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A.. .1 .":.*...... . . ._: . : TUSCALOOSA (A) - Defensive specialist Lee Roy Jordan scored the winning touchdown and bul- warked an awesome Alabama de- fense yesterday as the Crimson Tide whipped Houston 14-3 in a blistering intersectional football game. For the second straight game, Alabama had to come from behind to win. A brilliant pass intercep- tion and runback by Houston half- back Gene Ritch set up a 30-yard Cougar field goal by Bill McMillan -late in the first period. But the top-ranked Alabamians erased the deficit and went ahead early in the second quarter when the Houston center passed the ball over the head of fullback Bobby Brenzina as he went back to punt. Brenzina grabbed the ball in the end zone, but 'Bama end Charles Stephens shook the ball loose and Jordan grabbed it. The Tide scored again midway in the third, marching 65 yards in 12 plays. The rugged Alabama defense held Houston to a minus 49 yards rushing and only plus 45 in the air. Alabama was knocking at the Houston goal as the game ended, but the drive faltered on the four where Houston took over. Alabama has now run its un- beaten string to 22. The closest Houston came to penetrating the 'Bama goal on the ground was the 18 early in the 'game when the Cougars snared a fumble by soph quarterback Joe Namath. Houston set up for a field goal but the center passed the bal over the quarterback's head and Alabama end Bill Battle nailed him on the Alabama 28. Quarterback Billy Roland and Brenzina carried the offensive load for Houston, but the Cougars could never completely elude Jordan and his hard-tackling buddies. Longhorns Triumph DALLAS (A )-Texas, the nation's. second ranked team, used two Ok- lahoma fumbles for a 9-6 victory to roll on unbeaten and untied through four games. The game erupted into a free-. for-all fight just seconds before; the close when Rick McCurdy, Ok- lahoma 'end, and Tommy Lucas,' Texas end, exchanged blows. Both benches rushed onto the field and some occasional blows were struck, but the pending riot was soon; settled. One Oklahoma fumble set up a 26-yard field goal by Tony Crosby and the other led to a Texas touch- down when the ball rolled into the end zone and Perry McWilliams recovered it. Oklahoma got its touchdown oni the passing of Ronald Fletcher, who threw twice to Lanze Rentzel] for 73 yards. The payoff was a 34-, yard pitch into the end zone. All the scoring came in the sec-9 ond period and Texas spent the last half bottling the Sooners upa in their own territory with a grit- ty defense and the great kicking of young Ernie Koy.7 A crowd of 75,504-the seven- teenth straight sellout-watched1 the game played under lowering skies in the Cotton Bowl. Oklahoma had the better offense and appeared to have the better all-around team but couldn't over- come its errors in the clutch. * * * Nittany Lions Upset WEST POINT ()--Opportunist Army pounced on a fourth period fumble and scored on a 15-yard1 pass from quarterback Cammy Lekis to Dick Peterson yesterday3 for a 9-6 upset victory over Penn State, ranked third nationally. The fiercely played game ended in utter confusion. Twice the ex- cited gray-uniformed cadet corpsI rushed out on the field premature-r ly and had to be removed before< the last play could be run off. Ar- my and Penn State players ex- changed blows in a wild melee that brought both coaches off the bench just before the final gun. The previously unbeaten Nit- tany Lions were leading 6-3 on field goals of 32 and 24 by Ron Coates when Tom Kerns, center on Army's brazen Chinese Bandits, grabbed a ball on the Penn State 18 which had slipped from the hands of halfback Junior Powell. After two running plays had picked up only three yards and a pass had gone incomplete, Lewis, son of the late West Virginia foot- ball coach, hit Peterson with a scoring pass in the end zone. A pass attempt for the extra point failed. Army's other score in the bit- terly waged battle before a record homecoming crowd of 31,000 at Michie Stadium came on a 35-yd. field goal in the fading seconds of the opening period by Dick Heydt. * * * Huskies Squeak By PORTLAND (P)-The Washing- ton Huskies, frustrated for three quarters, got a break in the final quarter and eked out a 14-13 foot- ball victory over Oregon State's surprising Beavers yesterday. An Oregon State fumble gave the Huskies their chance in mid-field with time ticking out they drove 60 yards with halfback Charley Mitchell plunging over for a touch- down. Place kicker Jim Martin added the winning point with less than three minutes remaining. The Huskies consistently had trouble with Oregon State's de- fense. When it appeared they were bogging down again, Mitchell gave them the necessary lift. He was in- jured earlier in the game but came+ back in with the ball on Oregon State's 13. He carried it three consecutive times, the last one for two yards and the touchdown. Washington was ranked No. 7 in the nation and Oregon State was unranked, but quarterback Terry Baker almost pulled out an upsetj for the Staters.+ After a scoreless first quarter he led the team 80 yards, passing3 the final 6 to his favorite tar-1 ket, end Vern Burke, for a touch- down. Washington came back with a 43-yard scoring run by sophomore fullback Junior Coffey. He plunged into the center of the line, broke through the arms of three tacklers,1 and went the rest of the way un- touched. Razorbacks Rugged 1 FAYETTEVILLE, Ark.()-The undefeated Arkansas Razorbacks,1 with quarterback Billy Moore the key both in the air and on the1 ground, turned back Baylor 28-21 yesterday but only after experienc- ing a frightening second half. The Razorbacks piled up a 28-7 lead in the first half only to have Baylor come back after intermis- sion with its own passing attack behind quarterback Don Trull and terrorize them with a 29-yard touchdown aerial followed quick- ly by another score on the ground. The victory was Arkansas' fourth+ and its second in Southwest Con-J ference play where it is shooting for its four straight year as cham- pion or co-champion.1 Trull rocked the Razorbacks with the help of great receiving by Claude Pearson, James Ingram and1 Ronnie Goodwin. Goodwin spear- ed the 29-yard touchdown toss inl the third period. He also scored soon afterwards on a four-yard run. * * *O Maryland Undefeated' CHAPEL HILL ()-Undefeated Maryland rode the crisp passing of quarterback Dick Shiner and a couple of second half breaks to a 31-13 Atlantic Coast Conference triumph over winless North Caro- lina yesterday. The Terps zoomed off to their fourth straight victory by scoring two touchdowns and a field goal the first three times they had the ball. . North Carolina, battling to stave off a fourth straight setback, scor- ed two touchdowns in the second period, but committed two costly fumbles after intermission. ** * Blue Devils Win DURHAM (>) - Soph halfback Mike Curtis scored twice as once- beaten Duke built up a 14-0 half- time lead and rolled to a 21-7 victory over California's Bears here yesterday. A shirt-sleeved crowd of 31,000 saw the Blue Devils score in each of the first three quarters. The stingy Duke line, which had been leaky all season, yielded the Gold- en Bears only 12 net yards rush- ing during the entire game and halted several threats. Trailing by two touchdowns, Cal- ifornia took the second half kick- off and slammed 64 yards in 11 plays. Quarterback Larry Balliett, who sparked the drive, flipped to halfback Allen Nelson for the touchdown. Duke took the next kickoff and showed more fireworks by going 74 yards for a touchdown, with Cur- tis scoring from the 14. s* * Yellow Jackets Roll ATLANTA (A) - Brilliant Billy Lothridge, Georgia Tech's triple- threat quarterback, ran, passed and kicked the powerful Yellow Jackets to a 17-0 triumph yester- day over Southeastern Conference football rival Tennessee. A record Grant Field crowd of 52,223 shirtsleeved fans saw the 184-pound junior run for Tech's first touchdown, pass to his high school buddy, Billy Marton, for the second and kick a 26-yard field goal to cap another scoring drive. Tech, bidding for a return to the national rankings, has scored 67 points while posting a 3-1 season record, and Lothridge has had a hand or a foot in every point. Ten- nessee is 0-3 for the year. A sparkling 41-yard run by the multi-talented Lothridge put the ball at the. Tennessee 9 and set up the first Tech touchdown - a three-yard run by Lothridge. The junior quarterback guided the Yel- low Jackets 74 yards to their next touchdown, a nine-yard pass he lobbed to the 6-foot-4 Martin in the rear of the end zone. Loth- ridge completed five consecutive passes for 47 yards at the end for the long drive late in the second quarter. His field goal climaxed a 76- yard push after intermission. * * * Gators Explode GAINESVILLE, Fla. (A>) - The Florida Gators cut loose with their vaunted running power after two weeks of frustration and swept to a 42-6 victory over outclassed, fumbling Texas A & M yesterday. Scoring bursts of 15 yards by Sam Mack, 75 yards by Larry Du- pree gave the Gators their first three touchdowns. Tom Shannon put some frosting on the cake when he passed 13 yards to Russ Brown for a fourth TD and 27-0 halftime lead. Aggie fumbles led to three touchdowns and spoiled the home- coming for Hank Foldberg, rookie Texas A & M coach who formerly was an assistant at Florida. * * * Jayhawks Romp AMES (')-Kansas, undefeated in the Big Eight, overpowered Iowa State 29-8 yesterday for the Jay- hawks' second conference victory. After a scoreless first quarter, the Jayhawks scored on drives of 40, 56, 70 and 49 yards with half- back Tony Leiker scoring twice on runs of 7 and 15 yards. Ken Cole- man scored on a one-yard plunge and Gale Sayers ran 8 yards for the final Kansas touchdown. Iowa State's homecoming day crowd of 22,500 had only one op- portunity for elation when the Cy- clones narrowed Kansas' 14-0 lead with a fourth-quarter score on a one-yard run by Dave Hoppmann with 11%/2 minutes to play. After Tom Vaughn ran for the two-point conversion to trim the margi nto 14-8, Kansas drove 70 yards in 11 plays to assure its fifth straight victory over Iowa State. * * * Mountaineers Strong PITTSBURGH (P)-Tom Wood- eshick's 49-yard romp took West Virginia out of a hole in the fourth quarter yesterday, and the Moun- taineers-engineered by quarter- back Jerry Yost-proceeded to score a 15-8 upset football victory over Pitt. Woodeshick's run up the left sideline from his own nine to Pitt's 42 gave Yost a chance to direct the Mountaineers to their fourth con- secutive victory, three of them shutouts. Left halfback Tom Yeat- er scored the winning touchdown on a four-yard dash with 5:34 left in the game. The Panthers, now 2-2, had spoiled West Virginia's unscored- on streak 10 minutes before on Paul Martha's dazzling 34-yard run and Jim Traficant's two-point conversion pass to Gene Sobolew- ski. That came with 34 seconds left in the third quarter. Until then, West Virginia's stub- born defense frustrated the Pan- thers' attempts at avenging last year's 20-6 upset loss to their neighborhood rivals. * * * Orangemen Victorious SYRACUSE (A) - Sophomore quarterback Walley Mahle, play- ing his first varsity game, scored Syracuse's first two touchdowns of the season yesterday as the Orange posted its first victory of the year-12-0 over Boston College. Mahle, a 6-foot-3 runner from Erie, Pa., scored in the first and final quarters, on runs of 10 and 20 yards. Previously undefeated Boston College threatened twice in the second half, but its assault was stymied by a hard - charging Orange line, packing superior weight. Boston College's highly vaunt- ed passer, quarterback Jack Con- cannon, was thrown for a total loss of 43 yards by Orange line- men. Gibbs Awesome FORT WORTH (') - Giant quarter-back Sonny Gibbs passed for two touchdowns and scored twice on short plunges last night as Texas Christian crushed winless Texas Tech 35-13. The powerful All-America can- didate was in top form in leading the Horned Frogs to their first Southwest Conference victory of the season. It left the Christians 1-1 in conference warfare and 2-2 for the campaign while extending Tech's losing streak to four straight. Gibbs twice sneaked a yard for touchdowns and passed 21 yards to Tom Magoffin and eight yards to Ben Nix for two others. * * * Stovall Rambles BATON ROUGE (A)-Jerry Sto- vall, Louisiana State's elusive run- ning All-America candidate, and Danny LeBlanc, a bull-like sopho- more, led the sixth-ranked Tigers to a 17-3 rout of previously un- beaten Miami last night. The Bengals couldn't stop the bullet passing of Miami's George Mira, except when it counted - near the LSU goal line. Mira, a 6-foot junior, threw the ball 30 times and connected on 16 aerials for 162 yards in unofficial sta- tistics. Miami took a 3-0 lead in the first period on Bobby Wilson's 23-yard field goal. Mira had moved the Hurricanes from their own 12 but Miami couldn't push across. The Daily Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which The Michigan Daily assumes no editorial respon- sibility. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 3564 Administration Building before 2 p.m. two days preceding publication. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14 Day Calendar 7:00 and 9:00 p.m.-Cinema Guild - Rex Harrison, Kay Kendall, and John Saxon, "The Reluctant Debutante"; short, Sidney Peterson's "The Cage": Arch- itecture Aud. 3:00 p.m.-Professional Theatre Pro- gram-Richard Baldridge's "we, Comrades Three": Ly- dia Mendelssohn Theatre. 8:30 p.m.-School of Music Doctoral Re- cital-Morris Hochberg, viol- in: Lane Hall Aud. General Notices Woodrow Wilson Nominees who have questions concerning the criteria for selection and the kind of information and credentials submitted by each can- didate which will most clearly indicate to the Foundation his or her qualifica- tions for a fellowship may consult their concentration adviser, or Prof. Green- hut, 2634 Haven Hall. All Teacher's Certificate Candidates: The Teacher's Certificate Application is due at the beginning of the Jr. year. It should be turned in to the School of Education by Nov. 1. The address is 1203 Univ. High School. Events Monday Dept. of Biological Chemistry Collo- quium: Dr. R. M. S. Smellie, "Some Studies on the Enzymes of DNA Bio- synthesis," 4:00 p.m., Room M6423, Med. Science Bldg. Social Work-Social Science Collo- quium: Prof. Alfred J. Kahn, 4:15 p.m., 2nd Floor Aud., Frieze Bldg. Events Automatic Programming Seminar: "Use of the Core Clock & Addressable Memory Protect in the Univ. of Mich. Operaitng system," S. C. Gray, 4:00 p.m., Mon., Oct. 15, Seminar Room, Computing Center. Doctoral Examination for Stanley Donald Solvick, History; thesis: "Wil- liam Howard Taft and the Progressive Movement: A Study in Conservative Thought and Politics," Mon., Oct. 15, 3615 Haven Hall, at 2:00 p.m. Chairman, Sidney Fine. The Program in Comparative Educa- tion, School of Education, presents a ORGAN IZATION NOTICES Congregational Disciples E & R Stu- dent Guild, Faith, Inquiry & Intellect: "Why Inquire," Oct. 14, 7:30 p.m., 802 Monroe. . * * Deutscher Verein, Movie, "Der Rest Ist Schwelgen,"-a modern adaptation of "Hamlet" by Helmut Kautner, 4 p.m., & 8 p.m., Oct. 16, UGLI, Multipurpose Rm. * * * Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Group, supper, 6 p.m.; Program by the LutheranSchool for the Deaf, 6:45 p.m.; Oct. 14, 1511 Washtenaw. v *a Le Cercle Francais, Meeting, Oct. 16, 8 p.m., 3050 FB. "Venez-tous." Lutheran Student Assoc., Oct. 14, 7 p.m., Hill & Forest. Speaker: Rev. D. Htezler, Regional Sec. of N.L.C. Div. of College & Univ. Work. "Students' Atti- tudes toward Campus Life." * * * Sociedad Hispanica, "Tertulia," Oct. 15, 3-5 p.m., 3050 FB. U. of M. Folk Dancers, Regular Meet- ing, Dancing, Instruction, Oct. 16, 7:30 p.m., 1429 Hill. Wesley Foundation, Seminar, Oct. 14, 10:15 a.m., Pine Room, Worship & Pro- gram, Oct. 14, 7 p.m., Wesley Lounge; Open House, Oct. 15, 8-11 p.m., Jean Robe's Apartment. Young Democrats, Meeting, Oct. 17, 7:30 p.m., Union, Rm. 3B. Speaker: Prof. R. J. Niess, Dem. candidate for state senator, Washtenaw County, "Ma- jor issues that Face the Mich. Legisla- ture." * * , Unitarian Student Group, Elections of 1962-63 Officers, Oct. 14, 7:30 p.m., Unitarian Church. Speaker: Dr. M. Pill- suk, Mental Health Res. Inst., "The Role of the Student in Peace Research." lecture by S. K. Dey, Minister of Com- munity Development, Panchayati Raj and Cooperation Central Govt. of India. "Education: Master Key to Community Development in India," Tues., Oct. 16, 4:15 p.m., Aud. A, Angell Hall. Actuarial Club Picnic, Mon., Oct. 15, 3-7:00 p.m. at Island Park. Bring family or friend. PLACEMENT INTERVIEWS-Bureau of Appointments-Seniors & grad stu- dents, 'please call Ext. 3544 for inter- view appointments with the following: MON., OCT. 15- Texaco, Inc., New York, N.Y. (p.m. only)-Feb., June & Aug. grads. Mlen with BA Liberal Arts, only if interested in sales career. Location: throughout U.S. Must be U.S. citizen. Moore Business Forms, Inc., Park Ridge, I1.-Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men, BA or BS in any field who are in- terested in a career in sales or sales mgmt. Location: Ann Arbor, Detroit area. TUES., OCT. 16- U.S. Civil Service Commission - Feb., June. Aug. grads.-men & women. De- gree Liberal Arts with any major. In- terviewing for all kinds of positions in Fed. Govt., with primary emphasis on the Fed. Entrance Exam. Social Security Administration-Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men & Women candidates for LLB for following 2 types of positions: 1) Benefits Authorizer- LLB & 1 yr. pertinent exper. 2) Trainee Claims Authorizer-LLB (no exper.). 3) Claims Examiner-any major (no ex- per.). Location: Chicago. Social Security Admin.-Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men & women with ma- jor in anything for positions as Field Claims Rep. Trainees. Location: Field offices throughout U.S. National Labor Relations Board -- Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men & wom- en with major in Accounting, Law, Bus. Ad., Indust. Rels., or Poll Scl. for posi- tions as Labor Mgmt. Relations Exam- iner. Locations: Detroit & other major cities. U.S. Railroad Retirement Board-Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men & women can- didates for LLB in upper quarter of class for Attorneys Honors Prog. Also Interviewing Accountants & Actuaries. Bureau of the Budget (a.m. only) - Feb., June & Aug. grads. Men & women with degree in Econ., Poli. Sci., Sociol- ogy or Law OR with MS or PhD in Public Health or Nat'l. Resources for positions in Econ. (including Labor Econ.) or in Foreign Trade, Public Ad- min., Statistics. Must be U.S. citizen. Location: Washington. D.C. only. POSITION OPENINGS: Fome-Cor Corp., Addyston, Ohio - Openings as follows: 1) Process Dev.- Two BS/MS ChE/ME with 1-4 yrs. ex- per. in research, process dev. or pro- duction tech. service. 2) Project Engrg. -One BS ME/ChE with 3-8 yrs. exper. in engrg. field, pref. strong as project engnr. 3) Manufacturing Engnr.--One BS/MS ME/Ind. Eng. with 3-8 yrs. ex- per., pref. in close assoc. with mfg. Bethlehem Steel Co., Bethlehem, Pa, -Position for an Engineering Mathe- matician in Central Tech. Dept. in Quincy, Mass. Pref. Mech. or Struc- tural Engnr. with strong analytical abil- ity. Familiarity with computer program- ming not required but would be help- ful. Blue Cross (Mich. Hosp. Service), De- troit, Mich. - Opening for Research Analyst in Research Services Dept. Re- cent grad with interest in res. work & health field, with Computer Courses helpful but not necessary. BA or MA with training in Math or Statistics. I or 2 yrs. exper. helpful, but not re- quired. Oak Ridge Institute of Nuclear Stud- ies, Oak Ridge, Tenn.-Openings for Scientific, Technical, Design & Admin- istrative personnel including: Staff As- sistants-degree public admin. plus ex- per.; Contracts Administrator - degree law or admin. plus exper.; Special Ef- fects Designer; Exhibits Designer; Graphics Artist; Model Maker; Drafts- man; Biochemist; Med. Tech.; Exhibits Manager; etc. Associates Loan Co., Jackson, Mich. Financial Management Trainee - will learn the financial business through mgmt. trng. course. College bkgd-de- gree not essential. No exper. required. Minimum age 21, prefer 24-28. Should have own car. Union Twist Drill Co., Detroit, Mich. -Technical Sales Rep. for Flint, Mich. area. Must be familiar with Flint area. College bkgd. At least 2 yrs. sales exper., tech, sales pref. Age 28-38. Will be sales rep. for cutting tools & other products. + a . For further iformation, please call General Div. Bureau of Appts., 3200 SAB, Ext. 3544 S Read and Use Daily Classifieds TrnnAV IA~IjHon4 DIAL i I v'1 1 I I rIm AE A.W 8-6416 MOVED SOUTH to the CAMPUS THEATRE for on UNPRECEDENTED HOLDOVER "CAN BE PROUD OF ITS 'OSCAR'!" -Rose Pelswick, N.Y. Journal American j PAPER BACK BOOKS Shop in our complete Paper Back Dept. Carefully selected titles of most. of, the better publishers' series. OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 South University Ave. ----------------1 j ~SGC ORIENTATION. This Tuesday, (Oct. 16)- PAUL POTTER and BILL MADDEN i Discuss the National Student Association and the concept of a national Student Community. Tuesday, October 23- JOHN FELDKAMP I STEVE STOCKMEYER TOM HAYDEN MIKE OLINICK "SGC and the power structure of the Universtiy." SEMINARS START AT 4:15 IN ROOM 3529 SAB For further information, contact Ken Miller 3-0553, or 5-7183 SAVE ! 60% on your dry cleaning bills FBANK'S KLEEN KING COIN DRY CLEANING 1226 Packard Any combination of clothing . . (any colors) up to 10 lbs. for $2.00 20-MINUTE CYCLE SAMPLE LOADS (1) (2) 3 heavy coats 5 men's suits r t41 i 7% _ A 111Student Activities Scholarships APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE Friday, Ocober 12 to Friday, October 19 Requirements: (1) Financial Need (2) Etxra-curricular activities (excluding athletics) (3) 2.5 overall average