Badgers Edge Wildcats 2 < WcsBy The Associated Press Wisconsin fought off repeated fore Burton fum fourth quarter efforts by North- western yesterday and toppled the pitchout and Nels Wildcats from the ranks of ththehNort western go undefeated, 24-19, to climb into a tough Badger defe first place tie m the Big Ten foot- hold off the despex ball race. Rated second nationally, North- Iowa 33, Mi western blew its big chance late in Minnesota's beef the fourth quarter when a lateral after stalling Io' to halfback Ron Burton went nearly two quarters astray and Wisconsin center Bob eyes climbed out Nelson pounced on the loose foot- cellar with a 33-0 ball on the eight yard line. All that was a' Wisconsin piled up 17 points in game was "Floyd o: the second quarter on a pair of bronze statue of a. touchdown passes by Dale Hack- kept for the fifth t bart and then turned a North- had been tied for western fumbled, into another records before the touchdown early in the third quar- Halfback Bob ter for its sixth triumph in seven Ten's leading rush games. tackle time after t The outcome left the two teams Hawkeyes. He sco tied for the Big Ten lead with 4-1 touchdown and eni records and two games to play. ing march of 67 y Trailing by 11 points in the of 22 and 14 yards. [.. [fourth quarter, Northwestern a 15-yard pass in t] scored a touchdown when Burton, drive which put who in the first half had scam- 13-0. pered 69 yards for a touchdown Olen Treadway, t went 47 yards from scrimmage to Conference, opene NOTHWESTERN GETS A BREAK - Wisconsin's fumble setup a touchdown scored by little with a seven-yard BobbyEickoff.to end. Jeff Langs grabbed by Northwestern quarterback Larry Wood (23). This was B A couple of-minutes later, El time left in the se instrumental in leading to Northwestern's: first TD. Wisconsin's bert Kimbrough picked off a pass Sophomore V Tom Wiesner (38) and Northwestern's Mike Stock (40), are in for by Jim Bakken and ran 51 yards Treadway's under grabs, too. to the Wisconsin 11. Two plays 74-yard drive in the with runs of 15 a and an 11-yard p NATIONAL ROUND-UP another Iowa tout 17-yard dash to tli i's M any U s e sI Rludes LUd ,in the fourth peric Nation'sMany UpetsiIncudes LS By The Associated Press Fired-up Tennessee, capitaliz- ing on two quick breaks, toppled national champion L o u i s i a n a State 14-13 yesterday and snapped the ;Bengal's longest winning streak at 19 games. The alert Vols turned a pass in- terception and an LSU fumble into touchdown in the third period to score their game-winning touchdowns. It was the first time in 10 games that first-ranked LSU's goal -line had been crossed. An overflow homecoming crowd of 47,000 howled t h e m s e lv e s hoarse as the Vols pulled off their second upset of the season. In their opening game, Tennes- see edged Auburn, 3-0, to snap Auburn's unbeaten string at 24 games. Jim Cartwright plucked quar- terback Warren Rabb's pass in the flat and raced 59 yards for a touchdown to touch off the upset.. Cotton Letner kicked the first of two extra points, which ultimate- ly proved the margin of victroy. Syracuse 20, Penn State 18 Syracuse virtually .clinched the Eastern football title and a like- ly .bowl bid yesterday by edging: Penn State, 20-18, in a savage battle of unbeaten clubs despite a dazzling 100-yard touchdown by sophomore Roger Kochman of Penn State. This tense struggle, witnessed by 32,800 fans, was in doubt un- til the final minutes as Penn State charged back with two touchdowns in the final period. Texas 13, Baylor 12. Unbeaten Texas surged 39 yards late in the fourth period yesterday to overcome inspired Baylor 13-12 and move a step iearer the South. west Conference championship and the 1960 Cotton Bowl. Baylor twice elected to pass' for conversions but missed on each try. Dependable quarterback. Bob- by Lackey hit a conversion after the first Texas' score. to provide Texas winning margin for the second time this year. * * *' Oklahoma'36, Kansas State 0 Oklahoma, its unbeaten streak in the Big Eight Conference end- ed at 74 by Nebraska last week, started a new string yesterday as it blasted Kansas State 36-0. Held, to a 7-0 halftime advan- tage, the Sooners pulverized the tiring Kansas State defenses in the last half. Obviously played under wraps because of its date next weekend- with Army, Oklahoma relied on a basic. set of plays to dampen the homecoming spirits of 12,000 fans. The victory left the Sooners with a 4-3 season record. * * * deorgia Tech 14, Notre Dame 10 Mary Tibbets, Georgia Tech's number two quarterback, engi- neered and scored two touchdowns yesterday and the Yellow Jackets defeated Notre Dame 14-10. Georgia Tech had to come from behind twice after Notre Dame's brilliant Monty Stickles kicked a 41-yard field goal in the second quarter, then caught a 43-yard touchdown pass from Don White in the third, and kicked the extra point. Tibbetts, moved into the Yellow Jacket offensive unit for injured Fred Brasselton, sneaked from the Notre Dame one in the third quar- ter and raced over from the six with four and a half minutes left in .the game. . - * * * Penn 28, Yale 12 Penn capitalized on three breaks yesterday and a brilliant individ- ual performance from Fred Doel- ling to defeat Yale 28-12 and vault into the' Ivy League football lead" Quarterback Tom Singleton, standout for Yale.. on offense all day, nevertheless was the goat of the game. One of his passes was intercepted by Larry Purdy to set up the first Penn touchdown aft- er the Quakers trailed 12-0. Two fumbles by Singleton also were turned into Penn scores. Auburn'31, Mississippi State 0 Bobby Hunt, nimble -Auburn sophomore, scored on rushes of 42 and 51 yards yesterday and led the powerful Plainesmen to a 31-0 football rout of Mississippi State. When Hunt completed his sec- ond scoring sprint late in the game, the,' 19-year-old quarter- back boosted his ground-gaining total to 214 yards in 16 carries. Harvard 14, Princeton 0 Harvard's scrappy football team defeated one of its dearest ene- mies yesterday, blanking the Princeton Tigers 14-0 in a driv- ing rain which made the stadium gridiron soggy. Some 20,000 pneumonia-defying fans' witnessed this, 52nd: meeting of two, of the big three in a series which began in 1877. SCORES NHL Montreal 2, Chicago 2 Detroit 2, Toronto 2 NBA Minneapols 113, Detroit 111 (ovt.) St. Louis 117, New York 113 Cincinnati 103, Syracuse 101 IF i1 DAILY OFFICIAL I El in 1111