THE MICHIGAN DAILY Upsets Rock Grid World As Wildcats, Pitt, Golden Bears Boi Northwestern Stopped. 20-13I By Wisconsin N.U. Hope For Undisputed Crown Fades; Badger's Spirit, Speed Triumph; EVANSTON, Ill., Nov. 5.-(iP)-WTs- consin fired its bolt today and the explosion virtually shattered the' dream of an undisputed Western Con- ference championship which North- western had prayed for after its con-. quest of Minnesota a week ago. The scrappy Badgers, playing with faultless drive, precision, speed and spirit, conquereci the hitherto unde- feated Wildcats 20 to 13, causing Northwestern adherents to turn purple in color as well as in spirit. A crowd of 37,000, filling both aides of the huge stadium and trickling into; the end stands, watched the Badgers outscore the Wildcats in a sensational second half to register a stunning up- set. After missing a touchdown by d hair's breadth in the finish of the sec- ond period, the hard-hitting Badgers, with plenty of variety to their attack,r scored two touchdowns in the third period and another in the fourth. They just missed making it a routd when they lost the ball on downs six inches from the Wildcat goal. i Big Howie Weiss, Wisconsin's full- 1 back, registered Wisconsin's firsth touchdown soon after the start of the third period. Cutting off tackle, and t then dodging through the Wildcatc with amazing change of pace, Weiss C The Lorain Speedster Circles His End Carnegie Tech Ends Panthers Victory String Tartans Triumph, 20-10,1 Paul Kremer, sophomore halfbac quarter of yesterday's game. He was and was finally tackled on the Pen men in sight are number 22, Ed Bu 14, Rix Yard and number 46, Jam galloped 40 yards to score. The block- ing of the Badgers was perfect. The game, brim full of excitement, reached its heights when Jefferson, Northwestern's Negro halfback, took Hovland's kickoff, and ran 92 yards down the side line for a touchdown. He took the ball on the eight yard ine, and running behind perfect in- terference, reached midfield. Then he cut out into the open, with Mad- sen, a sophomore backfield man put- ting a terrific block on the last Wis- consin tackler. Another Badger, Gavre, tried to overtake Jefferson but unged and fell flat on his face, while the fleet footed Negro scampered on. The Badgers, now gunning for at east a slice of the Conference cham- pionship, showed their superiority by scoring 11 first downs to 6 for Northwestern and outrushing the Cats 101 to 88 yards. To Stop 22-Game WinI By DICK SIERK Seen, thought and heard at yester- Streak Of Pittsburgh day's intersectional battle between the Wolverines and Quakers: Penn- PITTSBURGH, Nov. 5-(P)-A val- sylvania came out decked in suits iant band of Carnegie Tech gridmen reminiscent of the gay 90s . . . White rose up today to pull mighty Pitts- bodies and shoulders with red and burgh from atop the nation's football black striped sleeves made it appear perch and accomplish a feat other as though Munger's team had arrived teams from coast to coast have been for the game 30 years too late. trying unsuccessfully to do for two The appearance of the umpire, John years. Schommer, out of Chicago, also re- Pittsburgh was beaten, 20 to 10. called stormy scenes on the basketball The Tartans, 3-1 short-enders in court last winter when this same the silver anniversary meeting of the Schommer called fouls on the crowd neighboring schools, made the famed . . . he just couldn't take the boos Pitt forward wall look like a pile of directed his way . . . he got along cards and the three pile-drivers in all right yesterday however. circled hisleft end in Photohe by B second Carnegie's backfield, Merlyn Condit, When Fieden, Penn end, came out s being hemmed in by Pe tacklers Ray Carnelly and George Muha, of the game in the first period after , bevin hemd r in b enTh cker plunged and drove furiously to ac- he had been set down very hastily nsylvania 3 yard lines The Quaker complish the unbelievabley by a vicious Wolverine he received a rke; number 33, Ray Frick; number Stebbins Runs 97 Yards standing ovation from his comrades nes Connell.-I The game left most oa the huge on the Quaker bench . . . Coach throng of 61,000 in the big hilltop Munger must have given the order to saucer stunned. It was crammed with "Clap Hands, Here Comes Charlie" Boileriiiakers thrills from the minute Curly Steb- . . . Harmon's 98 was the first jersey bins took the opening kickoff and casualty of the day as he parted with "'J ran 97 yards for a Panther touch- a portion of his sleeve in making a Beat D uc eyes down until the final seconds when much needed first down on the Penn- the desperate Panthers took to the sylvania 17 in the second quarter, airlanes. shortly before Don Siegel did his Lou Brock Leads Purdue Tartan courage bested Panther heroic piece work. To Easy 12-0 Victory ,prowess. Any other club might have It appeared after the first half that ! taken it lying down after the heart- the Michigan Stadium was a jinx to COLUMBUS,O., Nov. 5.--(P) reaking (for Carnegie) dash of highly-touted sophomore backs.. CS 0. - Stebbins. But six minutes later, Con- Reagan had little on the ball and Purdue punctured the Buckeye bubble dit faded to Pitt's 33 yard line and looked especially sad on Kromer's 50 today, 12 to 0, virtually wrecking looped a high pass over the goal to yard return of his kick for a touch- Ohio State's Western Conference title Muha. down . . . Reagan was just appear- aspirations with a pair of ast'-period Carnelly's placekick knotted the ing on the horizon as Kromer crossed count. A few plays later in the same into pay dirt despite the fact that a touchdown thrusts which 17:, a crowd Ifirst period. Bill Daddio, who rarely smart kicker will always cover up on qf 54,365 gasping. misses, booted a neat field goal from his kicks . . . It brought back Louis Brock, 185-pound junior full- the Carnegie 12, sending the Pan- thoughts of two year ago when Col- back from Stafford, Kan., was the thers in front again. umbia brought a much publicized Sid spearhead of the Boilermakers bri- Score On Pass Luckman to Ann Arbor . . . Sid speahead tBoermyaksalwrt With seconds to go beore the fared no better than Frank did yes- whistle ended the half, Kern shot terday but he faced a much weaker line and a couple of great running Karl Striegel, end, into the game. aggregation. mates. Carnelly's pass from the Pitt 33 land- Penn employed a novel kickoff 'but The Kansas flash cracked off a ed in the arms of "Chick" Chicker- aside from being novel it was nothing 50-yard run, longest of the day, to neo and caromed off into Striegel's to shout about . . . Shinn, doing the set up the firs't touchdown, which he hands, over the goal. kicking, disdained a ball-holder and carried over from the three-yard Biggie Goldberg, Pitt ace, played rolled the ball right down the center mark. A few minutes later he punt- only five minutes in the first period on the ground . . . such things are ed 80 yards from behind his own goal because of a leg injury, not good for the grass. t.. v...{.n4u1--'"i' .-Io.d. .r..h...ra... LOS ANGELES, Nov. 5 -(p)- ISouthern California's Trojan war- riors derailed the California Rose I Bowl-bound Special here today, wrecking the unbeaten record of the mighty machine from Berkeley and taking to themselves the inside track. to the Pacific Coast Conference foot- ball championship and the Pasadena I Bowl Game Jan. 2. A record-breaking crowd of 95,000 saw the Trojans dynamite California 13 to 7, and hoist the colors of cardi- nal and gold to heights unseen since the glory days of Troy five years ago. California's streak of 18 consecu- tive victories, topped by its triumph in the Rose Bowl last New Year's day, was trampled under foot. Leading the Trojan climb back to triumphant heights was Grenville Lansdell, flashy quarterback who pitched strike after strike to his pass receivers and scored the first Trojan touchdown in the third quarter on a brilliant sweep around California's left end after a six yard jaunt. Unable to dent the Trojan line, the Bears took to the air and Vic Bottari got hot to pass his mates 66 yards with Morely Matthewson, right end, snagging a final pass good for 38 yards and the lone Bear touch- down. Bottari drop kicked the extra point. [Different .., trYa III Sunday Special! Chicken Plate Afl Desert & Beverage 0 c THE GERMAN INN 117 W. Huron "Just Below Main" It tl R C I_ _ ._._.._. _ - . _ r._ il Shorthand - Typing - Business English Other Related Subjects. INDIVIDUAL INSTRUCTION Ann Arbor Secretarial School Nickels Arcade i a 1! ICI to put the Bucks deep in their own territory. Next he intercepteda pass, and then carried the ball to the one- yard mark from where Leon Dewitte, junior fullback, scored the second and game-clinching touchdown. Ohio, frustrated at every turn, was outclassed in all departments. Strong, Capable Representation in the State Legislature Is Assured by the Election of The victory broke a 22-game string of conquests run up by Pitt since they lost to Duquesne, another neigh- borhood rival, 7-0, on a mud-spat- tered field in 1936, Only one defeat, a one touchdown loss to Notre Dame, mars Carnegie's record this season. VANDERBILT WINS NASHVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 5.--(L)- Vanderbilt's once-beaten Commodores handed a stubborn Sewanee eleven-a 14 to 0 defeat today before 7,000 spec- tators in the 47th renewal of their gridiron rivalry. SUNDAY DINNER Turkey Dinner,, Complete 65c Steak Dinners at 75c, 65c 55c, 50c SUBWAY COFFEE SHOPPE 727 N. University at Thayer (Under Miller Drug) JOHN P. KEUSCH Democratic Candidate for State Legislature This office is one of the most important for e welfare of Wash- tenaw County to be filled at the forthcoming election. The office re quires a man who understands the needs of the county, not only the ordinary needs of its citizens, but the needs and requirements of the many great state institutions located here. These institutions are important not only to the citizens of Washtenaw but to many thousands of citizens throughout the state. His ability to forcefully and effectively represent all of the people of the county, as well as to present the needs of these state institutions to the legislature, transcends his political affiliations. The test is his ability to do this important job well. John P. Keusch was born and educated in Washtenaw County. He is a graduate of the Literary and Law Schools of the University of Michigan. He" is a practicing attorney in Chelsea where he lives and where he is City Attorney. For several years he was attorney for the Department of Interior in the Rural Resettlement Administration and in the National Park Service. In these positions, he was in charge of the legal work for the Park Service in the states of Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Indiana, and Kentucky. He is independent, liberal and progressive. His aggressiveness, ability and experience -will strengthen -Washtenaw's representation Yo Of FrjAP nfl r"j~x I I On-the-dot pressing service ELECT JOHN P. KEUSCH I~~t 1 the m I{ I