'1411,MICHT(;IAN DAILY Averines Score Three Times Then Coast To 19-13 Vici Cory ner Tallies te On Punt eturn, Pass 's Blocked Kick overed By Sukup I Zone For Score Continued from Page 1) Is) In 1 line late in the final period two plays Jack Dutcher, ore quarterback, scored the uchdown that has been regis- )f a running play against in this season. ent 18 yards around right end first attempt, and then ada- 2 yards down the sidelines on se from Loye Rainwater for re. Three Michigan defenders ots at him with Bill Luther the best angle on the Michi- but he squirmed out of their s to reach pay dirt. Penn Scores Again minutes later Penn scored marching 45yards through Dutcher passed to Bill Miller Wolverine 24, and two plays tossed another bullet to Fred on the Michigan 7. A line play and with only a minute re- g, Miller tossed flat to Straub goal line, and the reserve end d to project enough of his over the last marker to get or a score. r converted successfully after ial score but missed connec- i his second attempt. statistics give Michigan the er the ground route and Penn- i the nod through the air. The .nes registered 12 first downs Y's 10. They gained 182 yards ing to Penn's 145. Both teams 8 passes with Penn completing more than ,Michigan. The yardage on passes was 134, m's 80. Indicative is the yard- return punts, Michigan gain- yards by this route to Penn's Football Scoresl EAST Dartmouth 44, Dickinson 6 Yale 20, Brown 14 Fordham 3, St. Mary's 0 Manhattan,-3, N.C.S. 0 NYU 45, Lehigh 0 Syracuse 7, Colgate 0 Rutgers 20, Princeton 18 Holy Cross 33, Temple 0 Columbia 39, Virginia 0 Army 20, Fi ankiin-Marshall 12 Boston College 14, Indiana 0 Harvard 47, Chicago 13 Lafayette 7, Penn State 0 Villanova 25, Auburn 12 MIDWEST Detroit 38, North Dakota 7 Iowa State 14, Drake 0 Nebraska 16, Kansas 7 SOUTH Alabamat3, Tulane 0 Georgia Tech 19, Kentucky 18 Georgia 19, Florida 6 Vanderbilt 14, Sewanee 0 South Carolina 7, Duquesne 0 Tennessee 45, Chattanooga 0 L.S.U. 32, Miss. State 7 SOUTHWEST Baylor 14, Texas 3 S.M.U. 10, Texas A&M. 7 Rice 3, Arkansas 0 TCU 21,ATulsa 0 FAR. WEST Washington 10, Stanford 7 UCLA 21, Washington State 0 Wildcats Next Milo Sukup Finds A Linesman's Heaven--OnBottom Of Pile issouri Beats Chrkstman Paces igers To Winning Score COLUMBIA. Mo.. Nov.- /P--The University of Missouri cracked a bat- tered Michigan State cifense for a FOR young people who touchdown in the fourth quater and were unable to start school weathered a stormy last minute Spar- at the beginning of our Fall an attack for a 6-0 victory today in Term o September, , our heir jutersectional football gae be- new classes will be started fore 10.000 spectators. on November 7. Paul Christman, the Tigers' sopho- Students begin and ad- nore aerial artist, started Missouri's vane independently. As soon tcuchdown attak with a lo mp as definite assiguments are rom his own 29 yard line to Stillman compieted. the graduate is rouse, who caught the ball on his4 3. entit led to th assistance of As Spartan tacklers pulld him our Employmnent .Depart- downi he lateraled to Orf who car ment in securing a position. ried to the Michigan State 30. Myron Counsil, substitute fullback Alad -laying in place of injured Clarence placed. Hydron, shot through tile Spartan Phone or call for free literature line on a reverse for a first down on -Dety hot by'B~wiiix the 16-yard line. Christman then set After Don Siegel, rangy Michigan tackle, blocked Fr ank Reagan's kick early in the second quarter, the the s fr the th n th a ball bounded into the end zone where it evaded Siegel's grasr. After the subsequent pile-up was untangled, pass to Clay Cooper on the nine-yard arr1nilton there was Mile Sukup, hugging the ball close to his bar rel chest for the first Wolverine score. Pennsylvania line. thought that a Penn man had recovered and spent a mh aute debating the point with the referee. They lost -'------Business College that one and six others when Referee James Masker stck to his guns and gave the touchdown to Michigan. H. W. CLARK William at State Phone 7831 iroeEnglish Boot and Shoe Maker R ~ llO OJesSaonO esOur new repair department, the_________________ R ice V ictory R eopens SsnOurnwrepairfeparbest in the city. Prices are right. 438 South State and Factory on :Read The Daly Classifieds South Forest Avenue. FAYETTEVILLE, Ark, Nov. 5--UP) with only 50 seconds of play remain- Guard Bill Haner, holdin' the ball _-- -Referee Alvin Bell of Little Rock ing. for the second attempt tumbled. had to be escorted off the field by: The Rice Owls made two attempts Schuehle picked up, was chased back state policemen today after Rice won before Schuehle's successful boots 20 yards then tried to pass to a team-- a hectic Southwest Conference grid and the officials' decisions on the mate who turned out to be an ineli- battle from Arkansas 3-0. two plays brought boos from the gible receiver. Players and fans con- crowd. tended the ball was grounded deliber- Some 2,000 protesting fans and stu On the first field goal try which ately but no penalty was called. dents rushed onto the field shortly was blocked, a Rice substitute was The University ROTC oined offi-302 SouthState St(ear Liberty St after fullback Jake Schuehle kicked on the field and officials said the cers in protecting Bell. Coach Fred a field goal from the 27-yard line whistle was blown before the kick. C. Thomsen of Arkansas walked be- FOUNTAIN PENS side the official to the players dress- TYPEWRITERS Hichigan-Plnnsylvania aumegStatisticsing room. Approximately 1,500 fans 3r s~,nensvCin ~ iS~urrounded the dressing room for STUDENT SUPPLIES,~ PENN MICHIGAN more than 30 minutes before the First downs..10 12 crowd began breaking up and Bell left Fir t ow s .. .. .. .. .. .. .. -- . .. . .. . .. . . 1012under police guard. ~-- Yards gained rushing (net)......................145 182 Forward passes attempted .......................... 18 18 Forward passes completed .......................... 11 10 BIG TEN STANDINGS Yards by forward passing ..................... . .... 134 80 W L T Pt. Yards lost, attempted forward passes . ............... 8 0 Minnesota ...........3 1 0 .750 h .F..rward..asses inter.epted by ... ..... ..............1 0 Wisconsin ............3 1 0 .750 T h e4ih ' e, I &H 11 Pennsylvania Gustafson Shinn, c Mendelson Frick Hunt Polilli Warner Reagan Coulter Burke Connell Pennsylvania Pos. LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB Michigan Smick Janke, c Brennan Tinker Heikkinen Siegel Frutig Evashevski Kromer Harmon Mehaffeyl 0 0 0 13-13 Kromer Stars you're looking for heroes, the clearly brought forth the talents e gifted Kromer and Howard ffey as backs. Mehaffey, start- is first game showed power in unning and preolsion in his ing. Outstanding in the line Siegel, Sukup, and Horace r, who did 60 minute duty as e Kodros' 'relief. Kodros rested juredi ribs on the bench. sup especially was impressive.' romer's 50 yard touchdown run, s active Milo who dumped two defenders on the 25 to clear an for the ball carrier. As Ralph :inen's understudy, he led the ing brigade and showed a world eed and aggressiveness. Tinker .00 per cent at all times, tack- aell and passing accurately. Penn, Dutcher and Jim Con- were the backfield standguts Harlan Gustafson and Capt. Shinn starred in the line. Frank an, the publicized sophomore, used sparingly and wound up a net gain of a negative two for the afternoon. Michigan ..........0 13 6 0-191 Penn scoring : Touchdown: Dutcher, Straub. Point after touchdown, J. Miller (placement). Michigan scoring: touchdowns, T Sukup, Kromer 2. Point after touch- I down: Meyer (place-kick). Y Penn subslitutions: Ends, Fielden P Barnett, Miller, Straub, Stephens.1*Z Tackles; Yard, Bradway, Engler. 01 Guards, A. B, Smith, Lorber, Murphy, I Wagner. Center, Becker, Levy. Backs, Dutcher, Rainwater, Chizma- dia, Koepsell, W. J. Miller, Stephens, Daly. Michigan substitutions: E nds, Nicholson, Gedeon, Czak, Nielsen, Zielinski. Tackles, W. Smith, Jor- dan, B. Hook, Kuhn. Guards, Sukup, Fritz, Olds. Backs, Meyer, Purucker, Trosko, W. Hook, Levine, Renda, Strong, Phiilips, Christy, Kitti, Lu- ther, Laskey. Referee, James Masker, (Northwes- tern); Umpire, John J. Schommer, (Chicago); Field Judge, Frank Lane (Detroit); Head Linesman, J. J. Lipp'i (Chicago). t a it Wnt Be Long Now, So Be Prepared )ee our large fine stock of UITS )orting Goods - -w alU C4A G tt i icN cu iy. .. .. .. .. ards gained, run back of intercepted passes ......". ..2 0 inting average (from scrimmage)................29 38 Total yards, all kicks returned .... . ...... ...... . .. 73 136 pponents' fumbles recovered ....... ...............2 2 ards lost by penalties .............................35 45 * Includes punts and kick-offs. The Typewriter Opportunity of a Lifetime! Michigan ......... Northwestern..... Ohio State .... . Purdue ........... Illinois . . .... . .. . . Iowa ............. Indiana......... Chicago .... ..... 1 ' 2 1 2 1 ,..2 1 2 1 1 2 1 2 0 3 0 3 7I r% " ,. ; { ,;. ,'} { 5 ' {. Good Few Machines __ and up .667 .667 .667 .667 .333 .333 .000 .000 f K;r :% and SKI S Li I Artur Rodzinski CONDUCTOR MONDAY, Nov.7,8:30 HILL AUDITORIUM A limited number of both season and individual concert tickets - The best in S I& I i .