Th MIIfi+ TAN DAILY SUNDAY. t' 0lr-. 99-- 7 ,... . 1~ .UA. ~. a. ml 1. 5. . X J .5. ._..j, ..5. ~~l A Jlbr. rsvs I.,' Notre Dame .. . ..7 Texas A&M .... 20 Northwestern Carnegie Tech ... 6 Baylor .......Q Illinois.... . . 13 Tennessee.......17 Fordham ...... . 0 Mercer ..........0 Pittsburgh..... 27 Iowa......... 13 Wisconsin ..... 19 Princeton . . 13 Brown .. .. 26 12 .. I moU Sparks Michigan Eleven To 27 To 7 Win Over Y ale Star Halfback Scores Three Times In Rout Kromer Also Goes Over; Wood Tallies For Elis On Last-Quarter Pass (Continued from Page 1) Hammer hurled a pass to his Touch- down Twin who carried it to the 30. Kromer went around left end for five and then another pass, Harmon to Evie, took the galloping Wolverines to the 11. But the Bulldogs gritted their teeth and took the ball on downs on the three-yard line. It was the first time thus far this year that Michigan has neglected a scoring opportunity. Another Wolverine Surge Seymour kicked from his own end zone and Kromer kicked it too, but in- advertendly and in the wrong direc- tion to the Michigan 30 where he fell on the ball. But then came another Maize and Blue surge. Westfall got five and Harmon travelled to the Yale 16 around right end, cut back behind beautiful blocking for a 45- yard run before Burr finally dropped him .from behind with a bear hug. Kromer took it to the 10 and the Hammer hammered off right tackle for the score. He converted. The next score came early in the second quarter and again it was Har- mon who set it up. First he went over right guard from his own 33 to the Yale 37 before Burr knocked him out of bounds. Then, after he picked up nine more, Evie made a sensational catch of Kromer's pass in the left flat and went to the Yale four. On the first play Kromer crashed through center and the scoreboard read 13-0. Harmon's kick made it 14. Westfall Goes 21 Yards Westfall paved the way for the next tally five minutes later when he broke away off left tackle for 21 yards to the Yale 27. Kromer and Westfall made it one first down and they combined again for another on the two-yard line. On the third play Harmon scored. The last Wolverine touchdown was a thing of beauty. With the ball on Michigan's own 42 yard line, Kroner started to the strong side and hand- ed the ball on a reverse to Harmon who went around left end and down1 the sidelines unhampered 0fo? 58 yards. So perfectly was the play set up and so fine was the downfield blocking that no Yale man was nearl enough to the Hammer to do any- thing but wave good luck to him as he trotted by. His kick was blocked.e Elis Weak On Ground Yale's running attack was pitiful. They gained only 37 yards overland all afternoon while Harmon alone picked up 203 of Michigan's 357e yards. In the line it was Joe Savilla againr and Milo Sukup who stood out. Archiel Kodros turned in his best defensive game of the year while Bill Stackt made most of Yale's tackles. And oft course, the usual fine blocking of Evashevski and Westfall went vir- tually unnoticed. All-America Hope Continues To Shine Irish Win Fifth Straight; extra Point Nips Carnegie Tech, 7-6 PITTSBURGH, Oct. .28. -GP)-- Again that extra point looked big as a billion as Notre Dame scored its fifth straight victory of the year over Carnegie Tech, 7-6, before a thrilled crowd of 68,000 in Pitt Stadium to- day. This time it was Lou Zontini, fleet Irish halfback, who carefully lined up his sights and place kicked that vital seventh point after the Irish had scored their touchdown on a re- covered fumble in the third period. In scoring five victories, Notre Daie now has amassed a total of only 15 more points than its defeated rivals. The only thing that looked like a score in the initial half came after only a few minutes of play, when Merlyn Condit of Carnegie got away on a sparkling 31-yard run to Notre Dame's 14, and Muha tried to place kick a field goal from the 19. The ball went far wide of its mark. Kerr Scores Por Irish Thereafter, the South Benders kept pushing the Tartans back and back toward their goal posts, and what finally happened was inevitable. About midway of the third quarter, Condit tried a sweeping end run deep in Carnegie territory, and when he was struck by about three Irish tack- lers at once the sphere bounced high in the air. Bill Kerr, Notre Dame left end and outstanding All-America candi- date, grabbed the flying ball like an outfielder and raced 19 yards. into the end zone without a hand brushing him. Zontini's placement, with Steve Sitko holding, couldn't have split the posts more perfectly if a surveyor had been helping. Skibos Strike Back And then the Skibos started some- thing. Condit and Muha, a pair of great running backs, fairly took the Irish defense to pieces. Condit first darted off tackle and fled 45 yards before he was pulled down from be- hind. Then he and Muha slugged out two more first downs to Notre Dame's 18, leaving bruised tacklers in their wake. Here Condit tried his first pass of the long drive. It went wild and was partially blocked by an Irish line- man, but it finally came down in the arms of fullback Gerald White. who plowed on to the six yard stripe before he was downed. On the third try, Condit dove across the Notre Dame goal from the one yard line. Each team made four first downs, all of Tech's coming in the course of its touchdown drive. Total yards gained were 160 for Notre Dame, 157 for Carnegie. It was that close. Grantland Rice missed a great show yesterday as once again Tom Harmon, ace halfback from Gary, Ind., made further claims for All- American recognition by scoring 21 of Michigan's 27 points against Yale. The Touchdown Twin hit pay dirt first on a 10-yard plunge through center, next on a hurdle over the goal from the one-foot line, and finally on a 59-yard journey around left end. He also converted three times. Harmon's work yesterday, added to 7 points he scored in the Michigan State game, 27 against Iowa, and 18 against Chicago, brought his season total to 73 points. Michigan's Grid Greats Return To See 'Another Willie Heston' BOOKS..,. BOOKS... BOOKS NEW BOOKS open new worlds to everyone-happy fascinating worlds of adven- ture-worlds of information to feed curiosities-worlds of make believe to whet boundless imaginations. GIVE GOOD BOOKS fre- quently. Visit FOLLETT'S -see special displays of the best books. By PAUL CHANDLERI Swift moving Tom Harmon con-! tinued his wild gallop toward All- American fame here Saturday, and on the sidelines a shivering and happy cluster of Michigan immortals smiled and murmured to themselves, "He's Willie all over again . . . only two inches taller." They were the 'M' men of 1901- 1905, returned to the football lands where once they made Michigan foot- ball history., Willie is William Heston, a pack- age of gridiron dynamite who the experts still remember as one of the greatest halfbacks ever to stick a cleated shoe into the turf of an American stadium. Liken Hammer To Heston When these men, all of them vet- erans of the sensational "point-a- minute" football teams of Coach Fielding H. Yost, said that the Gary galloper looked like Heston they were cheering him with the finest tribute they knew. Forest (One-Man-Gang) Evashev- ski shared the praise. The hard-wal- lopling Michigan quarterback; was called the "greatest defensive back on the field" by Everett Sweeley, foot- ball captain in 1901, "because he seems to mean those tackles so thor- oughly." Willie Heston himself attended the game and praised Evashevski's play- calling strategy. "It would have been wonderful to play in that Michigan PACIFIC COAST Southern Cal 26, California 0 UCLA 16, Oregon 6 Washington 8, Stanford 5 Santa Clara 13, Purdue 6 backfield out there today," the all- time All-American halfback declared. Between halves Coach Yost took his boys out on the field and placed them in a huge block M while 53,700 spectators cheered. Schulz Praises Team Adolph (Germany) Schulz, a beaming big man who began the Michigan line of All-America centers, was enthusiastic about the perform- ance of the 1939 Wolverine backfield yesterday. "I would have loved to play in front of that outfit," he ex- claimed. Schulz labeled Capt. Archie Kodros as a "great center," but he explained that he played the position differently in those days. The big German said that he operated farther behind the defensive line, maybe five yards or so back, and then rushed up when the play arrived. When Paul Kromer fumbled a punt early in the second half Sweeley found fault with "that darn new thin ball." Sweeley, who never fumbled a punt in his college career, said that the ball they use today is all right for punting, "but our fat one was lots easier to handle." YOU MUST BUY: The Grapes of Wrath; John Steinbeck . . 2.75 Children of God; Vardis Fisher . . . 3.00 Black Narcissus; Rummer Goddin-. . 2.50 Watch for the Dawn; Stuart Cloete . . . 2.50 Captain Horatio Horn- blower; C. S. Forester . . . 2.75 Inside Asia; John Gunther . . . 3.50 Not Peace but a Sword; Vincent Sheean . . 2.75 Country Lawyer; Bellamy Partridge . 2.75 Days of Our Years; Pierre VanPaassen . 3.50 Let the Record Speak; Dorothy Thompson. 2.75 "foremost in friendliness" F OLLETT'S I, 'I I Wings' Opener Thursday DETROIT, Oct. 28.-(P)-Return- ing home from a successful exhibition tour through Ontario, the Detroit Red Wings will complete their training tomorrow and Tuesday for their Na- tional Hockey League opener at Chi- cago Thursday night. The Wings will enter the sixth game of their charity series with the In- dianapolis Capitals tomorrow with a 10-goal advantage, I -1 fl~ew f2Ayyirct3 ci at UiceP~ THE HOME OF FINE TAILORING 619 E.Wflliam St. Aim Arbor, Mich. Whether $29.50, or $80.00, we tailor them to your individual measurements. Our Selection of Fine Imported Fabrics is very complete. Prices are sure to advance, so order NOW! ELEANOR ROOSEVELT: "This is My Story" . THOMAS MANN: "Magic Mountain" . . HOWARD SPRING: "My Son, My Son" . OGDEN NASH: "I'm a Stranger Here Myself" WALTER EDMONDS: "Drums Along the Mohawk" GEORGE F. EIOT: "The Ramparts We Watch" OSWALD SPENGLER: "The Decline of the West" , , . . . $1.00 . . . . 1 .40 S , , 1.39 . . . . 1.29 , . , . 1.39 1.49 , . . . 2.39 DAPHINE DU MAURIER: "Rebecca" DAPHINE DU MAURIER: "Jamaica Inn" 0 ,, 1.00 .89 . , . , , f s r s VICTOR HEISER: "American Doctor's Odyssey" S . . . 1.49 'I 11 y v XY- . - cc7-% 1 -'L -- A -1-n t I1 III I