 6 t
Duke 20, North Carolina 13
Southern Methodist 20, Ga. Tech 0
North Carolina 26, Wake Forest 7
Oklahoma 40, Kansas State 6
Indiana 12, Miame (Ohio) 7
Harvard 16, Dartmouth 8
Oregon State 14, Washington 12
Syracuse 14, Penn State 6
California 14, Washington st. S
Kanfor 21, TUCLA 19
Lasas 14, Tulane 9

State slipped by Washington.
14-12, today in a crucial Pacific
Coast Conference football game..
State dominated it through
three quarters but won only on
the conversion points. The victory
kept OSC's Rose Bowl hopes alive
with a 3-1 PCC record.
Twice W a s h i n g t o n grabbed
fumbles deep in OSC territory and
converted them into touchdowns.
The Staters. on the other hand.
went the hard way, moving from
their own 21 to their first score
and from their 11 to the other.,
Bruins Down
Ca-nadiens
By The Associated Press
MONTREAL - The Boston:
Bruins gave up two early goals
while shorthanded and then blast-
ed their way to a 5-2 win last
night over the National Hockey
League-leading Montreal Cana-
diens.
TORONTO-The Toronto Maple
Leafs, taking advantage of an
inept Detroit offense. scored a goal
a period last night to defeat the!
Red Wings, 3-0, giving Johnny
Bower his first shutout of the Na-
tional Hockey League season and
the Leafs their second win.
* * *
NEW YORK-The New York
Rangers defeated the Chicago
Black Hawks, 6-2, in a fast and
rough televised National Hockey
League game at Madison Square
Garden yesterday.,
SYRACUSE, N.Y.-Tom Gola's
two free throws with only two
seconds left enabled the Phila-
delphia Warriors to defeat the
Syracuse Nationals, 110-109, in
their NBA opener last night.
DETROIT-Phil Jordan led the
Detroit Pistons to their first NBA
victory of the season last night
scoring 33 points in a 117-112 vic-
tory over the St. Louis Hawks.
OTHER NBA SCORES
Cinciniati 110, Minneapolis 9j
New Yorkt 127, Boston 125
(overtime)

BUSINESS SERVICES MICHIGAN DAILY
MONTH ENDSPECIALS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RAI
Better Dresses - Costumes
Waring Suits - Trapeze Suits LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 D/
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a1.12 .80 4.1
The DI LLON Shop Figure 5 average words to aline.
on Forest off S. University )J65 Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 1 1 :00 A.M. Sc
HELLO THERE' Phone NO 2-3241
Why not plan on. having lox, bagels,
cream cheese, onion rolls, or assorted
danish pastry this weekend? We'll be_ _ _ _ _
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Roundu
OTHER SCORES
EAST
Boston College 6, Miami (Fla.) 2
N-avy 50, Penn 8
Vale 14, Colgate 7
Brown 47, Rhode Island 6
Cornell 34, Princeton 8
MIDWEST
Western Reserve 26, Wayne State A
Louisville 40, Central Michigan 7
Marquette 27, College of Pacific 18
SOUTH
ILouisiana State 10, Florida 7
West Virginia 21, Virginia Tech 20
Georgia 28, Kentucky 0
Florida State 10, Tennessee 6
N Auburn 20, Maryland 7
WEST
New Mexico 13, Wyoming 12
Rice3 F4, Texas 7
Air Force Academy 16, Utah 14

605 E. Williams
Phone NO 8-7068

i,2

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and COMPLETE SERVICE at
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Shoe Repairing
Hat Cleaning
Taloring
Pressing
Shoe Shining
119 East Ann Street
(opposite court house)
NO 8-6966 )J32

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FINISHED WORK-Specialize in
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pickup and delivery. Siamese
service. Also Siamese cat for
NO 2-9020.

cot-
Free
stud
sale.
)J29

rFOX MOTEL

Room Phones
Free TV
2805 E. Michigan r

Munn Boosts New Substitution Rule,
To Appeal to College Football Fans

HU 2-224
)a8

By CHUCK KOZOLL
Two platoon college football may s
return via the encouragement of
Biggie Munn, Michigan State Ath-
letic Director.
Looking to the pro's crowd ap-
peal as a result of their high speed
game, Munn claimed, "the NFL's
exciting brand of football keeps
the fans in their seats until the
final whistle," I
The Spartan official went on to
say that 60 minutes of both offen-
sive and defensive play slows down
the game in the second half. "A
dull climax," he went on, "puts the
college games at a distadvantage
as far as paying customers are
concerned."
Hurts Players
In Munn's eyes, it also hurts the
pro-minded college player who is
forced to tone down his specialty
work, As a result, top flight punt-
ers or offensive halfbacks are
made to work in situations where
they lack ability.
Announcing his platform for
rules changes, Munn stated, "I'm
for a free substitution rule and
moving the goal posts back to the
college game "more wide open;"
a move favored by a majiority of
coaches and players, Munn went
on to say.
Changes Hobbled
However, Munn added, "we
have been hobbled in the change
by the rules committees of the
conferences." Noting the new
changes in a more liberal perspec-
tive, Munn looked to them as

"speeding up the game and adding ence and the winless seasons that
sparkle to the extra point plays." many of the Coast teams have
Viewing the attendance problem compiled. Many of the college
n college football, Munn stated stadiums-University of California
that the West Coast teams suffer in Berkeley and Stanford in Palo
from strong pro competition more Alto-were also constructed be-
than Midwestern elevens, fore the Rams and the 49ers be-
Twelve top drawing college gan to rise in popularity.
teams in the country-Michigan, "The pro's rise in popularity'
Ohio State, Notre Dame, Illinois, has helped to ease the rift that,
Michigan State, USC, UCLA, Min- once existed between the NFL and
nesota, Army, Navy, Wisconsin college teams," Munn added.
and SMU-consistently boast bet- Many pro teams use college
ter attendance figures than NFL stadiums and practice fields, and
-lubs. as Munn noted, "both groups end
PCC Rift !up helping each other." The situa-
The reason for the lack of tion also helps attract high school
Western teams is attributed to the stars to college as a stepping stone
rift in the Pacific Coast Confer- I to pro careers.

SMITH'S
CARPETS-RUGS
LINOLEUM--TILE
SAVE on Carpet Remnants-
many sizes and colors.
CARPET STORE-
207 E. Washington St.
--L NOLEUM STORE-
205 N. Main St.
)JI4
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
RARE iolins & String Instrument.
repairs. Pianos (Baldwin, Ivers &
Pond, Estey) and Organs (Baldwin,
Estey, Thomas) New and Used.
Terms.
MADDY MUSIC
508 E. William . NO 3-3223
)XI

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FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO.

216 W. William Street

Ann Arbor, Michigan

Telephone NO 8-8014

MIRRORS-FURNITURE TOPS AND GLASS REPLACEMENTS
DUTCH BOY PAINTS AND VARNISHES
COMPLETE AUTO GLASS SERVICE

American and Foreign Cars

(Auto Glass Phone NO 3-5369)

AMPLE FREE PARKING
SINCE 1884

S.
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