TIE MICE' GAN DAILY 5UNDYi ocr vy Plebes ow Some thusiasm I Navy, Syracuse Remain Unbeaten By The Associated Press edlam broke out in Annapolis night as Navy's football team t Washington 15-14 at Seattle, he Midshipmen, More than 0 of them from a 3,900 man ade, were seated in a Naval demy Field House where their rs were being piped by a ed phone line to the team as 7 listened to a radio play-by- broadcast of the game. hey broke from the stands ring and shouting as soon as back Al Hughes took a pass what seemed to be Navy's ning touchdown, but it was ed back for illegal procedure. hen, before the Middies could tilled again, end Greg Mather ed the 41-yard field goal that the game and rejoicing began anew. After the game ended, the Mid- dies began spilling out of the Academy and through the streets of downtown Annapolis, marching, cheering and singing. This was a big one for Navy. The brigade had turned out at 6:45 am. Thursday morning to see the team off for Seattle in a send-off rivaled only by the an- nual Army-Navy game. "We can go all the way," seemed to be a common feeling among Navy followers today after their team knocked off the No. 3 team in the country. "When you can't get Midship- men to stand still while the band is playing 'The Navy Blue and Gold' (the Academy's Alma Mater), it's really something," said Midshipman Hal Kelly of Mont- rose, Calif., an official of the Academy radio station, WRNV, who handled communications to the sidelines of the game at Seattle. The Midshipmen had decided Just Friday -- 24 hours before game time-that they would lease a telephone line and broadcast here to the team as they had done in 1957 when Navy upset Notre Dame 20-6 at South Bend and again in 1958 with a 20-14 upset of Michigan. They chipped in approximately 25 cents apiece to pay for the tele- phone line, rigged up a mock foot- ball field on the Navy basketball court and had plebes wearing striped shirts like referees to place the ball on the field after each play. Manning the phones on the side- lines in Seattle was Lt. Cmdr. Roy M. Gunzolous, commjnica- tins officer for the 13th Naval District, who told the Middes when plays were starting so they could time their cheers and songs. TWIN PURSUERS WEREN'T ENOUGH-Iowa back Jerry Mauren (16) outdistances two North- western pursuers as he -takes off on a 45-yard touchdown run in first period in Evanston, Ill., yester- day. Would-be tacklers are Northwestern end Elbert Kimbrough (86) and back Albert Kimbrough (12), twin brothers. IwaTroances Northwestern, Minnesota ClubsIndiaa, 42-0 By The Associated Press EVANSTON - Halfback Jerry Mauren, scoring two touchdowns within 68 seconds in the first period, sent Iowa's power-packed Hawkeyes hurtling to a 42-0 vic- tory over Northwestern yesterday in a Big Ten football opener. Sticking mainly to a running at- tack which sixth ranked North- western could not stop, the Hawk- eyes stamped themselves solid con- tenders for the Western Confer- ence title by completely crushing the Wildcats who took the field three-point favorites. Playing without Dick Thornton, its No. one quarterback, North- western - a 19-3 winner over Oklahoma last week - could not assemble a serious drive. Iowa scored a pair of touch- downs each in the first two periods for a 28 to 0 halftime lead. After a scoreless third period Iowa scored two more TDs in the last period, one on a 53 yard run by sopho- more Sammy Harris, a second string halfback. Minnesota 42, Indiana 0 MINNEAPOLIS - Resurgent Minnesota smacked Indiana 42-0 yesterday behind the second half exploits of Quarteiback Sandy Stephens and the might of its massive line. Stephens rifled a 46 yard scor- ing pass to Dick Larson early in the thir dperiod and later rammed over from the threenafter recover- ing a fumble to turn a tight game into a romp. Center Jerry Annis made a cir- cus one-hand Interception later and rambled 68 yards to score, and the Gophers topped off a five touchdown binge in the second half with a 28 yard pass from Joe Salem to Dave Lothner and Jim Rogers' one yard buck. Because of Indiana's suspen- sion for recruiting violations the. game will not count in the con- ference won-lost column. . * Wisconsin 35, Marquette 6 MADISON - Wisconsin shat- tered Marquette's upset hopes with a pair of field goals by Jim Bak- as it picked off enemy passes and grabbed fumbles to halt any scor- ing threats. The huge size of the invaders proved a detriment as Ohio's speedy backs ran through them like kids running through a woods. The Bucks picked up 274 yards rushing to Southern Cal's 69. The, Ohioans picked out four enemy passes and one fumble. Ferguson, who' scored only two touchdowns last year as a Sopho- more, broke the game open mid- way through the first period. On the first play after Ohio had taken a punt he broke over right guard and out ran four defenders in a 74-yard dash to the goal line. Illinois 33, West Virginia0 CIHAMPAIGN -- Pitch - outs jarred West Virginia's stubborn defenses' in the third quarter to- day and Illinois scored three times to wrap up a 33-0 victory in the By The Associated Press Navy 15, Washington 14 SEATTLE-A 31-yard field goal by Gregory Mather in the final 14 seconds gave Navy a 15-14 football victory over Washington's highly-favored Huskies yesterday. An overflow crowd of 57,000 sat tensely through the calm after- noon waiting for the vaunted power of Washington, third-ranked in the nation, to crush the chal- lenging Middies. But each time the Huskies ground out a touchdown, Navy's spirited crew managed to match it, although the Middies failed each time to convert. Each team had one touchdown nullified by penalties. In the first period, All-America quarterback Bob Schloredt passed to Pat Claridge in the end zone but the effort was nullified by penalties. On the next play, a fourth-down effort, Schloredt was dropped on the Navy one and the Middies took the ball on downs. Although Washington's lead was only by two points, 14-12, the Huskies appeared to have the vic- tory wrapped up in the final min- utes. But then Schloredt, back to punt, bobbled the center pass and Navy took the ball on downs at the Washington 24. Five plays later Harry Deitz tossed a 9-yard pass to Al Hughes in the end zone, but a penalty against Navy for an illegal backfield formation nullified that score. It was then, with 14 seconds remaining, that Mather booted the game-winning field goal. Syracuse 14, Kansas 7 LAWRENCE, Kan. - Syracuse spotted Kansas a 7-point lead in the early minutes, then had to pull all stops for a fourth period touchdown and. a 14-7 football victory yesterday. Syracuse marched 80 yards for its first touchdown following the second half kickoff but they failed to ruin for a 2-point conversion and trailed 7-6 going into the final period. The nation's second- ranked team needed a final tre- mendous push to settle the game. The Orangemen won it with a little more than 10 minutes re- maining when Ernie Davis, a great running halfback, wedged into the end zone from the 1-yard line. The clutch pass for 18 yards from back Dick Easterly to end Dick Reimer set up the play for Davis. Quarterback Dave Sarette passed to Davis for the 2-point conver- sion that ended the scoring in the nationally televised battle that was fiery all the way. Kansas shocked the Orangemen in the opening minutes when half- back Bert Coan swept end for 11 yards and a touchdown a couple of plays after the Jayhawks had recovered an enemy fumble on the Syracuse 21. John Suder kicked the extra point and Kansas didn't relinquish the lead until Syracuse's fourth quarter touchdown. Davis, who picked up 123 yards on 17 rushes, led the 80-yard march in the third quarter that payed off in Syracuse's first touch- down. Sarette passed the last 10 yards to Ken Ericson for the score. The Orange faked a place kick and Sarette was stopped short of the goal line in his effort to run for the conversion. Kansas lost a late bid for victory on a penalty. Curtis McClinton swept 21 yards around end and into pay dirt but the Jayhawks were called back for illegal pro- cedure. The play followed Syra- cuse's second touchdown. Syracuse had a bulkink ad- vantagen the statistics, picking up 301 yards rushing to Kansas' 68 and passing for 72 yards to the Jayhawks 68. The Orangemen's 13th con- secutive victory was scored in 84-degree weather under clear skies before a full house of 40,000. Syracuse began moving on the ground following Kansas' quick touchdown, but their passes wouldn't click. Once they would stall Kansas would take over, run three plays and then John Hadl, the Jayhawks' great Quarterback, would unload a high, long punt. Hadl's average for six punts was 47 yards, but two long ones rolled out of the end zone cutting off 40 yards. Oklahoma 15, Pittsburgh 14 NORMAN, Okla. - Oklahoma's Sooners blocked a punt early in the fourth quarter, turned it into a fast touchdown and then used PAPER-BOUND BOOKS 50 Publishers Represented PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders OVERBECK'S BOOKSTORE a bit of daring for a two-point conversion run and a 15-14 tri- umph over Pittsburgh yesterday. With their second straight de- feat staring them in the face, the Sooners surged through the Pan- ther forwards in the first minute of the, final period to block Fred Cox's punt. End Phil Lohmann was the first man through and he batted the ball down soon after it left Cox's foot. Tackle Marshall York- pounced on it on the 11-yard line and in two plays the Sooners went in for the touchdown. Fullback Gary Wylie pushed through for six yards to the five, then halfback Don Dickey broke through tackle for the final five yards and the touchdown. Trailing at that point x14-13, Oklahoma gambled for victory and won. Quarterback Bennett Watts, holding the ball for an apparent place kick attempt, turned sud- denly and streaked around his own right end for the decisive two-point conversion. Missouri 21, Penn State 8 UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.-Mis- souri's backs danced the Missouri Waltz in quicktime yesterday and gave Eastern power Penn State a sound 21-8 beating. Mel West, Donnie Smith and Norris Stevenson provided most of the footwork that shot the visiting Tigers into a 14-0 half- time lead and put the game out of reach in the final quarter after favored Penn State had scored its eight points. But the name that became most familiar to the 35,500 Homecoming Day spectators at Beaver Stadium was that ,of Missouri end Danny La Rose. It seemed that every spectacular play on offense or defense involved the six-foot four, 220-pound senior from Crystal City, Mo.- He scored the first touchdown when he gathered in a pass by quarterback Ron. Taylor for 16 yards to complete an 80-yard drive at the start of the second quarter. Before that he had recovered two fumbles by State in State ter- ritory to set up scoring threats. Florida 18, Georgia Tech 1' GAINESVILLE, Fla. - Larry Libertore, 138 pounds of quarter- back darling, led Florida to an 18-17 upset victory over Georgia Tech yesterday in a wild South- eastern Conference offensive bat- tle. Florida was never ahead until with 33 seconds to play in the final quarter Libertore went for two points on the exact point option and tossed a wobbly pass to fullback John MacBeth in the end zone. Bobby Dodd, Jr., son of the Georgia Tech coach, shared Flor- ida's quarterbacking with Liber- tore and also had a big hand in beating his dad's team by throw- ing a 32-yard pass to Don Deal in the final touchdown drive. Florida drove 85 yards for its final touchdown in the closing minutes of the game. Duke 20, Maryland 7 COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Duke used a hard running game di- rected by sohpomore quarterback Walt Rappold and a pressure de- fense yesterday to win a 20-7 foot- ball victory from Maryland. The Blue Devils hugged the ground for three touchdowns. Two came in the third quarter after Duke intercepted passes. Rappold, 200 - pounder from Beckley, W. Va., ran 11 yards for Duke's first score in the second quarter. Gary Wilson, his class- mate from Alliance, Ohio, -sprinted nine for another in the third. DaVe Burch, a junior from Can- ton, N.C., plunged a yard for the final. Maryland dented the goal, for the only time in the last quarter on a one-yard plunge by quarter- back Dale Betty. The opportunity was set up by a recovered fumble on the Duke 33. Duke resorted. to only short passes in its three scoring drives of 35, 26, and 61 yards. Their lonesome end, Tee Moorman, didn't catch a pass compared to last Saturday when he snagged 11 in Duke's 31-0 victory over. South Carolina. Duke passed only nine times, completing 4 for 37 yards, to hand Maryland its second defeat in three games. -I If 11 Hi el's SUPPER CLUB Open to All Hungry Persons Begins Sun., Oct. 2, 6 P.M. Tickets $1.00-members 75s 1429 H ILL ST. I ' _ I I it il juice potcato delicatessen sandwich chips dill pickles soft drink dessert r 'U Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at' BARGAIN PRICES New Books If You Prefer STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY U ;I Tonite!-6:00 I Newman Club Dinner Guest Speaker: FR. BRESNAHAN (and crew) of the Christophers ken and two touchdowns on pass first football meeting of the two interceptions en route to a 3 5-6 schools. victory today in a battle of in- The Illini, ranked No. 4 nation- experienced intra-state football ally, looked sluggish against the rivals. fired-i Mountaineers in the first ' half but finnally took a 7-0 lead in Ohio State 20, USC 0 the second quarter on Bill Brown's COLUMBUS - Fullback Bob four-yard off-tackle smash. It Ferguson, a 220-pounder with a ended a 54 yard drive in nine build like a fireplug, scored three plays, highlighted by John Easter- touchdowns yesterday as Ohio brook's 27-yard pass to junior end State defeated Southern Califor- Dick Newell - a battery that nia 20-0 before a crowd of 83,204, proved excellent in the last half fifth largest ever to fill the Buck- surge, eye Stadium. The Mountaineers only three Ferguson, from Troy, Ohio, ran times got beyond midfield, their through the West Coast Trojans best thrust being to the 29 against on scoring jaunts of 74, 2 and 19 Illinois' third etam in the last yards as the Southern Cal squad quarter. - for only the second time since In the first six minutes of the it started football in 1888 - lost third period the 155-pound Easter- five consecutive games, brook pitched out to junior half- Ohio's defensive team, out- back Joe Krakoski, who streaked weighed almost 20 pounds per 53 yards to score. man, turned the huge Coast club Five minutes later, Ilinois' se- into a fumbling, stumbling giant cond team rushed across the second TD, covering 61 yards in four plays and the help of a A15-yard penalty. Mel Meyers pitched out to Marshal Starks who revtersed the field and bolted MONTOYA'ds into the corner of the tchdown zone. Near the end of the third, Ann Arbor High Easterbrook passed 16hand 22 Fri., Oct. 7 yards to Newell to set up the third 8:30 P.M. tally. Purdue 51, Notre Dame 19 SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Purdue, led by alternate quarterbacks Bernie Allen and Maury Guttman, yesterday gave Notre Dame one of its worst football defeats, 51-19. Jim Tiller, fleet Boilermaker halfback, was the only two- touchdown scorer, going 30 yards in the second quarters on a pass from Allen and then running a punt back 66 yards in the same period. Allen's other contributions in- cluded a 34-yard field goal, Pur- due's final touchdown on a six- yard- run and six successful kicks for extra points. His other boot was blocked. lackNotre Dame fumbles under jar- ring Purdue tackles led to two of the winners' touchdowns and Allen's field goal. Pass intercep- tions started two other Purdue scoring drives. Notre Dame's three touchdowns were made by Bob Scarpitto on a W 64-yard run. Angelo Dabiero on a 24-yard pass from George Haff- rS ner, and sophomore quarterback Daryl Lamonica on a 6-yard keeper. L r AU in I ..-.. 'I I en MANCE 164$"..x Open Daily 9 to 5:30 'I I i BLACK MARTI? cordovan leather The popular new olive-bi combination for fall. All of the tough rugged scuff-proc characteristics of cordovan in a nee shade that complements the color in the fall clothes. s " s 11 III ii ' I I III II