THlE MICHIGAN DAILY urdue Stuns Iowa as Upsets Prevail in Big Ten 4 ,, ed the last foot for a touchdown. DiGravio hit halfback Tom Bloom with a 19-yard pass and halfback Dave Miller with a short one in in the important nearly drive, and a 15-yard Iowa penalty helped considerably. The field steadily deteriorated into a swamp, and the only other scoring was Skip Ohl's 27-yard field goal late in the third quar- ter. It, too, was set up by an Iowa mistake--halfback Bernard Wy- att's fumble which Purdue guard Stan Szurek pushed into the mud at the Iowa 43. A 12-yard run ny halfback Tom I Bloom helped set up the goal. A fumble prevented Ohl from com- pleting a conversion kick on the Purdue touchdown and he was smeared in an attempt to run it.' The 47-degree morass complete- Iy stymied Iowa's swift backs. They made only 101 yards on the ground to Purdue's 140. Iowa had an 84-48 margin by .passing, largely because of a beautiful 31- yard catch by sophomore end Cloyd Webb in the last couple of minutes. Purdue sub quarterback Don Meyer intercepted another Szykowny pass at the Purdue 29 in the Hawks' deepest penetration of Purdue territory, with a little under four minutes to go. Iowa didn't pass Purdue's 45- yard line until the final period. The Hawkeyes last failed to score in the final game of the 1952 season against Notre Dame. That was 78 games back in his- tory. Their smallest score this year had been 27 points against Indiana. Northwestern's Larry Benz toss- ed his only completed passes of the season, and both went for touchdowns as the Wildcats took over where Michigan State left off last week. A spectacular 50-yard pass play from Benz to Bill Stinson provid- ed Northwestern's first touchdown early in the second half and the payoff toss was a short 7-yard basketball heave to Albert Kim- brough midway in the final quar- ter. The triumph was the third straight for Northwestern over No- tre Dame in the renewed series and kept Coach Ara Parseghian's rec- ord of never having lost to the Irish. Northwestern, kept from scor- ing touchdowns in its last two games against Minnesota and Ohio State, recorded its third victory against two losses. A °crowd of 59,075 saw the Irish suffer their second successive defeat after tri- umphing in their first three games. MSU Only Undefeated Team Michigan State remained the only Big Ten team to be undefeat- ed and untied with a smashing win over hapless Indiana. The outcome was expected al-! though a higher score had been predicted. The victory leaves Michigan State among the Big Ten leaders and a standout candidate for a Rose Bowl bid. The Spartans looked unspirited in the first half except for a 59- yard scoring drive made the first time MSU got the ball. Fullback Ron Hatcher bulled in from the one for the touchdown. Michigan State buckled down to business and delighted the homecoming crowd of 55,361 with four more efficient scores in the. second half. MSU powered 60 yards for one touchdown in four plays as Carl Charon scampered 48 yards for the score. George Saimes, the As- sociated Press back of the week last week, ran six yards for an- other. Quarterback Pete Smith, back on the Indiana 49, hit end Lonnie Sanders with a pass on the 20 and he skipped into the end zone from there., First string fullback Roger Lopes -AP wirephato BURY THE BALL-CARRIER-Indiana players swarm over Michigan State fullback Ron Hatcher (46) in the 35-0 Michigan State rout of Indiana. Hatcher here scores the Spartan's first goal on a one- yard plunge in the first period. Te was turned around and pushed back but still crossed the goal line. This victory gave the Spartans a 3-0 Big Ten record. shook off two tacklers and.went minded Badgers before a home- I payoff maneuver. A 2-point con- Bear-Colt Battle Looms as Only Tossup seven yards for the final touch- down to cap a 51-yard march that took only seven plays. Aerial Bombardment Ohio State withstood a Wiscon- sin aerial bombardment from Wis- consni's Ron Miller to grind out a 30-21 victory. . With Coach Woody Hayes call- ing most of the plays by use of a messenger, the Buckeyes put on a brilliant display of ball control in posting their fourth straight triumph since an opening 7-7 deadlock with Texas Christian. Ohio State rolled to a 10-0 lead, then had to fight off the passing wizardry of Miller, who tossed for two touchdowns and scored once himself. But the Buck- eyes' crunching overland attack proved too much for the upset- coming crowd of 58,411. The Buckeyes, who had sur- rendered a mere 10 points in four previous outings, scored on a 63- yard- march the first time they had the ball. All-America fullback Bob Ferguson was shaken up on the third play but-his substitute, Dave Katterhenrich, took over. Katterhenrich carried 8 times fbr 47 yards in the 14-play scor- ing surge. He capped the move by bursting over right guard on a quick opener and racing 17 yards into the end zone. Dick Van Raapiorst booted a 23-yard field goal in the second period before Miller 'unlimbered his arm. Miller, whose receivers had a bad case of dropsy in the early going, pitched with pinpoint accuracy and finally connected with Gary Kroer on a 36-yard version on a passmade the count 10-8. Ohio State rebounded by going 64 yards in 16 plays for another touchdown. Ferguson came back to spark the advance, carrying 7 times to account for 52 yards. Bob Klein took the scoting honor by sweeping right end from 8 yards out. Illionis made a long and excit- ing journey in a vain attempt to escape the football wilderness- but Southern California hung on to win, 14-10. Southern Cal's Trojans went in- to the game as two-touchdown favorites, but had to come from behind in the third quarter. Soph- omore quarterback Pete Beathard took to the air in a 55-yard scor- ing drive to turn the trick. touchdowns. He is third in the league among pass receivers., Dallas after a fast start is now settling down. They have a 3-3 record, and have lost their last two games, one to the Giants. The Forty-niners, after being smothered by Bears, will attempt a comeback against the Pitts- burghSteelers. The Steelers have been probably the most unlucky team in the League. They have lost several close games, and their quarterback, Bobby Layne. Sari Francisco will again use their colorful shotgun, with Bill Kilmer (the runner), John Brodie (the passer) and Bill Waters (who does both) alternating at the tail- back slot. Crow Returns The Cardinals will have their all-pro halfback John David Crow returning to action after being- out with an injury for the first six games. The Browns likewise will have theirsstar halfback Bobby Mitchell returning after an injury, sustained last week. The other games show Phila- delphia a strong favorite over Washington; likewise Green Bay is strongly favored over Minneso- ta; Detroit is not the big favorite, but is still picked to defeat Los Angeles. Ole Miss,' LSU Post Strong Wins By The Associated Press UNIVERSITY, Miss. - Potent Mississippi launched a massive attack and the second - ranked Rebels rolled to a 47-0 victory over outmanned Vanderbilt yesterday in a lackluster Southeastern Con- ference football game. The Rebels, starting slower than at many times this season, showed little punching across one touch- down in each of the first two per- iods, then picked up the tempo against the tiring Vanderbilt team after intermission. Ole Miss, probably looking ahead to next week's encounter with seventh.- ranked Louisiana State, looked lifeless but had too much manpower and talent for Vander- bilt. 7 The scoring parade featured two touchdowns by Reb fullback Billy Ray Adams and one each by end Wes Sullivan, halfback A. J. Hol- loway, end Ralph Smith and quar- terbacks Doug Elmore and Perry Lee Dunn. * * * GAINESVILLE, Fla.-Dramatic touchdown bursts by Ray Wlkins and Dwight Robinson sparked na- tionally ranked Louisiana State to a 23-0 football victory over South- eastern Conference rival Florida. yesterday.t The triumph was the fifth fn a row for LSU, unbeaten since a season opening loss to Rice and ranked seventh in the Associated Press national poll. Florida, taking its second loss, has three victories, two defeats and a tie. Halfback Wilkins capped an 88- yard scoring drive by racing 33 yards for a touchdown,in the sec- ond period. Quarterback Robinson, a defensive specalist, intercepted a Florida 'pitchout minutes later and sprinted 25 yards for another.. The fast and furious LSU Tigers added more glitter to their na- tional reputation by covering 86. yards after intermission in only five plays for a third score on the bulls-eye passing of quarterback Lynn Amedee. Amedee pitched 16 yards to end Danny Neumann for the touch- down to the dismay of a Florida homecoming crowd of 46,000,. -I J' * V - - 'i { r down passes in the second period yesterday to lead Penn State to a come - from - behind victory over California yesterday. Trailing 10-3 at the start of the second period, Hall hit speedy halfback Roger Kochman for a 36-yards scoring play and then fired a two-point pass to end Bob Mitinger to put the Nittany Lions. permanently in front less than three minutes after the period began. Late in the quarter halfback Hal Powell, a sophomore from Lewistown, caught California's deep defenses napping. He was wide open at the California 25 when Hall threw a pass his way. and he continued across the goal unhampered to complete a 51-yard touchdown play. * * * SYRACUSE - Led by Ernie Davis' two touchdowns, Syracuse crushed Holy Cross yesterday 34-6. The Syracuse line stymied the Holy Cross passing attack and opened holes for a platoon of backs. Pays scored first for the Orange, bolting 13 yards through the Holy Cross team in capping a 53-yard drive in 11 plays. In the third period, the fleet and powerful Davis put on, a one-man advance of 51 yards. Davis took a punt on the Syracuse 49 and raced to the Holy Cross 25. Then he peeled off 24 yards before being knocked out of bounds on the one, and on the next play, he bulled over for the score. Holy Cross' only sustained march, 80 yards on 7 plays, was sparked by the pin-point passes of quarterback Pat McCarthy. Mc- Carthy threw four times, the last on a 46-yard play to Barry Tyne. * * * COLUMBIA, S.C.--South Caxo- lina combined a newfound offense with sound defense yesterday to upset heavily favored Maryland 20-10 in an atlantic Coast Con- ference football game. South Carolina scored twice on short passes, both thrown by quar- terback Jim Costen. One went for; four yards to halfback Bill Gam- brell. The other was a six-yarder; to end John Caskey. Gambrell also scored another on an 11-yard run. John Hannigan kicked a 26-yard field goal for Maryland in the first period after Gambrell's scoring run. Then quarterback Dick Shiner flipped a nine-yard pass to end Gary Collins early in the second quarter to give the Terps a brief lead, 10-6. But then came ,Cos- ten's scoring toss to Gambrell and South Carolina had the game in the bag before it was half over. * * * ' AUBURN, Ala. - Quarterback Bobby Hunt's brilliant passing game gave Auburn a promised new offensive weapon yesterday and cleared the way for a 24-14 grid- iron victory over a Clemson team that refused . to budge on the ground. The 180-pound senior from La- nett, Ala. tried only 3 passes but completed all of them for long gains which put the Auburn Plainsmen within scoring range. Coach Ralph Jordan had warned after Auburn's 7-6 loss to Georgia Tech last week that his charges had finally found a' passing for- mnula and would be tough in the air. Hunt fulfilled that promise. Clemson came to Auburn with a dreaded passing attack of its own, but it couldn't overcome a stub- born home-team defense. * * * NEW ORLEANS-Quarterbacks Stan Gann and Billy Lothridge and a mightly Georgia Tech line smothered Tulane 35-0 before 20,000 homecoming fans yesterday as the highly-ranked Engineers rolled to their fifth victory of the football season. Tech, ranked ninth in this week's Associated Press poll, scored by almost every. method possible and kept Tulane bottled up throughout the rain-soaked afternoon; The Engineers rolled up a quick lead in the first nine minutes, marching 57 yards in 12 plays with halfback Zollie Sircy circling left end from the 10 for the score. Six minutes later, Lothridge spotted halfback Joe Auer with a pass down the sidelines and Auer sped in the end zone on a 57-yard play. a UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.-Galen Hall completed two long touch- TI '. I, A ede ted QLLafiic tclen at t /9rice3 . 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