A N . DAILY SUNDAY AN DAILY SUNDAY Lose to Hoosiers, 26- 7 Michigan Outplays Indiana, But Mistakes Prove Costly (Continued from Page 1) down. He was tackled immediate- ly on the Michigan 39.. From there, Indiana used its "Common-Named Couple" attack of Jones and (Captain Ted) Smith to run behind its tough line. Smith did the most 'damage in the six-play drive as he scooted 22 yards on one play and swept' around left end for the final six yards. End Ron Miller kicked the point and boosted Indiana to a 7-0 lead. Michigan's offense was stopped by fumbles on its two succeeding occasions, and Indiana capitalized on the errors to touch off the scor- ing drives. The first of these drives faltered when a Hoosier field goal fell short, but the second one meant a touchdown surge. Bob Dattaglia, a little second-string guard, re- covered a fumble to start things on the Michigan 22. Rio, Callahan Injured Then in quick fashion Indiana slipped through the Michigan de- fense that was now without the services, of injured linebackers Tony Rio and Alex Callahan. Wingback Richie Bradford dash- ed 13 yards on the first play and was followed by tailback Willie Hunter's sweep to the seven. Brad- ford capped the abreviateld march by carrying Reid Bushong into the end zone on a six-yard end sweep. Michigan g t back in the game in the secon quarter and it ap- peared that e contest might be a replica of, the Illinois affair last week when Michigan came back after a poor first quarter. The Wolverines took a short punt by Smith on their own 30. In 10 plays Michigan moved steadily to the Hoosier 25. A pair of Nos- kin-Johnson passes and first down run by fullbacks Ken Tureaud and Tunnicliff aided the assault. On the eleventh play Noskin faded back and found Halstead moving between the opposing half- backs. He fired a pass to the end on the 14-yard line and Halstead zig-zagged into the end zone. Halstead also kicked the point as Indiana's margin was narrowed to 13-7. Too Many Mistakes But the Hoosiers struck back immediately. After the kickoff they paraded 66-yards on 15 plays to a score. The drive was culminated by fullback Don Cromer's plunge from the one-foot line with just 1:34 left in the half. Again Miller missed the extra-point kick, but Indiana had a 19-7 halftime lead. Michigan remained a spirited team the second half. Noskin hit 9 of 16 passes and halfback Ben- nie McRae kept the Hoosier de- fense edgy with his off - tackle slants and endruns. The Wolverine defense, spear- headed by Halstead and Johnson, contained the Hoosiers and limited them to 55 yards for the half. Michigan had 151. Errors Kill Drives But Michigan's best drives once more were halted by fumbles and interceptions. And when Michigan did err the Hoosier opportunists took full advantage. Indiana finished all Michigan's hopes in the opening moments of the fourth stanza. Indiana moved the ball to the Michigan 14 in three plays after the Stamos inter- ception. On the fourth play, Smith--who completed three of four previous passes-lofted a high pass to Ted Aucreman on the five. Aucreman struggled into the end zone and in doing so, ended all Michigan thoughts of victory.- The final 13:35 were just a ques- tion of whether or not Michigan could win the statistical battle, 4 M 4 -David ailitrow AIR BATTLE-Michigan's Bob Johnson fights with an Indiana halfback for one of Stan Noskin's aerials in yesterday's action. Johnson was suceessful here but too often the Wolverines wersn't and the Hoosiers intercepted as the Michigan mistakes paved the way for the Indiana triumph. DICKENS, ELLIOTT COMMENT: Praise Efforts of Two Good Teams By JIM BENAGH Daily Sports Editor Special to The Daily BLOOMINGTON - Two foot- ball coaches agreed on two things here yesterday: Indiana's Phil Dickens and Michigan's Bump Elliott said they saw two good football teams play good games. Dickens, whose team has been hit by bard luck of goal-line de- cisions In the last two weeks, said his team did a fine job in its fourth win of the year. "They were physically relaxed and mentally alert," he said. "And that's the way you have to be in this league." line. Michigan held Indiana to 117 yards on the ground. Elliott was sorry about his team's errors, but pointed out that hard-hitting and hard-charging Indiana linemen helped cause some of them. * * * Michigan got continued good, statistical performances from Stan Noskin, Bennie McRae and Bob Johnson. Noskin had his best day of the year in passing yardage, conjplet- ing 14 passes for 154 yards. He had completed 26 for 204 in five previous Big Ten games. "He's a terrific thrower," Dick- ens said about the Michigan quar- fanh-F 4T-ie Cr~+ o cna sn the one he received at Illinois last week. Other Michigan Injuries in- cluded Alex ballahan, who had a leg injury, and end George Mans, who was "clipped" out of the game in the first half. * * * About the only Hoosiers moan- ing despite victory were the ticket salesmen. Only 27,000 paid to see the game and there was even a question as to how many of those showed up. Next week Michigan will finish the season against Ohio State. Last year the powerful Buckeyes barely squeeked by the Wolver- ines, 20-14, in the final game of Bennie Ooosterbaan's coaching career. First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Passes Intercepted By Punts Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized Mich. Ind. 17 12 95 158 164 60 14-25 4-5 0 4' 1-40 5-31 4 0 25 .45 u Of Michigan, he added: erbacx. " i.isp ae na "Just about what we expected. hook passes were the ones that You have to play the whole sixty hurt us." B nai B'rith Hillel Foundation minutes against them. we ust took advantage of most of the McRae gained 57 yards on 10 clu A Enl.E. breaks." carries. Only Indiana's Ted Smith supper Elliottcredited his squad as -with 67 on 15 attempts-had MEMBERS 75c being a- "team that never gives more. NON-MEMBERS $1.25 up." He hadva good word for his Johnson totaled 80 yards on six $1.nupfot" h idago pass receptions to hold his rank job against the strong Indiana among the conference leaders. Come and enjoy kosher delicatessen Going into the game, he was third with 10 for 144 yards. Others 6-7 P.M. 1429 Hill Street "We aim to didn't fare so well, however, For instance, Big Ten punting !Pleader Smith lowered his 39.6 av- JeaSe yau - erage after his four punts aver- Sit back, relax as we aged out at 30 yards per try. ily Css edscut your hair to your liking. Another hard-luck guy was Queries invited Michigan's fullback Tony Rio,. TAwho sat out more. than three Bring Q uick Results THEDASC A BARBERSnearMichigquarters with an injured shoulder. Biinear Michigan Theatre Te ijury was a recurrence of Reserved eat ickets on sale oWmrro - for UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN OHIO STATE UNIVERSTY Conert 0 Saturday, November 21 "!I -if A r * SCORES GRID PICKS SCORES Indiana 26, MICHIGAN 7 Michigan State 15, Northwestern 10 Ilinois 9, Wisconsin 6 Iowa 16, Ohio State 7 Purdue 29, Minntota 23 Pittsburgh 28, Notre Dame 13 Oklahoma 28, Army 20, Alabama 9, Georgia Tech 7 Georgia 14, Auburn 13 Duke. 27, Wake Forest 15 Maryland 28, Clemson 25 Mississippi 37, Tennessee 7 Arkansas 17, SMU 14 TCU 14, Texas 9 Nebraska 14, Colorado 12 Yale 38, Princeton 20 Washington 20, California 0 Stanford 39, Oregon State 22 Oregon 7, washington State 6 USC 17, Baylor 8 OTHER SCORES Louisiana St. 27, Mississippi St. 0 Navy 16, George Washington S Penn State 46, Holy Cross 0 Syracuse 71, Colgate 0 Detroit 14, Western Michigan 0 Vanderbilt 6, Tulane 6 (Tie) Rice 7, Texas A&M 2 Air Force 20, Arizona 15 Valparaiso 14, Wayne State 6r Missouri 26, Kansas State 0 Wyoming 25, New Mexico 20 Kentucky 41, Xavier 0 Dartmouth 21, Cornell 12 North Carolina 41, Virginia 6 Marquette 35, Cincinnati 34 Rutgers 12, Villanova 6 Kansas 28, Oklahoma State 14 Texas Tech 27, Houston 0 William & Mary 9, Florida State #1 Bowling Green 30, Delaware 8 f Brown 16, Harvard 6 Bucknell 26, Temple 6 VMI 32, Citadel 8 Virginia Tech 12, West .Virginia 1 Tulsa 17, North Texas State 6 Iowa State 55, San Jose State 0 Hope 32, Ohio Northern 6 W. Illinois 22, E. Michigan 0 I 9 _.. _._._ _._._ I F Sr f you plan to buy a CAMERA PROJECTOR SCREEN or any other