THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,. . << :"k .re. .:: Cornell . . . Colum.bia ... ...13 , !! . 7 Dartmouth .... 33 'fordham.... ... 13 Yale ........... 0 Rice............7 'I Duquesie Marquette . 21 Penn ..... 13 Navy 13 Tennessee . 6 L.S.U... 20 Alabama..... 7 .. 0Kentucky ......7 Villanova.. ...13 Detroit ........6 i : , . ;. t t_ . ., I Ohio State Takes Big Ten Lead By Drubbing Indiana, 24-0 _ S1te7 a' Buckeyes Win Third Straight In Conference Scott And Langhurst Pace Teammates To Victory; Hursh Is Bottled Up t Paces Teammates To Another Victory I COLUMBUS, 0., Nov. 4.-()- Ohio State's rampaging Bucks gra bed undisputed possession of fir place in the Western Conference tc day by romping to a 24 to 0 victor over an utterly impotent Indian squad before 40,872 shivering fans. Bounding back from last week startling setback at the hands c Cornell, Ohio grabbed its thir straight Big Ten win and becam the League's only undefeated tear following Illinois' upset of Michiga: and Iowa's defeat of Purdue. Th loss eliminated Indiana from the titi race. Scott Is Sensational Ohio's Don Scott, 200-pound, quar terback, sparked the Bucks with sen sational punting, passing and run ning. Two of the touchdowns wer registered by James Langhurst, th nimble-footed fullback, but Scott ac counted for the other touchdown an two extra points. Charley Maag, gi ant tackle, booted a 16-yard fiel goal and the other extra point t rbund out the scoring. Halfback Jimmy Strausbaugh' slippery running put the Bucks i snoring position, three runs by hin featuring a55-yard advance to th three yard line. On the first pla of the second period, Langhurs plunged over for the first touch down. Hursh's Poor Punt Costly Indiana's Hal Hursh of Middle. town, 0., whose dangerous passing was bottled completely, set the scen for Maag's field goal. Hursh's only poor punt slipped off his boot for one-yard gain to Indiana's 28an 'cot ripped off 15"yards befor Maag's boot. Three accurate passes by Scot were good for 45cards and the triple- threat quarterback topped off th drive by hitting center for eight yard and the second touchdown. ' Indiana halted a fourth period Buck drive on the three, but Hursh passed from behind the goal line and Lang- hurst intercepted. Two plays later Langhurst slipped through from the two- yard marker for the final touch- down. Coach Alvin "Bo" McMillin's pro- teges never once threatened to score, the big Ohio line halting the Hoosier runners in their tracks. Phi Delts Boast Best I-M Record AroundBig Ten Which fraternity is the strongest in athletics throughout the Big Ten? According,: to the records compiled since 1931, the' honor goes to Phi Delta Theta by a wide margin. The Phi Delts have won the all- around championship no less than 14 times in the last eight years, Ohio $tate leading the parade with four winners, all in the last four years; Minnesota has had three top-notch Phi Delt aggregations, Illinois two, Indiana two, and Michigan, Purdue and Wisconsin, one apiece. Second place goes to Phi Kappa Psi, which has had 10 winners in five Big Ten schools since 1931. Northwestern and Iowa lead with three, Purdue has had two, and Chi- cago and Indiana one apiece. Other fraternities which have won championships more than twice are Delta Tau Delta with five crowns, Psi Upsilon with four, and Beta Theta Pi, Sigma Chi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Beta and Sigma Pi with three each- Here at Michigan, the strongest fraternity in intramural- competition during the last eight years has been Theta Chi, with victories in 1933 and 1934. Other winners hav been Alpha Kappa Lambda, 1932; Pi Lambda Phi, 1935; Delta Upsilon, 1936; Chi Psi, 1937; Phi Delta Theta, present leader in the Big Ten, 1938; and Psi Upsilon, this year's pace setter. leafs Blank Bruins, 5-0, In Hockey Tilt TORONTO, Nov. 4.-(P)-Showing superior condition and attacking punch, the Toronto Maple Leafs humbled the World Champion Boston Bruins 5-0 tonight in the National Hockey League opener for both clubs. Although strengthen up front by Sothern Cal's* Trojans Crush Oregon State USC Power Brings 19-7 Triumph, Strengthens Bid for Rose Bowl Game PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 4.-(~)- Crashing, crushing giants wearing the maroon and gold of Southern Cali- fornia battered Oregon State College into submission 19 to 7 today in a football classic that left the-winners knocking at the Rose Bowl door as the losers tumbled into the oblivion of defeated teams. Trojans Show Power It was merely a case of a good big team bucking up against a bigger and better gridiron opponent. Tro- jan ground power, combined with a sharply clicking a e r i a 1 attack, smashed down a stubborn Oregon State to account for two touchdowns in the second period and another in the third. The northern eleven, fighting des- perately to stave off its first Pacific Coast Conference defeat, came back with a last minute drive to count and touchdown and convert the kick. USC Is Undefeated Southern California; undefeated in the Conference championship race, but tied in its opening game by Ore- gon, lined up on the dirt floor of Multnomah stadium as the favorite.j An overflow crowd of 32,611 left the enclosure convinced the odds of 2% to 1 were justified. HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL University of Detroit High 12, De- troit Cooley 12 Detroit Northeastern 6, Detroit Denby 0 River Rouge 14, Wyandotte 6 i i i I EAST Holy Cross 46, Providence 0 New York U. 14, Lafayette 0s Boston College 13, Auburn 7 Long Island U 27 W.Va. Wesleyan 6 Brown 54, Tufts 7 Bucknell 32, West. Maryland 6 Georgetown 14, W. Virginia 0. Penn State 12, Maryland 0 Manhattan 26, Boston U 0 Catholic U. 13, Tulsa 7 Rutgers 32, New Hampshire 13 Connecticut 20, Lowell Textile 0 Bowdoin 7, Bates 0 Amherst 13, Mass. State 0. Union 27, Williams 7 Rensselaer Poly 13, Vermont 6 Lehigh 20, Haverford 13 Colby 7, Maine 6 Ohio U 14, Morris Harvey 13 SOUTH Mississippi 14, Vanderbilt 7 Duke 7, Georgia Tech 6 S. Carolina 6, Florida 0 Kentucky 7, Alabama 7 (tie) Tennessee 20, Louiana State 0 Mississippi State 28, Birmingham- Southern 0' Chattanooga 10, Sewanee 7 No. Carolina 17, No. Carolina St. 9 Wake Forest 14, Marshall 13 Virginia Tech 20, Furman 7 Randolph Macon 26, Delaware 0 Va. Military Inst. 0, Richmond 0 Virginia 47, Chicago 0 Davidson 22, The Citadel 14 MIDWEST Lawrence Tech 34. Defiance 0 Michigan.Normal 13, Wayne 6 Albion 39, Olivet 0 Washington U 12, Wash. & Lee 6 Toledo 20, John Carroll 0 Case 6, Baldwin-Wallace 0 Wooster 19, Oberlin 14 Findlay 26, Kenyon 0 Western Reserve 32, O Wesleyan 6 Detroit Tech 19, Miami U. (O) 7 Apron 29, Wash. & Jeff. 22 Centre 6, Cincinnati U 6 (tie) SOUTHWEST Baylor 27, Texas Christian 0 Southern Methodist 10, Texas 0 Oklahoma 38, Iowa State 6 Oklahoma A&M 20, New Mexico Aggies 0 1IDWEST Beloit 26, Grinnell 19 Iowa Wesleyan 6, Upper Iowa 0 Adrian 2P, St. Mary's 0 Hillsdale 30, Hope 6 Michigan Tech 12, Grand Rapids 0 Carroll 26, Wheaton 7 Cornell (Ia.) 8, Knox 0 Illinois College 20, Millikin 0 ROCKY MOUNTAINS Colorado 21, Utah 14 Brigham Young 21, Denver 18 Idaho 19, Utah State 7 Colorado State 22, Wyoming 0 FAR WEST U.C.L.A. 20, California 7 Southern Cal 19, Oregon State 7 Santa Clara 7, Stanford 7 Washington 9, Montana 0 Oregon 38, Washington State 0 Baylor 27, Texas Christian 0 New Mexico 0, Oklahoma A&M 20 Texas 0, S. Methodist 10 Oregon Grabs Another EUGENE, Ore., Nov. 4.-(IP)- Coach Tex Oliver tossed three power- house University of Oregon football teams at Babe Hollingbery's Wash- ington State Cougars today to roll up a 38-0 Pacific Coast Conference vic- tory. The Webfoots scored in every period to post the most decisive victory in the 39-year-old rivalry. Mieb. Ill. First downs . ...... ......8 7 Yds. gained rushing (net) 112 9P Forward passes attempted 22 17 Forward passed completed 6 5 Yds. gained fwd, passes... 99 77 Yds. lost, att. fwd. passes 15 7 Fwd. passes intercepted by 1 3 Yds. gained runback intercepted passes .... 18 37 Punting ave. (from scrim.) 36 44 Total yds., kicks returned 34 93 Opponents' fumb. recov'ed 1 5 Opp. fumbles recovered .. 1 5 Yds. lost by penalties .... 25 25 Football Results Throughout Country Ohio State's 200-pound quarterback, Don Scott, turned in another sensational game yetserday when he paced the Buckeyes to a 24-0 rout of Indiana with a superb display of running, passing and punting. He'll bear plenty of watching when he accompanies his mates to Ann Arbor Nov. 25. «,. 75,626 See Notre Dame Ramblers Whip Army,14-0, For Sixth Straight V -1 NEW YORK, Nov. 4.-(JP)-Work- ing on its customary narrow mar- gin of profit, the well-manned Notre Dame football team ran its 1939 win- ning streak to six straight today by making the most of two breaks to whip game but out-classed Army, 14- 0. A crowd that filled the 75,626- seat Yankee Stadium to capacity saw the all-conquering Irish go 30 yards in three plays after recovering an Army fumble in the second quarter, and then, behind expert blocking, send sub halfback Steve Bagarus scooting 43 yards down the sidelines with a fourth-quarter intercepted pass. Stevenson Boots Extra Points In each case Harry Stevenson booted the extra point from place- ment, as Notre Dame has done with only one exception after each of its scores this year. Between the two tallies, Elmer Layden's boys threw up -a defense that once halted the Soldiers on the Irish 21 and again took the ball on downs when Army needed only half a yard for first down on the Notre Dame 5. Notre Dame's first tuochdown, which would have been enough to keep thr South Benders among the nation's unbeaten and untied teams, was remarkable chiefly for the fact' that it included the first Irish pass completion in three games. Given the ball on the Cadet 31 when John Finneran, second-team center, dropped on an Army fumble, the Irish hit the line to a first down on the 20. But from there they were pushed back tothe 30 by two suc- cessive penalties. Here Stevenson took command. First he faded back and pitched a long pass square into the arms of Pete Arboit, an end, who took it in Villa nova Tops Detroit, 13-6 front of Johnny Hatch, Army's star sophomore, and was dropped in his tracks on the 7 yard line. A line play got one yard, and then Stevenson, starting wide around Army's left end, cut back over tackle' for six yards and threw himself over the goal line through a mass of Army tacklers. Army ComesBack Army came back in the last few minutes of this first half to recover a Notre Dame fumble on the Irish 30. One smack at the Notre Dame line made 9 yards, but two more were held for no gain, and Steve Sitko knocked down Match's fourth-down aerial to end that threat. Midway of the third quarter the Soldiers started pounding their op- ponents' line to good effect. With Jim Dubuisson and veteran Art Front- czak making most of the yardage, they drove from the Notre Dame 47 to first down on the 15 in five plays. Three plays'more and they needed only half a yard for first down on the 5. But the Irish forwards rose up en masse, Frontczak was spilled for a loss, and the Irish had the ball. That was the last time Army even came close. Half way through the final period Hatch, harried by a horde of inrushing Notre Damers, let fly a gambling pass. Bagarus Scoots To Score Bagarus intercepted it virtually at the sideline and then walked a tight- rope down the line behind a screen of impromptu but efficient blocking to go the 43 yards to pay off territory. As if to add insult to injury, the Irish apparently had a third touch- down three plays after the ensuing kickoff. Another fumble and Irish recovery had given the winners pos- session on Army's 32. On the first play Stevenson reared back and left fly to Bagaraus, who took the ball on the 5 and stepped over, but the play was called back and Notre Dame penalized 15 yards for unnecessary 1.oughness. IIA' MICHIGAN UNION SUNDAY DINING ROOM SERVICE 1:00 UNTIL 2:30 AND 6 UNTIL 7:30 P.M. MENU California Fruit Coupe Chilled Tomato Juice Blue Points on Half Shell Fresh Shrimp Ravigote Cream of Fresh Mushrooms Essence of Chicken Consomme Royal Hot Beef Tea in Cup Branch Celery Mixed Olives Sweet Pickles Grilled Fancy Swordfish, Shoe String Potatoes .............. 1.00 Stuffed Long Island Duckling, Dressing, Spiced Crabapple .... 1.25 Braised Loin of Boneless Lamb, a la Bouquetire ............ 1.25 Planked Choice Veal Porterhouse Steak, Stuffed Tomato .... 1.25 Roast Club Sirloin of Beef, Fresh Mushroom Sauce .......... 1.25 Union Special Steak Dinner . ... ..... ....... 1.50 Tenderloin or Porterhouse with French Fried Potatoes to order French Fried Potatoes Potatoes Louise Candied Yams New Peas in Butter Mashed Hubbard Squash Brussel Sprouts, Cheese Sauce Lettuce Hearts, Roquefort Dressing Arabian Peach Salad Assorted French Pastry Chocolate Parfait Stuffed Baked Apple Pumpkin Pie, Whipped Cream Swiss Gruyere Cheese with Wafers Rum Ice Cream 4 I F Z2 your sweaters! Fashion IS Spinach, as fas as angora sweaters are concerned-those adorable little angoras will insist upon curling up in little bals or becoming dreadfully attached to your skirt and .coat. Our own secret method of cleaning and brush- ngSweaters.Willsimply amaze youE Vial i23-23-1 Free 516 East Pick up and n -,i._. _Liberty will Southern Cal 19, Oregon State 7 1 **'-. , --*~* - - ,- ' .9 1 GREEN E'S :i Visitors' Titans' Aerials Statistic Offset Edge DETROIT, Nov. 4.-(,P)-For the fifth successive year Villanova today conquered University of Detroit by a single touchdown, winning 13 to 6 as Nick Basca, a sharpshooting passer from Phoenixville, Pa., completed two long touchdown aerials. A crowd of 10,651 that sat under esn nn, v Qlripc . n u pri ~n, i4.~ .t..nm i, t. I