[ from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'til 11:30 A.M. t EAST LANSING VP)-Gary Ball- man, a sturdy Detroit sophomore playing with a finger in a cast, scored two touchdowns and kept Michigan State in Big Ten conten- tion with a 14-6 victory over In- diana yestierday. Ballmann, a right half who was an uncertain starter because of the painful injury, caught a 20- yard pass from Dean Look for the first score in the second quarter. He bolted 25 yards through left guard for the second touchdown in the third period. Art Brandstatter, another soph- omore, kicked both extra points. Indiana was put in position for its last-period touchdown by a 49-yd. pass from big John Henry Jackson to Ted Aucreman, who escaped to the one. Three plays later, Jackson passed to Earl Fai- son for the score. A Jackson pass for the two-point conversion failed. Michigan State, an outfit with alternate losing and winning Sat- urdays the first of the season, looked like a team that had finally jelled to the 54,611 homecoming. fans at Spartan Stadium. Michigan State defenders were forced to make a magnificent goal line stand in the closing minutes of the game. The Spartan line held the Hoos- iers on four plays at the Michigan State four and took over the ball on downs. The Spartans now have won' two and lost one in the Conference. Indiana has won one and lost two. * * * Northwestern 30,: Notre Dame 24 SOUTH BEND P)-The talent of Northwestern quarterback John Talley; who threw three touch- down passes and raced 61 yards to score, overmatched the luck of the Irish yesterday as the second- ranked Wildcats defeated Notre Dame 30-24. This fifth straight Northwestern victory of the season was the Wildcats' first over Notre Dame since 1940 and only their fourth triumph against 23 defeats and 2 ties in a scrappy series which had lapsed after 1948. Talley, rangy, 175-pound senior from Delaware, 0., hurled touch- down passes covering 78, 54 and 18 yards. The only one of Northwest- ern's five touchdowns in which Talley failed to figure was the second Wildcat score which came on a 3-yard run by Ray Purdin. Notre Dame's three touchdowns -two of them scored by halfback Bob Scarpitto-and Monty Stick- le's 38-yard field goal, all came on Northwestern miscues. Wildcat fumbles on their own 2 and 12 yard lines were directly responsible for Irish touchdowns. And a 52-yard pass play, from Notre Dame's Don White to Scar- pitto worked for a score only be- cause a Wildcat defender tipped the ball into Scarpitto's hands. After Northwestern took an 18-7 halftime lead, the Irish outscored the Wildcats, 17 to 12 in a rousing second half., Penn State 20, Illinois 9. CLEVELAND (IP)-Quarterback Richie Lucas shrugged off four pass interceptions yesterday to lead eighth-ranked Penn State to a 20-9 victory over Illinois in an intersectional contest. The classy signal - caller from Glassport, Pa. intercepted two passes himself, scored a touch- down, ran 16 times for 66 yards and passed for 71 yards to ac- count for more than half the Nit- tany Lions' total yardage. Illinois converted two breaks into its scores. Turning a recovered fumble into a 30-yard field goal by Cliff Roberts in the opening period and a pass interception in- to a second-period touchdown by fullback Bill Brown. But Penn State went the long way to get its first two scores. The victors marched 65 yards in nine plays in the first period with Lucas going the last four on a keeper play. In the second period, the Lions went 51 yards in four plays in a drive spanning the first-sec- and quarter intermission with halfback Dick Pae scoring from the one-yard line. The third score was practically a gift. In the third session Gary Kolb of Illinois intercepted a pass on his own two and on the next play Brown fumbled and Pat Botu- la recovered for Penn State. The Lions needed two plays before Dick Hoak scored the final points. Sam Stellatella, Penn State tackle, booted his 12th and 13th conversions without a miss after the first two touchdowns, but a pass, failed as the Lions went for two points on the last one. CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.25 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 MAYNARD & SEEGER WELDERS and BLACKSMITHING 109 S. Ashley NO 8-7403 J3 Protect your car!i . Fall Changeover *Antifreeze * Winter Lubrication Complete Tune-up.Service Available GOLDEN'S SERVICE STATION LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .80 .96 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .89 .47 .54 Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 1 1:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 USED -CARS 1958 THUNDERBIRD, power steering and brakes. Silver gray. Call GE 8- 3021. )N34 601 Packard NO 8-9429 83 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service-mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!" 1W0 S..University at Forest NO 8-9168 Si WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 i S2 WANTED TO RENT GRAD. COUPLE desire apt., JTan. 1- June 1st, in exchange part-time work. Exper. general maintenance, light. construction. Box 6, Mich. Daily. Li MICHIGAN STATE HERO-Gary Ballman, sophomore right halfback for the Spartans, scored both touchdowns yesterday for the rampaging Staters. Since, his finger was ina cast he was a doubtful starter for the game, but instead, ended up the, day's hero. i { , GAINESVILLE, Fla. (AP)-Louisi-v ana State's alert defense pounced on Florida mistakes yesterday and the nation's No. 1 football team whipped the stubborn Gators 9-0. The hard-charging Tiger line, led by guard Emile Fournet and tackle Bo Strange, prevented Flor- ida from getting a punt away and set up Billy Cannon's touchdown in the second quarter. A little later end Gaynell Kinchen intercepted a pass and halfback Wendell Harris booted his fifth straight field goal of the season. Florida almost turned the tables in the final quarter, snapping .up two LSU fumbles and riding the passing of Dick Allen and Jack Jones into the shadow of the LSU goal. The victory was, LSU's 18th straight and the Tigers still have not yielded a touchdown this sea- son. -.. , * Oklahoma 7, Kansas 6 NORMAN, Okla. (P-Oklahoma's Sooners preserved their kingpin pole in the Big Eight Conference, with a squeakish 7-6 victory over the stubborn Kansas Jayhawks before, 50,000 fans at Owen Sta- dium yesterday. The Sooners' triumph enabled them to vault into the Conference lead with a 3-0 record and it was their 74th league game without defeat. Oklahoma held the upper hand after quarterback Bobby Boyd per- sonally took command of the Soon- er offense with 7 minutes remain- ing in the second quarter. He re- turned a punt 44 yards to the Kansas 36 and seven plays later' Boyd plunged over for a touch- down going about a half-foot on the third down. Boyd also ripped off gains of 13 and 11 yards in the drive. Syracuse 44, West Virginia 0 SYRACUSE (A) - Sophomore halfback Ernie Davis .led a devas- tating Syracuse attack yesterday that humbled West Virginia 44-0. It was the fifth straight lopsided football triumph for the unbeaten Orangemen, ranked sixth nation- ally. The east's top team, geared byj vicious line; play, exploded for 23 points in a big second quarter that featured a 57-yard scoring run by Davis. terback Jim Maxfield sparked touchdown di'ives of 70 and 74 yards to 'put the Middies ahead 22- 19. That set the stage for Shaw's dramatic kick with just a minute and 46 seconds of the game left. Mississippi 28, Arkansas 0 MEMPHIS (A) - With power- house fullback Charlie Flowers ripping Arkansas' line to tatters, mighty Mississippi man - handled the Razorbacks 28-0 yesterday. Flowers rammed over two Ole Miss touchdowns in a bitter first half scramble that left the Razor- backs reeling. Halfback Dewey Partridge and quarterback Jake Gibbs also hit paydirt for the Rebels. The heavy but agile Mississippi line kept the frustrated Porkers bottled up most of the game. A ferocious goal line stand late in the game stopped the Hogs' best effort on the Ole Miss five. s s * ' Penn 22, Navy 22 PHILADELPHIA (P) - Under- dog Penn restored some prestige. to the Ivy League yesterday by coming from behind twice to deadlock Navy 22-22, on Ed Shaw's 24-yard field goal in the closing minutes. The unbeaten and fired - up Quakers outplayed Navy for three quarters until second string quar- When it Comes to Cars You Can't neat the New 1960 SAAB It's Available NOW at MICHIGAN EUROPEAN CAR CORP. 303 S. Ashley Headquarters for Sales and Service V4 FOR RENT 790 SQUARE FEET divided into 2 bed- rooms, living room, kitchen and din- ette, bath and. utility room, 3 large closets. Stove, refrigerator, heat, and water are furnished. Call NO 3-4922 after 4:30. C94 2 LARGE well furnished rooms, double or single. Twin beds. Call after 5, 807 West Liberty, NO 8-8278. C93 UTILITY APT. with stove, refrigerator and Murphy bed. $85.00 per month with heat. Call Mr. Rose-mornings -11-12 a.m. at NO 3-1531, Ext. 7233. C92 HALF of two-family, 5 rooms, stove, refrigerator, basement, garage. Newly decorated. On busline. NO 3-4035 or 3-7851. C90 FURNISHED: 2 bedroom home, avail- able until June, oil furnace, complete bath, washer, 433 E. Shore Dr., Whit- more Lake. NO 8-6931. C91 DOUBLES ONLY. Linens furnished. Only2 block from Law Quad at 804 S. State (at Hill). C64 CAMPUS ROOMS, large quiet singles, doubles, lineng furnished. Reason- able. NO 3-4747. C2 ON CAMPUS One block. Modern apartmentse 514 S. Forest. Also rooms. NO 2-1443. C25 PARKING Space and garage. 514 S. Forest. NO, 211i443. C26 LARGE ROOM, single 8 per week.-HU 2-4959, 5643 Geddes Road. C35 FURNISHED campus apts. for 3-4 single students. Pvt. bath. $1051 50per month. 344 S. Division St., NO 3-8134. C30 I1 THESE TWO EXTRA SPECIAL BUYS With Any In Town ! '55 Chevy ..........$445 (V-8, standard shift, radio) '55 Pontiac .........$425 (8 cyl., radio, Hydra-Matic) OVERSEAS AUTO SALES 331 S. 4th Ave. NO 2-2541 W32 1958 MGA COUPE. One owner. 17,000 miles, radio and heater. $1850. NO 8- 9738 after 5 P.M. N31 51 MG, new motor, excellent condi- tion. Call NO 2-0972 after 6 P.M. N29' '52 PLYMOUTH 4 dr., heater, radio, low mileage.$175. NO 3-1857 after 5. N27: HELP WANTED Secretaries and Stenographers. Openings for experienced,, qualified' secretaries and stenographers in- terested in seeking a position with challenge and opportunity for growth. Excellent salary, fringe benefits and good working condi- tions. Apply in person. s BENDIX SYSTEMS DIVISION Mr. Lawrence Smiley 3300 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor7 H43 WANTED: Part-time male or female telephone operators. Arthur Murray's. NO 2-5539. H27 WANTED-Experienced Arthur Murray teachers, full or part time. NO 2-5539. 1311 S. University. H10 BUSINESS SERVICES FOR TODAY'S breakfast why not buy 'ome lox, cream cheese, bagels, onion rolls, or assorted Danish pastry? Plan ahead also . . . later in the week we'll have smoked whitefish, gefitle fish, kosher soups, pastrami, and corned beef. Shop at Ralph's for these delicious foods. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard N02-3175 FAST, ACCURATE TYPING at reason- able rates. NO 3-9104. J45 FOR PERFECT PAINTING the push button way, beautify in minutes with Krylon spray paints. Dries in minutes. For your painting needs we carry a full line of paints and accessories., REAL ESTATE HOUSE--AVAILABLE IN DEC. Comfort- able five-room house with large living room, tile bath, and basement. Near North Campus. Reasonable-will ne- gotiate. Phone owner-NO 2-8137. R4 BUSINESS PERSONAL DID YOU LOOK at your calendar to- day? Notice how close it is to Ann Arbor's cold season? Well, if'n you start now-with vitamins purchased' from Lumbard's - chances are you might be around to take your finals in February. Lumbard's, 1225 S. Univ. )FF28 PERSONAL "THE CURRENT Impressionistic style which is so preponderant in modern analyzations, are, quite clearly con- nected with stages: of fixa tions,- as outlined in the latest edition of the THE STUDENT DIRECTORY, which will be available for your approval and careful. scrutiny on ,Wed." Tom Creed,: (T.C. Sr.) )F93 MORGAN SAYS:, Hear while you can. )F91 SLATS: Ta Ra Rea Boom De A .. The Counselor )F90 TOMORROW'S THE DAY when all you Kampus Kats can buy your lollipops for Hillelzapoppin. See you on the, Diag between 1 and 3. )F89 MAKE .YOUR RESERVATIONS now! Going to Hoboken, Kokomo, or ye old home town? Need a ride? Put your ride wanted ; to . . . for the weekend or vacation in our Trans- portation column. F8t NEW SERVICE FOR YOU] The Michi- gan Daily will run free of charge any articles found in the campus area. If you have found any lost articles call NO 2-3241 or NO 2-4786. P'86 SUPPORT YOUR SGC - Vote at the elections Nov. 3 and 4. F55 ATTENTION: rgcognized student organ- izations currently registered with of- fire of student affairs. You are eli- gible for consideration as movie sponsors. Cinema Guild will be inter- viewing Saturday, October 24. from 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. Pick up your petition Oct. 19-23 S.A.B. P62 BIKES and SCOOTERS 'YOU SMASH 'EM - WE PATCH 'EM' Need that extra radio? Special on Olympic electric rac 5 Tube, AM $14.88 GRI NNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 8- Complete Parts and Service on all CUSHMANS ITOMS, PARITLLA FOR SALE BERGUNDY RED velveteen dress, priz cees style, size 9. White Jonathan Lo gan sheath, size 7. Both worn on] once. Orange & black tweed clutc bag, brand new. Call 3-7541 ext. 50 after 8:00 p.m. ask for Mae Rut Kimmel. )B TENOR SAX, CONN. Very good condi tion. Call NO 5-5802, 6:30-8:00 eve nings.B4 STUDENTS-I will give you a 25% dit count on a name brand portable type writer, backed by Ann Arbor's moi reputable office supply company. Fi demonstration, call Ralph Frederick 3-3839, 5-9 evenings. - B4 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Black wallet, initials B.K. Huro River Riding Stable. Call NO .5-77: Ext. 3438.)A2 FOUND: 3 keys in the Fishbowl, 2 which are Ford car keys. NO 2-478 ON PACKARD AND STATE a black ca was found; you can tell it's lonely b its sound. Anyone' know to whom1 belongs? Halloween will be here 'e: long. Phone NO 3-9044. A LOST: Woman's Bucher watch. Browx strap. Call Ellen Lewis, NO 2-4514. A2 LOST: Gold ring with pearl and dia monds. Sentimental value. Rewar Call 3-4559. A: FOUND: Ladies' Bulova watch. Call 41 Lloyd, West Quad. )A: BARGAIN CORNER ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-7.95; sock 39c: shorts 690; military supplie Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington., MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS TAPE RECORDERS $79.95 UP Revere. Telectro, Webcor and others. Accessories. Music Center 300 S. Thayer NO 2-2500 xJ A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119.W. Washington NO 2-1834 Join GRINNELL'S Piano Rental Clu $20. gives you the use of the piar with lessons for 30 days. From then o only $10 a month-up to five month G I NNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 8- PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co. 213 E. Washington NO 3-314 Complete line of Him component Including kits; complete service .0x radio, phonographs and HiP! equi ments. at ENGLAND SPORTING GOODS 120 W. Huron NO 5-5284 )Z10 IS YOUR PAD EMPTY? You can fill those spaces with furnishings and hardware from BEAVER'S BIKE & HARDWARE 605 Church NO 5-6607 Ze ORGANS and PIANOS BY WURLITZER, EVERETT, &, THOMJ Makers, restorers, and dealers of rare violins and bows., Sales -- Service -- Rentals MADDY MUSIC 508 E Williams NO 3-3395 HELP WANTED-Male Excellent CAREER Opportunity Married or engaged male graduating seniors or grad students, any field. Write Box 1, Michigan Daily. Y1 NEW YORK (M)-- Fabled Wilt (the stilt) Chamberlain made a brilliant National Basketball Assn. debut last night. He scored 43 points as his Philadelphia War- riors turned back the New. York Knickerbockers 118-109' at Madi-l son Square Garden in the season's opener for both teams. * * * Cincinnati 108, Detroit 103 CINCINNATI (') - A splurge of 39 points by Jack Twyman helped Cincinnati's Royals defeat Detroit's Pistons, 108-103, despite a fourth quarter Royal fade in a televised National Basketball Assn.; game yesterday. Rookie Bailey Howell tops for the losers with 17 points, scored them all in a fourth quarter Pis- ton spurt that carried Detroit within three points of a tie - 106-103-with 17 seconds to play.7 kept the victory out of Detroit's reach. The Royals, last year's NBA doormat, had' a 50-38 halftime lead and stretched it to 86-68 at the three-quarter mark. But then -much like last year-the Royals had a game-ending dull stretch. Thek decision set both team's marks at 1-1 in the young NBA season. * * * Boston 121, Syracuse 109 SYRACUSE (P) - The Boston Celtics uncorked one of their typical fourth period surges to make the Syracuse Nationals their second srtaight victim in the new National Basketball Assn. cam- paign 121-109 last night. It was Syracuse's first start. Sorely outclassed in the first 25 minutes, the Celtics came from 14. points behind in the third period to within 87-85 at the three-quar- ter mark. With Frank Ramsey hitting for 13 points, the Celtics could do no wrong while 'the Nats repeatedly missed shots and mishandled the ball in the fourth period, * * * New York 4, Toronto 1 TORONTO - Left winger Jim- my Bartlett's goal midway through the third period last night gave the New York Rangers a .1-1 Na- Try our collegiate Mtyles-they are: 0 SUAVE 0 SMART * SMOOTH 11 Haircutters The Dascola Barbers near the Michigan Theatre tional Hockey League tie with the Toronto Maple Leafs. Bartlett scooted into the center of a player jam in front of the the third period and swatted the Toronto net at the 9:05 mark of puck through a maze of legs. In the first period, at 16:50, Gerry Ehman gave the Leafs a 1-0 lead when he took Billy Harris' pass from the right boards and fired 'a five-foot shot into the far side of the net. * * * Montreal 5, Boston 1 MONTREAL (P) - The Mon- treal Canadiens defeated the Bos- ton Bruins 5-1 last night. A pair of goals by Jean Beliveau shared top billing with a wild tantrum display by the Bruins' Bronco Horvath. The rampaging Horvath wound up with a minor, a misconduct and a game misconduct penalty in one swoop for two automatic fines of $75. He was ejected from the game in the second period. Horvath, after staging his out- burst, was held by teammates when he appeared on the verge of walloping referee Eddie Powers. Powers had imposed a minor penalty on Horvath for slashing at Montreal's Claude Provost. The enraged Hrovath slashed at Pow- ers, though several feet from him. Powers added the 10-minute mis- conduct penalty. Before Horvath could be herded into the penalty box he tried to break loose from teammate Johnny Bucyk to get at the referee. Powers added the MUEHLIG and LANPHEAR 311 S. Main J46 1j ONE-DAY SERVICE AT SANFORDS j Shoe Repairing Hat Cleaning Tailoring Pressing Shoe Shining 119 East Ann Street Open Til 8 P. M. - Also Sundays & Holidays (Opposite court house' since 1927) NO 8-6966 J2 WASHINGS and/or ironings. Free pick- up and delivery. Specializing in cot- ton dresses. NO 2-9020. AA1 SORORITIES AND FRATERNITIES"- We have favors for parents' weekends. Burr Patterson and Auld Co., 1209 South University. NO 8-8887. J47 TYPING: Theses, term papers, reason- able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590. JI11 Men: Stripes is the word, horizontal or vertical . .. Read more about it in The Michigan Daily Fashion Supplement. I r Coming soon-, Michigan Daily Fashion Supplement 11 But lowed Royal Arlen Bockhorn fol- with two free throws that """""" Tol IF -I U 40th EDITION 1958 Imo,/ V.i Si/ .,/ V i /'V V V 8{.! I 11 * - I III