ROUND THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAOE A)LL] up: Southern Powers Win Easily; To arhee Trip Terps Ohio State, Iowa Win Big Ten Opener By The Associated Press Three traditional powerhouses of southern football-Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana State-- ripped through the opposition with little difficulty yesterday while previously unbeaten Maryland suf- fered the only upset handed to one of the nation's top ten teams. Ole Miss, top-ranked in the latest Associated Press poll, clob- bered hopeful Houston 47-7; third-ranked Alabama took North Carolina State 26-7; and come- back-bound LSU murdered South Carolina 42-0. Maryland, which climbed to the No. ten spot only this week, was the victim of its own fumbles and North Carolina, 14-8. Underdog Houston ripped to the first touchdown given up by Mis- sissippi this season but the na- tion's No. 1 team trampled. the fired-up Cougars in a merciless second half. yesterday. An awesome combination of brute power and fancy passing crumbled the Houston defense. The Rebels picked up two touch- downs running and five by air. End Woody Dabbs led the Ole Miss scoring with two, taking a 21-yard pass from quarterback Doug Elmore fo rthe first, and snagging a 25-yard pass from quarterback Glynn Griffing for the second. The Rebels broke Houston apart in the third quarter with Elmore, fullback Billy Ray Adams, 250- lb tackle Jim Dunaway and guard Bookie Bolin, a 222 pounder, do- ing the hard-nose work. Alabama fell behind on the scoreboard for the first time this season, then rallied on the bulls- eye passing of Pat Trammell and walloped North Carolina State. Trammell, a senior quarterback, passed 12 yards to Richard Wil- liamson for Alabama's first touch- dwn and two yards to Bill Battle for the second, wiping out a North Carolina lead that first stood at 7-0 and then at 7-6. Trammell got Bama's third touchdown on a five-yard run in the fourth quarter, giving the heavily favored Crimson Tide its first semblance of safe lead.' South Carolina could not cope College Scores GRID PICKS SCORES Michigan State 28, Michigan 0 Arkansas 23, Baylor 13 Florida State 3, Georgia 0 Iowa 27, Indiana 8 North Carolina 14, Maryland $1 Minnesota 10, Northwestern 3 Notre Dame 30, Southern California 0 Army 10, Penn State 6 Ohio State 44, Illinois 0 Arizona 15 Oregon 6 Purdue 19, Miami (.) 6 Rice 19, Florida 10 Texas 28, Oklahoma 7 Wisconsin 23, Oregon state 20 Georgia Tech 21, Duke 0 Kentucky 21, Kansas State 8 Princeton 9, Pennsylvania 3 Louisiana State 42, So. Carolina 0 California 21, Washington 14 Michigan Union 8, Michigan Daily 6 OTHER SCORES West Virginia 20, Pittsburgh 6 Columbia 11, Yale 0 Colgate 15, Harvard 0 Navy 31, Cornell 7, Kansas 21, Iowa State 7 Missouri 10, Oklahoma State 0 Syracuse 28, Nebraska 6 Tennessee 52, Tulsa 6 Wake Forest 17, Clemson 13 Virginia 14, VMI 7 Mississippi 47, Houston 7 Auburn 35, Chattanooga 7 Indiana (Pa.) 14, Slippery Rock 7 UCLA 28, Vanderbilt 21 Stanford 17,'San Jose State 6 Texas Tech 10, Texas Christian 0 "Keep A-Head of your Hair" We specialize in . PERSONALITY CUTS « CREW-CUTS . FLAT TOPS . O PRINCETONS try- THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre with the brilliant play of LSU backs Jerry Stovall, Jimmy Field and Wendell Harris and the alert defensive work of such lineman as tackle Bob Richards, who set up two touchdowns with fumble re- coveries. The first LSU score came in the opening period when Jim Costen's pitchout to Billy Gambrell bob- bled free and was smothered by Richards on the South Carolina 12. - Burly Bo Campbell slammed his way from there to the 3. After three futile rushes Earl Gros col- lected the required several inches for the touchdown. Richards recovered' another bad pitchout, this one from Dave Sowell, in the second period on the 1. Fullback Buddy Hamic took it over. In other games Texas used !Ok- lahoma mistakes and the passing and running of Mike Cotten and Jim Saxton for a 28-7 victory. It was Texas' fourth straight in the ancient intersectional football series. 'Oklahoma was inept but fighting AAU Oay Policy Shift~ SAN FRANCISCO (P)-President N. J. Barack of the Amateur Ath- letic Union declared yesterday the embattled organization will be re- vitalized and changesmade where necessary. Barack has said an effort to cause a split in administration of amateur athletics is being led by "one college association and a small vocal group of college coaches.declared: "I offer an invita- tion to any group, any organiza- tion or any group of men with a proposal of any kind to further athletic competition in the United States, to come forward. We will discuss it and will be most grateful and willing to adopt it." He frowned, however, at a three- point package program proposed by a southern California group to liberalize rules concerning, amateur athletics. Darrell Smith of 'San Diego, speaking for the Pacific Southwest Association, outlined these pro- posals: a professional in one sport might compete as amateur in others; persons who sell sport- ing goods would no longer lose amateur status; remove the re- striction against persons receiving payment for loss of time or wages and none of Texas' touchdowns came real easy. However, only when Texas put in its reserves was Oklahoma able to score. Ray Poage blocked Ronny Payne's kick that led to a touch- down, the ball bouncing out on the Oklahoma six. Cotten scored the next two touchdowns. He set up the first with his passing, tossing to BrettI Moses for 26 and to Jack Collins for 22. A blocked punt in the final three minutes set up the winning touchdown as California's under- dog Bears upset the defending champion Washington Huskies 21- 14 in their Big Five Conference opener. California guard John Erby "broke through and knocked down a fourth down punt by Dave Kopay at the Huskies' 17. Three plays later sub quarterback Larry Balliet scooted left end for six yards and the touchdown that brought California victory. Jim Ferguson booted his third straight By The Associated Press Michigan State, Iowa,~ Ohio State, and Minnesota were victori- ous yesterday in Big Ten confer- ence games. The Spartans shut out tradi- tional rival Michigan 28-0; Iowa smashed Indiana's winless Hoos- iers 27-8; the Buckeyes trounced Illinois 44-0; and Minnesota won the closest conference game of the afternoon, defeating Northwestern 10-3. In non-conference action both Wisconsin and Purdue were vic- torious. The Badgers Just edged Oregon State 23-20, while the Boilermakers beat Miami of Ohio 19-6. Top Big Ten With their defeat of Michigan the Spartans hold down first place in the Big Ten standings with a 2-0 record. The Spartans play a total of seven Big Ten games this season, one more than any of their rivalsd who scored two touchdowns. kicked a 22-yard field goal. All and loom as the team to beat now. Third-team halfback Mike McDon- Minnesota's scoring was in After a very close call against ald scored the last Iowa tally. third period. Gopher fullba Southern Cal last weekend, Iowa, Indiana's Don Cromer accounted Judge Dickson accounted for without theservices of quarterback for the Hoosiers lone score with a other scoring as he kicked Wilburn Hollis and halfback Larry j three-yard run. touchdown extra point and a Ferguson, had no trouble against the Hoosiers. Matt Szykowny, fill- ing in for Hollis, completed 13 for 22 passes for 128 yards to lead the Hawkeye attack. Undefeated Iowa was equally paced by halfback Joe Williams Ferguson Scores All-America fullback Bob Fergu- son scored four times to lead the Buckeye rout. After a scoreless first quarter, Ohio State exploded, scoring 21 points in the second quarter and 16 more in the third period. Ferguson made his touchdowns the easy way. He went over from the one-yard line, twice from the two-yard line, and once from the three-yard line. The Buckeye triumph was their most impressive in 50 years of combat with Illinois. The 44-point total was matched only by the 1942 Nation1al Champion Ohio State team which won 44-20. yard field goal. Wisconsin, leading 23-0 at t half, just squeaked out a victo as the fired-up Beavers tallied f 20 points in the second half. Only half of the Miller an Richter combination played form yesterday. Quarterback Ro Miller completed 15 of 28 pass for 216 yards. Miller scored o: touchdown himself with a two ya run. He threw an eight-yard pa to Ron Staley for another. Jh Nettles plunged over from the fo to account for the other Badg score. Baker to Johnson Terry Baker, Oregon State highly-touted talback, passed Roger Johnson for two of tY Beaver's touchdowns. In spite of the comparatively l score, Purdue had an easy tir with Miam of Ohio. Only once'd the Redskins get inside the Purd 45 yard line, and that was at t. end of the game when they score The Boilermakers gained 1 yards rushing and 149 yards pas ing as compared to Miami's yards '-on the ground and 80 yar via the air route. conversion.j Syracuse seized on pass inter-. ceptions as weapons both of de- fense and offense, converted two of them into early touchdowns, and raced to a 28 to 6 inter- sectional football triumph over Nebraska. Syracuse end Walt Sweeney, grabbed one interception and raced 49 yards to a touchdown. Ernie Davis scored two of the Syracuse touchdowns, the 26th and 27th of his Syracuse career, setting a new. school record. Nebraska's commendable ground game was nullified repeatedly by aerial boo-boos. Everybody Scores In addition to Ferguson's close- in scores, sophomore Paul Warfield tallied on a 36-yard run and Ken Johnson pulled in an 11-yard scor- ing pass from John Mummey. Dick VanRaaphorst booted all six con- versions, and the other two points came via a safety when Illinois' punter Doug Mills was caught in the end zone. Northwestern's sophomore full- back Bill Swingle, the hero of the two previous Wildcat wins, was the goat in yesterday's game. Swingle fumbled on his own 11- yard line to set up Minnesota's only, touchdown. Sandy Stephens, the Gopher quarterback, scored via a one-yard plunge. Field Goal The Wildcats took the lead in the first period when Dave Damm Big Ten Michigan State Iowa Ohio State Minnesota Wisconsin Northwestern Purdue MICHIGAN iinois Indiana Standings W L Pct 2 0 1.00( 1 0 1.000 1 0 1.00 1 0 1.00( 1 1 .50( 1 1 .50C 0 0 .00C 0 1 .00C 0 2 .000. 0 2 .000 -AP Wirephoto AROUND THE CORNER-Northwestern back Bill Swingle (36) carries ball for a six-yard gain as Minnesota's tackle Bobby Bell moves in to down himn (nthe first quarter. Northwestern tackle Pete Echols (75) blocks out Minnesota guard Jim McAlpine (69). 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