~AY, OT.a2, 939TIE M-C II G A-NDAILY PAGE SK Duqpqew *...21' Tu~lanp .... rN. Caroling- .. 14 Nebraska....... 219 S. Methodist... 16 Georgia Tech 14, Baylor ..........) arquette......0 Vanderitu 14 Princetoni...... 14 N.Y.U. . .... ... nDike . 6 Columbia.......7 Carniegie Tech ... O Syracuse a. I TJ Char MIN Ohio S thr~ee, then r ter dri just mi turvy 1 fans. Thre Gophe; Scalt with, playt iV and p6 play, f. for a ball sti posts, then d' Ohio Bierms on its galmet a blizzE Buckey they t remain- ~Ohio''S 'pound Sandus which of vict xe~eTourdowlu lasses Give, Oio WinOv rGphwrs, 2.3-20, 'lie lMaag's ~Fieldl Goal march climaxed by substitut'e full- TI WT* 'ack' Milt Piepul's one-inch plunge oves To BeW inningf U~over center. argin ;ISeesaw Tilt The Midshipmen; checkmated on the ground, took to the air with: a NEAPOLIS, Oct. 21.-(P4-)'desperate& passing attack in the final tate's roaring Buckeyes pitched( period and' clicked for a 64-ytard touhdo~ipasses today and touch~down on an aerial fron red- touchdoed Bob Leonard, substitute half- 'esisted a Minnesota last gu.ar- tack, to ilimont Whitehead, another [ve that netted one score and1 substitute halfback. .Whitehead took iissed another to win a topsy, the 34-yard heave on the' Irish 30, ball grne23 to 20 before 55,000oooutraced 'two 14otre Damers to the goal line'' and tfhen kicked' the' exaa ee points behind, the Golden point. ors ~drove despjerately to - the t and . Grey's four-yArd line JTi aruw J efts Ill raw; ,wo minutes to play. On that f~ Minnesoa was c'auight holding IINarwJ'0W af e,, i7-6 nalized;15 yar~ds. On the next CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Oct. 21.-(/)- furth downp, Joe Mernik tried score- tyinig pladce kick. The Indiana University squeezed the Uni- ruck thle'center barof the goal' versity of Illinois today, 7 to 6, by bl$oted a split second and the narrow margin of a' successful copped back the wrong way. placekick after touchdown, giving the St~ate thuis became the first Hoosiers their second Western Con- 'e teamt to 'defeat a Bernie ference victory of the season. an coached Minnesota squ~ad ' a h is im nteIitr home field since 1932.Itwstefrtiminheitoy thre-pont argi ofvicoryof the series between the two teams t~ire-pint argn ofvicorythat Inidiana had defeated the''Illii bQOod out so promhinently in a on the latter's home' field. that several times threatened and of touchdowns came in the The Hoosiers' sturdy defense saved ;yes bjig secon~d quarter when tI segae in the first .qiater when vice came fromh behind to score Bob "Zuppke's fiery eleven stormed' nts. to the Indiana three yard line, regis'- His Running Aids In Piling-Up Points s ' Hercules tRenda, diminutive Michigan halfback who started the Wolverine's drive for their second touchdown by returning a Chicago punt 25 yards. Hsere later rounded end for the touchdown. 148 sec ing, th tate dr. CTha)rii ky, 0. ar, ext later pi Ory. Irish 1Beat Bej ore Ht CLEVELANI by a horde' of tiptoed their v today to beat Navy team 1, screaming far land Stadium. The South1 dirt on the fii period when OC Ill., third-:str'i 27-yard run first time he1 ball, Sberidai week from the .T~he second.P in the third conds of the ~first half tem a ±urst ulwn there~. Four ie Gophers stopped an ?lays gained two and a half. yards, the riye on their 12, s0 210-;ball going to Indiana on downs on es Nra,'tackle from the 18 inch line. kicked a, field goal remnely difficult angle Putrdue Whip3 ,Spate, 20,M7 proved to be the margin Fo7 Yars Frt "i LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct'. 21.-(/VP)- Navy, 14°7y A couple of bull's eye passes by ;Mike .age rowdByelenie and Johnny Galvin and a sudden dash off' tackle by the elusive D, Oct. .21.--( ) -Notre Byelen~e brought Purdue a, 20 to 7 n-fast backs, aided triumph over Michigan State's Spar- fine-blocking linemen, tans' here today before a Dad's Day1 w'ay to two touchdlowns :crowd of 21,000.a 1 a stubborn air-minded It was Purdue's first victory of .the 4 to 7 before 81,104 season and Michigan State's third. is. who jammed Cleve;., defeat in a row. Purdue previouisly' had lost to Notre Dame and tied. Bend Irish struick pay Minnesota, and the Spartans h ad irst play of the second been° beaten by Michigan and Mar-t yen Sheridan of Havana, cjuette. ng 'back, ripped, off :a Purdue's first tally came suddenly, around right end the two' minutes before the first h~alf had his hands onl tlhe ended. From .his' own 42' BY"elene .n graduated only this 'rifled a pass to Dave. Rankin on the e fourthi string. State six from where Rankin, takingt Nsotre Dame score" came the' ball from Byelene on an end-' period on a' 64-yard around play, went over. Announcing" a A NEW an#d Detter TRAVEL SERVICEt t - .Infqrma pnm - Res erva innus ON TRAVEL BUREAU In Lobby iof the Michigan Unionx - S daily Phone 2-4431 (eve.3245) c J Fighting Yale' Eleven Trounces Untorganized Army Team, 20-151 NEW HAVEN, Oct. 21. --(-)- A that threat by intercepting another searching party went out looking for of Burr's pitches, but on the first the kitchen sink today after the Yale play Cape Burnam broke through to football team had beaten Army, 20- block Hatch's punt, Bill Zilly re- 15, in a harrowing, hair-greying ball covered for Yale on the Army 3, and game that had everything in it but Tom Lussen, taking the ball from thatvalabl pice f hme urnsh-Burr on an end-around, carried over thatvalublepiec of omefurnsh-the second tally. :ing. There were so many pass inter- -_______________ ceptions that it looked like a play the boys had practiced before hand. .There were blocked kicks, a volun- tary safety, an Army passing attack that let loose 34 aerials and an Army funning "attack" that was held to a net gain of 33 yards. 62,0;00 See Game But emerging from the confusionS E\ was, chiefly, the picture of a Yale team better than. it had been given credit, for and an Army team without punch or cohesion. The Cadets could make gains only through the air and, when their passes were broken up in R against the charge of as tout Yale line. USA C A crowd of 62,000 that includedTUSD y C formner President Hoover and Gov- ernor Ralph Carr of Colorado, both guests of Gov. Raymond E. Baldwin of "Connecticut, saw Army recover a 'Yale fumble on the Elis' 18-yard line early in the second quarter and go over from there in eight plays. Eli's Lead At Half It was Seymour's punting that pushed Army back and eventually gave Yale the ball on' the Cadet 28, from where Burr passed to Alan Bar- tholer y for the first touchdown and a 7-6 half time lead. In the; third perior another Burr pass, to Jim Mc- Clelland, gave Yale first down on the Cadet 12. Johnny Hatch apparently stopped:; i HM MAN INOFF 4 Iicke IJNII H'rs. 10.- 11 nat ,,t our )&k wtitzc WOMEN? ( ,. r .. '."' When you're not around do women say you are thoughtful or thought- less? You could raise your personal rating: by remembering. that it's the little things in life that count. A small gift' is something that leaves a good impression. f 4.' 1~.~~.t1 ... I WHITMAN'S CHOCOLATES ore one gift that any and every woman appreciates. All Whitman's boxes are equally attractive, and the next bite is as delicious as tha fast. '4 4 4 Only the finest materials go into this superior product, mnaIing its quality unexcelled, its flavour superb. 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