THE MICHIGAN DAILY" TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5.1962 ISU, OSU, Illinois Remain To Battle for Title Texas Tops AP Poll But Lead Narrows 4 won. Also Illinois meets pre-season favorite Wisconsin and, in the final game, co-leader Michigan State. This game could easily de- cide the championship. Apparently underrated in pre- season polls, Michigan State trounced defending champion Wisconsin, 30-13, to remain tied for the conference lead. Sherman Lewis and fullback Roger Lopes were the Spartan workhorses as they ground out most of State's 273 yards rushing. Lopes ran for two counters and Lewis went 87 yards with a pass from quarterback Steve Juday .for another. Juday was forced out of the game early in the second quar- ter with a shoulder separation. Dick Proebstle replaced Juday Who will probably be out for the rest of the season. Michigan State's defense held the Badgers to only 29 yards on the ground but Wisconsin's pass- ing attack prevented the game from being a shutout. Southpaw quarterback Harold Brandt com- pleted nine out of 20 passes for 117 yards and his replacement, Dave Fronek, hit on 10 of 15 for 171 yards. To remain on top, Michigan State must defeat Purdue, who has a habit of humbling the Spartans when they seem to be Rose Bowl bound. State also faces Illinois in the season's final and perhaps most crucial game. Buckeyes Triumph The Buckeyes of Ohio State scored a 7-3 come-from-behind victory over Iowa Saturday to pre- serve their title bid. Tom Barring- ton, a sophomore quarterback switched to halfback, and full- back Matt Snell sparked Ohio State on a 74-yard scoring drive in the third quarter. Iowa's only score came on a 34-yard field goal by Jay Roberts earlier in the third quarter. Neither team was able to pass effectively, each com- pleting only two. Ohio State appears to have a schedule advantage in the con- ference games remaining. The Buckeyes face a pair of second- division teams, Northwestern and Michigan. In the other Big Ten games last Saturday, Indiana upset Minneso- ta, 24-6, on the running of/ Tom Nowatzke who churned for 138 yards, more than half of Indiana's total. By The Associated Press Unbeaten, untied Texas held firmly to its position as the na- tion's No. 1 college football team today, but new strength gathered in The Associated Press weekly poll for Illinois, Mississippi, Navy and Auburn. Also, Michigan State moved in- to the select Top Ten, taking over the No. 9 spot after a 30-13 vic- tory over Wisconsin. The latter rated eighth, dropped from the list in the only radical change of the week. Texas, with a 7-0 record, gained 45 of the 53 votes of a special panel of sports writers and broad- casters to get the top spot for the fourth week in a row. These were four less votes than received in the preceding balloting and the lead- ers' point total-based on 10 for a first place vote, 9 for second, etc.-- also fell below the previous mark. The Longhorns slid past South- ern Methodist last week 17-12. Illini Second Second-place Illinois, 41-21 con- queror of Purdue, increased its rI Pro Standings NFL Eastern Division first place votes from one to four and added 67 points to its total, now standing at 425. The next three teams-Missis- sippi, Navy and Auburn - also picked up a fatter vote harvest after impressive victories, Missis- sippi clobbered Louisiana State 37- 3, Navy thrashed Notre Dame 35- 14 and Auburn, like Texas, unbeat- en and untied, won over Florida 19-0. These places remained unchang- ed from a week ago as did No. 6 Oklahoma, which routed Colorado 35-0, and No. 7 Alabama, squeak- ing winner over Mississippi State 20-19. Pittsburgh, which turned back Syracuse 35-27 in a freak snow and thunderstorm, jumped from 10 to eighth. Ohio State dropped a notch-from ninth to 10th-al- though winner over Iowa 7-3. Texas has a formidable test Sat- urday against Baylor; Illinois plays Michigan. Mississippi has a breather with Tampa, Navy tackles Maryland and Auburn has a date with Mississippi State. Other assignments for Top Ten teams include: Oklahoma vs. Iowa State; Pitt vs. Notre Dame, Mich- igan State vs. Purdue and Ohio State vs. Penn State. Alabama is idle. The top ten teams with first place votes in parentheses, season records and points on a 10-9-8-7-6- 5-4-3-2-1 basis: W L T Pts. 1. Texas (45) 7 0 0 502 2. Illinois (4) 5 0 1 425 3. Mississippi (1) 5 0 1 343 4. Navy (1) 6 1 0 322 5. Auburn (2) 6 0 0 310 6. Oklahoma 5 1 0 209 7. Alabama 6 1 0 158 8. Pittsburgh 5 1 0 115 9. Michigan State 4 1 1 109 10. Ohio State 4 1 1 98 Others receiving votes, listed al- phabetically: Army, Baylor, Georgia Tech, Memphis state, Nebraska, North Carolina State, Penn State, Princeton, Southern California, Syracuse, Washington, Wisconsin. W L T Pct. Pts. O.P. Cleveland 7 1 0 .875 234 148 New York 6 -2 0 .750 230 170 St. Louis 5 3 0 .625 201 166 Pittsburgh 4 3 1 .571 200 171 Philadelphia 2 5 1 .286 151 207 Dallas 2 6 0 .250 163 218 Washington 2 6 0 .250 164 223 Western Division Chicago 7 1 0 .875 184 82 Green Bay 7 1 0 .875 241 119 Detroit 4 4 0 .500 188 132. Baltimore 3 5 0 .375 143 167 Minnesota 3 5 0 .375 173 223 Los Angeles 2 6 0 .250 114 240 San Francisco 1 7 0 .125 102 222 Sunday's Results New York 38, St. Louis 21 Chicago 17, Baltimore 7 Cleveland 23, Philadelphia 17 Dallas 35, Washington 20 Detroit 45, San Francisco 7 Green Bay 33, Pittsburgh 14 Minnesota 21, Los Angeles 13 McKINLEY AVENGES: U.S. Swamps India In Interzone Finals I L SWEATERS*I . .it...!..r. 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