THE MICHIGAN DAILY TEN ROUNDUP: linnesota Routs Favored Hawkeyes, 27-10 Blue Devis Surprise Middi Army Overpowers Syracus By The Associated Press rNNEAPOLIS-Avenging Min- ta, redeeming years of humili- a with 60 minutes of savage bal, struck down Iowa's No. nked Hawkeyes 27-10 yester- and thundered into the fore-. t of the nation's gridiron illback Roger Hagberg drove niesota partisans in the record aorial Stadium crowd of 65,610 near hysteria with seven min- left by steaming 42 yards for clincher touchdown. sealed Minnesota's most glori- football moment in two de- s, a victory which shot the eaten third - ranked Gophers the undisputed lead in the Ten and stretched their win- i streak to seven games. inutes after Hagberg scored game breaker, the Gophers ed another touchdown in .an ost unbelievable finish to a e that sent Minnesota soaring from the ruins of three consecu- tive seasons of disaster. The Gophers ganged Iowa soph- omore Matt Szykowny, forcing him to fumible, recovered the ball and boomed Joe Salem over from the 1 yard line for the final touch- down with four minutes left. It was the third Gopher score that came as a result of a recovered fumble. Trailing 10-7 after the speedy Hawks charged 55 yards in six plays for a touchdown early in the second half, the. Gophers rallied by churning 81 yards for the go- ahead touchdown. Sandy Stephens scored from the 1 over Minnesota's magnificent 240 pound guard, Tom Brown. Tom Moore kicked a 28 yard field goal for Iowa in the second period before the Hawks gained the lead in the third quarter on Joe Williams' 20 yard blast, but it was Iowa's final overture. MSU 17, Purdue 13 LAFAYETTE - Michigan State quarterback Tom Wilson scored a touchdown, passed for one, and tossed a conversion pass for a 17-13 victory over Purdue yester- day. Art Brandstatter caught the 13- yard touchdown pass and kicked a 28-yard field goal. Fred Arbanas rounded out the miscellaneous Spartan scoring by catching a conversion pass. Michigan State had to get its winning touchdown in the last three minutes to offset the feats of Roy Walker, Purdue's 213- pound sophomore fullback from North Olmstead, Ohio. Walker, who had never carried, the ball in a varsity game, scored two touchdownsrafter veteran Wil- lie Jones was hurt on the first play. The big sophomore got both on short plunges but he set up the first with an 11-yard run and an 11-yard pass from Bernie Allen. Fullback George Saimes of Michigan State, another third stringer, was the big man in the 99-yard drive that won for the Spartans in the closing minutes. After Michigan State held for downs on its one-yard mark, Wil- son broke away for 40 yards, then carried on eight of 10 plays to fourth, fifth and sixth stringers in the late going. Indiana scored with two minutes to go on a 22- yard pass play. Ohio gained 223 yards on the ground and 171 through the air in piling up 29 first downs. The Hoosiers with four first downs exactly doubled the net yards they gained rushing. In addition to the two yards on the ground Indiana passed for 58 more and a total gain of 60 yards against Ohio's 394. " * s NW Blasts Badgers MADISON-Northwestern un- leashed a bruising ground attack for three first half touchdowns and bottled up Wisconsin's vaunt- ed passing game in rolling over the Badgers, 21-0, yesterday in the 47th renewal of a Big Ten rivalry. The Wildcats, smoothly direct- ed by Dick Thornton and power- ed by the line smashes of Mike Stock, struck for scores on march- es of 83, 46 and 66 yards in spoil- ing Wisconsin's Homecoming Day before a crowd of 61,730. The Wildcats fumbled on their second running play after taking a punt, but quickly regained the ball on a recovery and roared down-field to score in 19 plays, with Stock banging over. IMi~leijapo i MASS MEETING JNDAY, NOVEMBER 6 7:15 HILLEL r I I I By The Associated Press DURHAM, N.C. - Mighty Navy suddenly became a fumbling giant in the second half as Duke struck for two touchdowns and a field goal to crumble the Middies' dreams of an - unbeaten season, 19-10, yesterday. A wildly cheering overflow crowd of 46,000, largest here since 1952,; saw Duke capitalize on recovered fumbles after the Blue Devils had been frustrated by miscues in the- first half. The victory, Duke's sixth against a 31-6 loss to Michigan, boosted the Blue Devils' hopes of a possible post-season Orange Bowl bid. Duke Scores Duke slammed 59 yards for a third period touchdown after hav- ing recovered a Navy fumble. Full- back Dave Burch crashed over from the one. Duke scored again a short time later when halfback Dean Wright crashed over from the seven. Two- point conversions were made each time. Sophomore halfback Billy Rey- nolds booted a 35-yard field goal for Duke early in the fourth period after a Navy fumble was recovered on the Middies' 37. * * * Army 9, Syracuse 6 NEW YORK-A fighting Army team, which pounced on every break, handed defending national champion Syracuse its second straight defeat, 9-6, yesterday in a fierce football game decided by a 29-yard field goal by quarterback Tom Blanda. The game, played before a crowd of 66,000 at Yankee Stadium, ended in wild hysteria with Army on the Syracuse 1-foot line after a pass interception by Roger Zail- skas ended the last Syracuse threat. With an iron man fullback, Al Rushatz, playing a powerful role, Army went 50 yards in the second period to set up the field goal by Blanda. In thethird period, the aroused. Cadets went 68 yards on 16 plays, using up more than eight minutes of the clock, with sub quarterback Dick Eckert scoring from the two. "We aim to please you 1 ! Sit back, relax as we cut your hair to your liking. 10 Haircutters THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre Outcharged through most of the regionally televised game, Syracuse stormed back for a- touchdown early in the fourth period on the pounding hoofs of Art Baker and Ernie Davis. Missouri Rallies To Win COLUMBIA, Mo.--The Missouri- Tigers spotted Colorado's fired-up, Buffaloes a six-point lead in the Conference Footban champion- ship yesterday with a 26-yard field goal 25 seconds before the game's end to beat tenth-ranked Rice 3-0. * * * Pitt Whips Notre Dame SOUTH BEND - Notre Dame's proud football history hit a low mark yesterday as Pittsburgh's rugged Panthers, clawing for two third - period touchdowns, tri- umphed 20-13 and anchored the battling, courageous Irish witi their longest losing streak in his- tory, six straight. Florida Upsets Georgia JACKSONVILLE-Florida upset Georgia 22-14 yesterday on the power running of Don Goodman and clever quarterbacking of Larry Libertore and Bobby Dodd, Jr. A record crowd of 48,000 in the newly enlarged Gator Bowl sat in disbelief as Florida scored two touchdowns before Georgia could run an offensive play. * . * Washington Shuts Out USC LOS ANGELES - Washington floored the Southern California Trojans 'with two touchdowns in they first four minutes and then roared on toward the Rose Bowl today on the heels of a 34-6 vic- tory. ,Fullback Ray Jackson scored the first touchdown in 2:21 after the Huskies had jarred the ball loose from Trojan Nick McLean on the kickoff. It took five plays to score. * * 4 * Yale Stays Unbeaten NEW HAVEN, Conn.-Powerful Yale .pulverized Pennsylvania 34-9 for its seventh straight football triumph yesterday and remained undefeated and untied in what could be the Blue's best season since 1923 when they had an 8-0 mark. NFL Standings WESTERN DIVISION SI EUWI.IT' State St. at North U. ROGER HAGBERG ... big gun for Gophers carry across the game-winning points with a minute left. Saimes choked off a last ditch Allen aerial attack by intercepting a pass on the State 26. OSU 36, Indiana 7 COLUMBUS-Ohio State piled up terrific yardage and a 36-7 victoryover the hapless and al- most helpless Hoosiers of Indiana yesterday but can't count a bit of it in the Big Ten standings or statistics. The boisterous Buckeyes built up a 27-0 halftime lead and then coasted to the coiquest with Green B Baltim Chicago San Fra Detroit Los An Dallas Clevela: Philade New Yo St. Loui Pittsbu Washin W Bay 4 ore 4 3 ancisco 3 1 geles 1 o EASTERN W nd 4 Iphia 4 ork 3 is , 3 rgh 2, .gton 1 L T Pct. PF PA 1 0 .800 137 74 2 0 .667 176 96 2 1 .600 116 142- 3 0 .500 95 115 4 0 .200-94 135 4 1 .200 146 180 6 0 .000 91 193 DIVISION L T Pct. PF PA 1 0 .800 177 92 1 0 .800 141 132 1 1 .750 112 94 3 0 .500 130 137 3 1 .400 139 135 Z' 2 .333 87 116, - FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 8-8014 We Have All Kinds of Glass-Mirrors and Furniture Tops We Have the Nationally Advertised Paints Also; we have complete glass service for foreign cars. TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at San Francisco . Green Bay at Baltimore Los Angeles at Dallas New, York at Cleveland Pittsburgh at Philadelphia Washington at St. Louis Chicago-Bye TOM BLANDA engineers Army victory first quarter, then charged back for a 16-6 victory to take over first place in the Big Eight Cham- pionshi football race yesterday.-x The Tigers, ranked No. 2 na- tionally, gained their eighth vic- tory of the season and fifth in the, Big Eight with a 49-yard drive in the second period and a spec- tacular 55-yard punt return by little Norman Beal in the third. A desperation passing effort by Colo- rado in the*closing minutes back- fired into a Missouri safety. s s Arkansas Edges Rice LITTLE ROCK-Mickey Cissell kicked the Arkansas Razorbacks into position for a Southwest GET GASTRONOMIC GRATIFICATION of Pro Scores NBA Los Angeles 112, Syracuse 110 Philadelphia 130, Detroit 123 Cincinnati 113, Boston 104 St. Louis 119, New York 104 NHL Montreal 4, Chicago 4 Toronto 7, New York 3 I II I Free Parking in Front of Our Store HILLEL'S SUPPER CLUB every Sunday night 6:00 P.M. 1429 HILL STREET WE -HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 75 YEARS I . _--- J _ _ _ I- mportant Mass eeting Sunday, ov. 6 Discussion of EXTRA-CURRICULAR ACTIVITIES Some Activities With comments by: That are sponsored by the STUDENT ACTIVITIES OFFICE of the MICHIGAN UNION: WALTER "BUD" REA, Dean of Men PERRY W. MORTON, President of Michigan Union I / World's Fair An opportunity to join Student Activities Offices of THE MICHIGAN UNION Union Jazz Concert P Creative Arts Festival And nearly Come to the too Orientation, U-Day, and M-Day SO more..... k Michiaan Union. III. -