sib. THE MICHIGAN DAILY a a Navy Machine Crushes To Smash Irish Undefec BALTIMORE, MD., NOV. 4-(P)- Fury engendered by eight years of frustration would not be denied today as the Navy football team, a big, tough and power-laden machine, crushed the hitherto undefeated No- tre Dame eleven, 32 to 13, in a game which kept an estimated capacity crowd of 67,000 in Municipal Stadium in various stages of emotion for the full 60 minutes. The Middies, who sputtered and wheezed in early season games, were supposed to have exploded in smoth- ering Penn a 'week ago, but that was only the pop of a cork compared with the blast they loosed against the ever-trying but thoroughly outplay- ed Irish. Not that the Navy followers were without their anxious moments. For the first few minutes it seemed the proverbial luck of the Irish hovered I over the field this hazy day. It was Zipper Note Books. I Votre Dame tedString_ only a mirage, however, and once the Navy power had begun to exert itself, 'there seemed little doubt of the out- come save in the final half when Notre Dame at time threatened to pass its way into one of its tradi- tional belated victories. The Middies scored twice in the first period and again in the third before the thwarted Irish could push across a counter: Navy came right rack with another touchdown in the fourth, saw the Irish match that, then powered across one more to put the game safely away. 0 It was power, power and more power that humbled the Irish. On offense it mattered not which backs of the horde on the Middie bench were in the game. They slashed and bulled and tore through the valiant Irish defense as a knife through tis- sue paper. On defense, the big line rolled in like a gale-whipped sea to crush and shatter the Notre Dame runners, and in sheer desperation the Irish took to the air, often passing from deep in their own territory to thwart that ever-rushing line. The big scare for Navy fans came shortly after the opening kick-off when Bill Barron fumbled an Irish punt on the Navy 18, and the Irish recovered. Shortage o-L Veterans i s Cage Q Yale 6, Dartmouth 0. P Penn State 41, Syracuse 0.M Coast Guard Academy 20, Brown M D Texas Tech 13, Rice 7. G urdue 35, Wisconsin 0. [innesota 14, Northwestern [issouri 13, Michigan State uke 19, Georgia Tech 13. eorgia 14, Alabama 7. 14. 7. 0. Lund' King, To Return as Stevens D)epart .. 3.95 and up * c -- U I Tina 0. Texas 34, S.M.U. 7. Arkansas 7, Texas A&M 6. Norman Navy 15, Oklahoma A&M 0. h Ann Arbor's Busiest Bookstore Scores of Top Football Games Around the Nation Army 83, Villanova 0. West Virginia 6, Temple 0. Cornell 25, Columbia 7. Navy 32, Notre Mmue 13. Ohio State 21, Indiana 7. Wake Forest 13, Clemson 7. Michigan. 41, ]Penn 19. Iowa 27, Nebraska G. South Carolina 6, North Caro- , I -"FRI N tGED" SPECTATORS Fashion bestows a gift of jaunty fringe upon her favorite god-child . . . the spectator pump ... giving new glamour to a well-loved classic. In mellow Army Russet Airplane Stamps No. 1, 2, 3 Now Valid in Book 3. , xx t With the opening game less than a month away Michigan's basketball coaches are faced with the unenvi- able task of molding an almost entirely new teamdfrom a variety of largely inexperienced and untried talent. Only one veteran from last year's quintet, guard Don Lund, who holds two cage letters, will be on hand for the opener, and even his services are doubtful. Lund is a member of the football squad which will not wind up its activities until Nov. 25, just a week before the curtain raiser. King Lost in Transfer Wolverine cage hopes were given a sharp blow by the transfer of Ma- rine Tommy King who last winter was the big gun in the Michigan attack. King finished sixth in Big Ten scoring and paced the offense from his forward position. His value to the Wolverine cause was aptly demonstrated when he was recently chosen for the Collegiate All-Star squad to play against the national pro champions at Chicago later this month. Departing with King was Bob Stevens, a reserve forward who saw limited action last year. Stevens was known for his aggressive tactics and with a little polishing might have developed into a first-rate performer. Faced with this scarcity of experi- enced personnel, Assistant Coach Bill Barclay inaugurated summer bas- ketball practice at the start of the summer semester and called out a squad drawn from Marine and Navy trainees in the University PEM pro- gram. Later, a call was issued for civilians. Summer Practices held The response to this new program was gratifying from the point of numbers, but subsequent drills only served to bring out the tremendous amount of work involved in placing a top-flight Wolverine team on the floor. Nevertheless, the final squad will probably be drafted largely from this group together with those fresh- men and new students who come out within the next few days. Michigan will be out to do some- thing this season which it has been unable to do in several years-win a championship. The Wolverine cage fortunes have been at a rather low ebb in recent years as Purdue, Illi- nois, and Ohio State largely domi- nated the Conference basketball scene. Last season the cagers were the only Michigan aggregation which failed to finish above the .500 mark and also the only Wolverine team in Big Ten play which failed to annex a title. INVEST IN VICTORY BUY WAR BONDS & STAMPS Rd , s Expensive-looking inexpensive littleWool dresses. 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