THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVI Purdue.. ....13 Kansas State Wisconsin..... .7 Indiana . . .. 13 Oklahoma ..... 14 Baylor .... 6 Nebraska_..........Texas A&M . ....6 .. ..6 Rice ........ Texas ....... .. 13 California . .. 6 Washington . ... 14 Santa Clara . . ... 7 Arkansas . ...'. 21 ii Ohio State ... Chicago..... . . 42 Last Period Score Gives Michigan 15-13 Victory Over Yale Harmon Paces 81-Yard Drive To Touchdown Purucker And Nicholson Make Michigan Tallies; Humphreys Is Eli Star (Continued from Page 1) position, took the ball, faded back tok the seven yard line and threw a spot' pass to John Nicholson, who leaped high in the end zone to spear the ball for the winning points. Brendan's Throws Winning Pass conversion was good. In the first half Michigan clearly showed the effect of its bruising battle with the Gophers. Players failed to carry out their assignments on occa- sion, and there were glaring defensive oversights. The whole team seemed physically off key. With only four an a half minutes gone in the first quarter Yale pulled its initial coupe. The ball was on the Eli 45 when Humphrey, who pitches on the Yale baseball team, began to chuck those passing bullets. Passes Start Clicking After two unsuccessful tries, he fin- ally shot a beautiful toss to halfback Johnny Miller who snared the ball at the sideline and travelled to the Michigan 35 before Phillips and Nich- olson brought him down. With Michigan spreading out its defense, Humphrey employed a strate- gy at this point, sending speedy Al Wilson through the center of a split Michigan line. The play was a reverse, Bill Snavely to Wilson and carried to the 30 yard line where Arch Kodros made the stop. Before the Wolverines' baffled de. fense could decide what to expect, Humphrey faded back and tossed a beauty to Moody in the end zone. Moody circled behind Harmon and the toss carried 48 yards in the air. Wilson's attempted conversion was wide. Michigan Threatens Michigan threatened to score in the initial period but the stout hearted Yale forwards withstood the attack. Nicholson r e c o v e r e d Wilson's fumble on Yale's 29 and Michigan's sporadic attack began to slowly func- tion. Harmon made it look easy on a cut back, crashing to the nine yard line on the very first play for a first down. A Phillips to Evashevski lateral lost a yard, but Purucker gained five on the next try, smashing over the weak side tackle to the Eli five. Once more Purucker hit that right tackle but big Bill John stopped him after a scant two yard gain. It was fourth down and three yards to the goal line. Harmon received the ball, faked a pass, and plowed over left guard but he wound up one yard short and Yale took the ball on downs. As Miller stood deep in his end zone to punt, the giant Siegel came blasting through to block the kick. The ball bounced off his chest and over the end zone for an automatic two points for Michigan. In the closing minutes of the quar- ter, Yale moved 38 yards in four plays one of the a successful Humphrey pass, to rest on the Michigan 42 as the period ended.p Yale Scores Again They scored just three minutes later, Humphrey started it by again6 taking advantage of Michigan's1 spread defense to fake a pass andl smash through right tackle to the Michigan 30, where Howard Mehaffeyp snowed him under. Yale madenodbones about whatl they were going to do. Two Humphrey passes fell incomplete, but the thirdI time he pitched a beauty to Wilson on the flank and Al moved to the Michigan 20 for a first down. Once more the Yale quarterback faded, found Art Dyess free on theE seven and slung a beauty right into his hands for the fourth first down in succession. A Humphrey pass and a Humphrey run failed, but the third time found success and six more Yale points. Moody was the receiver again as he slipped behind Fred Trosko and Paul Kromer to snare the toss in the end ;:one. Wilson Converts Wilson's conversion was good, and Michigan 'was 11 points behind. The Wolverines overcame that lead1 however in that final half which added somewhat of a zest to a dullP afternoon. The greaterpart of the game seemed to be spent in discus-s sions between players and officials who apparently could not fathom some of the mid-western rules thor- oughly. For Michigan, Janke, Brennan and I Pingel Leads- State To Win OverOrange Spartan Back Wins Duel With Sidat-Singh; First' Defeat For Syracuse EAST LANSING, Mich., Oct. 22- (~)-In a breath taking struggle that developed into an individual battle between Johnny Pingel and Wilmeth Sidat-Singh, Michigan State downed Syracuse, 19 to 12, today to topple the Orange from the ranks of the na- tion's undefeated major college foot- ball elevens. Pingel, Michigan State's veteran halfback, and Sidat-Singh, Syracuse's much-heralded star, either had a part in or set up all of the touchdowns. Pingel put State in the lead when; he shot a scoring pass to big Ole Nel- son in the end zone in the second period. He counted the last two touch- downs almost single handed, fighting his way 23 yards for a third period, score and going 26 yards on an off- tackle smash in the final quarter to make the Spartan margin safe. Held in check in the first half, Sid- at-Singh connected in the third period for a 32-yard gain that ended on the State one and a subsequent touch- down and tossed a 45-yard scoring pass to Phil Allen on the opening play of the last quarter.. Sidat-Singh was the better passer" today, completing four of 12 tosses for 121 yards, but Pingel was the superior runner as he averaged better than six yards a crack in gaining 115 yards in 19 tries. Sidat-Singh gained but 38 yards running while Pingel connected on four of six tosses for 39 yards. In the end the ground game proved superior to the pass. A tricky 33-mile an hour wind that swept the length of the field, placed one team at a distinct disadvantage in each period. f l 1 1 l 1 I Team's Narrow Victory Leaves Pitt Overwhelms S.M.U. PITTSBURGH, Oct. 22.- (P) - Campus Doubtful About Future Prowling with equal success through the air and on the ground, the University of Pittsburgh's mighty It was a happy and relieved Ann the broadcast, the Wolverines ap- Panthers swamped Southern Metho- Arbor town that looked at Yale's short parently headed nowheres in particu- dist under a 34 to 7 touchdown bar- end of the Wolverine-Eli game and lar. the high hopes appeared bound rage today as 37,500 fans wildly ac- murmured with fervent relief, "There for the rocks. claimed the spectacular show. Pitt's but for the Grace of God.' The first touchdown and the optim- touchdowns, two by passes, were scattered into every period. The campus experienced a peculiar ism of the broadcasters touched off shock during the broadcast of the a spark of hope in the collective Ann game-and practically everybody in Arbor breast and the second score town was on the receiving end of a fanned it into a flame. Arnd in spite radio set. Frustrated by five years of of the fact that Michigan was knock- If you enjoy REALLY GOOD victory starvation, the'consecutive vic- ing at the Yale goal line for another good eating" at THE HAUN tories over Michigan State and Chi- score, the timer's gun announcing cago and the heart-rending loss to the end of the game was accompanied mighty Minnesota, the subsequent by an almost audible sigh of relief here SUNDAY DINNERS 12:30 - emotional build-up to the point I in town. 0 I' FOOD why not "Adventure in TED TAVERN. 7:30 75c - $1.25 In The Midwest Iowa State 21, Kansas 7 Drake 18, Miami U. 6 West Virginia U 20, Creighton 13 Beloit 6. Knox 0 Wittenberg 13, Marcetta 0 Valparaiso 34, Indiana State 20 Missouri 13, Washington U. (St.) 0 North Dakota U 7, Montana U. 0 Butler 35, Ohio Wesleyan 0 Hillsdale 14, Kalamazoo 6 where it was believed that the Wol- verines were a team of destiny, cul- minated in the belief that the team was unbeatable from here on. Theo slogan "On to Yale" was interpreted as "On to a Yale Victory" and though the near-defeat left the campus still firm in its belief in the team it was+ a bit puzzled. But the fact that Penn beat this same Yale team 21-0 and that Colum- bia beat it 27-14 only to have Penn- sylvania nose out the Lions yesterday made the campus a little skeptical about the vaunted prowess of the Wolverines and the outcome of the Penn game Nov. 3. At half time this town was as dead! as the fight for free silver. With the score 13-2 against Michigan and,' from what little could be learned from STATISTICS MICHIGAN-YALE M Y First downs .............14 Yards gained rushing . . .129 Passes attempted........21 Passes completed.........8 Yds. by forward passing .169 Yds. lost, attempted passes 11 Passes intercepted by ... 1 Yds. gained, run back of intercepted passes .....14 Punting average .........28 x-Total yds, all kicks returned ..............93 Opponents fumbles recovered .............1 Yds. lost by penalties ... .25 x-Includes punts and kickoffs. 11 69 27 12, 145 8 3 WAFFLE DINNERS 5:30 - 7:30. 60c WEEK-DAY LUNCHEONS 11:30 - 1:30. 40c - 85c WEEK-DAY DINNER 5:30 - 7:30 .60c - $1.25 e E HAUNTEDrAV7E7RN 417 East Huron Dial 7781 -Michigan Daily Photo Sophomore Tom Harmon again justified the paens of praise sung to him when he spearheaded Wolver- ine touchdown marches against Yale yesterday. His fourth down touchdown pass to Nicholson in the end zone midway in the last period climaxed an 81-yard drive to thede- ciding score. 13 30 78 , 0 5 HOW ABOUT YOUR PRINTING PROBLEMS? i} Let us give you an estimate. 11- Football Scores 11 II s.. EAST Albright 32, Moravian 0 Brown 40, Rhode Island State 21. Catholic U. 21, West Virginia Wes- leyan 0 Army 40, Boston University 0 Navy 13,.Princeton 13 (tie) Cornell 21, Penn State 6 Bowdoin 25, Colby 18 Holy Cross 29, Georgia 6 Lafayette 7, N.Y.U. 6 Maine 23, Bates 6 Lehigh 32, Delaware 0 Washington & Jefferson 14, Dick- inson 6 Gettysburg 16, Franklin-Marshall 8 Rutgers 32, Hampton-Sydney 0 Oberlin 14, Swarthmore 0 Amherst 13, Wesleyan 0 Tufts 6, Williams 6 (tie) Georgetown 14, Manhattan 13 Rochester 17, Hamilton 0 Niagara 32, St. Lawrence 7 Providence 7, Springfield 3 Trinity 26, Coast Guard 0 Western Maryland 19, Upsala 0 Waynesburg 19, Geneva 0 C.C.N.Y. 21, Brooklyn 0 LaSalle 20, St. Mary's 0 MIDWEST T.C.U. 21, Marquette 0 Xavier (Cincinnati) 26, Kentucky 7 Western Reserve 33, Cincinnati 0 Akron 20, Baldwin-Wallace 6 Loyola (New Orleans) 13, De Paul 0 John Carroll 14, Case 0 Miami (O) 14, Dayton 0 Kent State 54, Buffalo 0 Ohio U 52, Wayne 7 Toledo 13, Marshall 7 Whew!!!j RIDERS 302 South State St. (Near Liberty St.) TOM HARMON, who was our representative last year, is again with us this year. Call Tom .t 2-4551, or RAMSAY -KERN FOUNTAIN PENS TYPEWRITERS STUDENT SUPPLIES Pr i n e r s National Bank Bldg. Phone 7900 U 'Ti ghting Irish' Beat Carnegie Last Period Touchdown Gives Irish 7-0 Win SOUTH BEND, Oct. 22.-(P)- Notre Dame, off on another march for national championship honors. relegated Carnegie Tech to the ranks of the defeated today in the most bruising encounter the Fighting Irish have engaged this season. Notre Dame won, 7 to 0, but only after a savagely fought game that kept the crowd of 25,000 in an uproar. Third string players accomplished what the regulars failed to do. Outweighed and outmanned, the Scots waged a heroic battle for three furious periods to outplay Notre Dame. Then, after four minutes of olay in the fourth, Notre Dame Launched a touchdown drive that was set up in midfield when John Get- chell, the referee, gave the ball to Notre Dame. The decision wound up with the Carnegie players and even Coach William Kern swarming :round him to dispute it vigorously. The fourth period opened with Tech making first down on its own 38 but failing thenand Notre Dame taking the ball on downs on the Tech 46 yard line. Getchell told the.invad- ers' quarterback that it was third down, then reversed himself. I I r Alexader Woolicott 11 TUESDAY, October 25 8:15 HILL AUDITORIUM, BOX OFFICE OPEN MONDAY AND TUESDAY moon. I 7 Other Lectures: Michigan Pos Valek LE Janke Heikkinen LC Kodros C Brennan R Siegel R'I Nicholson RE Evashevski QE Purucker LEI Harmon RI Phillips FE Michigan .......... Yale ............... Michigan scoring: i,. xr G V r Yale Dyess John Caracciolo Platt C. MillerE Taylor Moody, Humphrey J. Miller Wilson Snavely 6 7-151 0 0-131 ITALIAN DINNERS La Gondola SPAGHETTI and RAVIOLI 1602 Packard. Ypsilanti Ph 958-W November 15 PAUL VAN ZEELAND November 29- COL. W. STEWART-RODDI E January 12 CAPT. WARWICK TOMPKINS January 26- R. H. BRUCE LOCKHART February 16- LORD STRABOLGI February 28- CAPT. C. W. R. KNIGHT March 8 --HARRISON FORMAN 0 7 Touchdowns-I Purucker, Nicholson. Point from try after touchdown, Brennan (place-' ment). Yale scoring: Touchdowns-Moody 2. Point from try after touchdown-' Humphrey (placement). Safety - Siegel. Substitutions, Michigan: End Ged- eon. Tackle, Smith. Guard, Fritz. Backs, Mehaffey, Trosko. Meyer, Kromer, Evashevski, Hook, Levine. Substitutions, Yale: Ends, Zilly, Hoton. Tackle, Brooks. Guards, Burnham, Dern. Center, Stack. Backs, Anderson, Whiteman, Collins. Referee, J. E. Keegan, Pittsfield, Mass.; Umpire, F. S. Bergin, Prince- ton; Linesman, L. A. Young. Penn- sylvania; Field Judge, E. Cavanaugh, Pittsburgh. I".______ COMPANYO OD P R OFES S IO NA L T EEXTEMI NTEN . it SEASON TICKET SALES CLOSE OCT. 25th II1- Beat the Anti-Freeze Rush II PRICES: $3.50- $3.00 - $2.75 i 11 .11 .l ..