six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, sI~ SUNDAY, N'WESTERN UCLA 27PURDUE 26 OSU 24 INDIANA 20 WISCONSIN 7 ILINO 7 IOWA 35 TEXAS 12 N. CAROLINA 341 NOTRE DAME 40'MICH. STATE 0 PITT 61MISS.STATE 7 GEORGIA 0 LSU 35 19 Crisler Sends Coast Warning by Bur ing Stanford Gridiron HeroesI BILL LUONGO-Penn-Scored four touchdowns to lead the red and blue to a 59-0 rout at La- fayette. WARREN HUEY - Michigan State--Caught a pass on the eight-yard line and scored from there, tallying State's only touch- down enabling them to beat Mis- sissippi State, 7-0. PERRY MOSS-Illinois-Guid- ed the Illini in their 35-12 defeat of Iowa. LOU KUSSEROW-Columbia- Scored the first and passed 35 yards for the second touchdown as the Lions nipped Navy 13-6. JULES SIEGLE-Northwestern -Grabbed a 33-yard touchdown pass in the fourth period to hand the Wildcats a sizzling 27-26 win over heavily favored UCLA. RIP ROWAN - Army-Tallied twice, as Army displayed her power of old in downing Colorado, 47-0. EARL MAVES - Wisconsin- FERRY FIELD BARBERS NOW 3 BARBERS WAITING TO SERVE YOU 806 South State Street WM. A. MILLER, Prop. Ran 70 yards in the fourth quar- ter to give Wisconsin a 7-7 tie with the Indiana Hoosiers, in a game that had been played most- ly in Wisconsin territory. BILL BYE- Minnesota-Start- ed Gophers on their 28-13 victory over Nebraska by climaxing a 68 yard drive with a plunge over center for the touchdown. JOHNNY. LUJACK - Notre Dame-Sparked the Irish to 40-6 win over a surprisingly strong Pitt eleven. JIM FUCHS-Yale-Scored in- itial tally with an 11-yard end run to pace Bulldogs to their second straight victory, a 14-0 decision over scrappy Cornell. RAY EVANS-Kansas-Caught one touchdown pass and ran six yards for another score as Kansas whipped the Iowa State Cyclones, 27-7 in the opening Big Six game. BOB DE MOSS - Purdue - Scored once and in general passed Ohio State dizzy as the Boiler- makers scored one of the day's many upsets taking the Buckeyes into camp 24-20. Brown To Test Kramer In Coast Tennis Final SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 4-(AP)- Tom Brown of San Francisco and National Amateur Champion Jack Kramer of Los Angeles advanced to the finals of the Pacific Coast Tennis Championships today. Brown, seeded second, defeated Jim Brink of Seattle, 6-3, 6-2, 6-3, while Kramer beat Ed Moylan., We print 'em all No job too large or small. Programs - Tickets Stationery - Announcements ROACH PRINTING 209 E. Washington Ph. 8132 Irish Demolish Panthers, 40-6 Lujack Paces Team In Big Second Half PITTSBURGH, Oct. 4-(,)- The Notre Dame gridiron express ran late today but engineer John- ny Lujack's adroitness generated enough steam to bring the Fight- ing Irish home on schedule with a 40-6 victory over a surprisingly tough band of Pitt Panthers. It was Notre pame's first start and the 64,333 shirt-sleeved fans on hand blinked in disbelief as the Panthers made things hotter than the 80-degree temperature for al, most a full half. The Irish started off to do the expected by scoring in the first six minutes as Terry Brennan of Mil- waukee plunged three yards for a touchdown in climax to a 57-yard march. But from there on until the last few minutes of the half, it was strictly a Pitt show. Extent of Wolverine Power Still Untested Despite Win (Continued from Page 1) Durket, who consistently boomed high spiral punts that would have kept the Wolverines at bay, but for the brilliant punt returning of Gene Derricotte and Bump Elliott. Derricotte, late in the first quarter took a Durket punt on the Michigan 23 and legged it be- hind beautiful blocking to the Stanford 25, but part of the run was nullified by a clipping pen- alty. The second quarter offense was spearheaded by Derricotte who scored twice to make the halftime score, 42-0. He started a 54-yard sustained drive to notch the first second period touchdown, by pitching a per- fect jump pass to Ed McNeil, Wolverine end, who raced it to the Stanford 27. Hank Fonde, running the re- verse, raced to the seven. Derri- cotte took a handoff from Yerges, who did some excellent faking, and hit to the two. Stanford tight- GENE DERRICOTTE . . . vet- eran Wolverine shifty left half from Defiance, Ohio, who ac- counted for two second period Michigan TDs on one yard dives. EXPERTS, GUESS AGAIN! Upsets Mark Western Conference Tilts Welcome Students!! We specialize in Crew-cuts Personality Styles Scalp Treatments. 10 Barbers - No Waiting Tonsorial queries invited Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 The Dascola Barbers Between State & Mich. Theatres b; 5 : . " ' > 4 . UCLA Clawed By The Associated Press EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 4 - A fourth-string halfback, speedy Jules Siegle, grabbed a 33-yard touchdown pass in the fourth pe- riod to hand inspired Northwest- ern a sizzling 27 to 26 win over heavily-favored UCLA before 44,- 000 at Dyche Stadium today. The actual victory margin was provided by Quarterback Jim Far- rar's point-after-touchdown, but Siegle-in his first and only play of the game-broke the back of the heralded Uclans with his pay- off snach from Farrar midway of the closing period with Northwest- ern behind, 26 to 20. The Uclans blew a 13-0 lead in the second period and were de- "Home of 3-Hour Odorless Dry Cleaning" CLEANERS 630 South Ashley Phone 4700 TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Bought, Rented, Repaired, STATIONERY & SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted moralized by two sensational Northwestern touchdown runs in thethird period-a 93-yard kickoff return by Frankie Aschenbrenner and a 66-yard punt return by Tom Worthington. lini Tumbles Iowa IOWA CITY, Iowa, Oct. 4-(P)- You can count Illinois in on the battle for the 1947 Western Con- ference football championship, too. The Illini, although minus sev- eral of the stars who led Illinois to the 1946 title and a Rose Bowl triumph,, showed a tremendous running and passing game today as they opened their 1947 bid with a 35 to 12 victory over Iowa before a crowd of 52,294 today. Expertly guided by Perry Moss from the quarterback slot, the Il- lini piled up a 21 to 6 half time margin, and continued their dom- ination through the second half against an Iowa team anxious to make amends for a loss to UCLA, Purdue Tips OSU LAFAYETTE, Ind., Oct. 4-Pur- due University's Boilermakers, los- ing the lead three times, ham- mered back to defeat Ohio State's Buckeyes, 24 to 20, today. The 34,000 fans were repaid for Bi ine Standings TEAM Won Lost Tied Pct. Illinois 1 0 0 1.000 Wisconsin 1 0 1 .750 Purdue 1 1 0 .500 Indiana 0 0 1 .500 Michigan 0 0 0 .000 N'western 0 0 0 .000 Minnesota 0 0 0 .000 Ohio State0 1 0 .000 Iowa 0 1 0 .000 a pre-game drenching by a grid- iron foot race that made 50-yard line boxes the poorest seats in Ross-Ade Stadium. It was Purdue's first Western Conference victory in two seasons and the first for Coach Stewart K. (Stu) Holcomb, former Army line coach and one-time team- mate of Ohio State's Coach Wes- ley Fesler. Badgers Tie d. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 4- Earl Maves of Wisconsin scooted to yards today to get a 7-to-7 tie played in Wisconsin's territory most of the afternoon. The squat Badger senior broke through the center of the line when the Badger fortunes were low in the last quarter and not a Hoosier could lay a hand on him as he raced to the goal line 70 yards back. George Taliaferro, Indiana's brilliant sophomore, led his team on a series of sustained drives but only one paid off, and that in the third. He crossed up the Badgers after a series of line plays and passed to End Lou Mihajovich in the end zone. Gophers Triumph LINCOLN, Nebr., Oct. 4-Min- nesota handled Nebraska merci- lessly in the first half and the fourth period today to crush the Huskers, 28 to 13, in a Big Nine- Big Six inter-conference game be- fore 36,000. ened and made a brilliant goal line stand, but a fourth down in- terference penalty in the end- zone gave Michigan a first down on the one yard line. Derricotte then went over. Less than a minute later, Derri- cotte did it again after J.T. White' set up the score by intercepting a pass thrown by Morris and had run it to the Stanford 4-yard line. Derricotte took it over in two plays. Brieske split the up- rights and the half ended, 42-0. The second half was a dif- ferent story, and served' to ex- plode the myth that Coach Fritz Crisler's third team is as good as his first which he used only during Brieske's seventh straight conversions. The Indians scored once in the third and once in the fourth quarter.The passing of second rering quarterback Morris and the running of little Wayne Erick- son and Mickey Titus sparked Stanford's second half play. Erickson sprinted 21 yards to Michigan's 49 with a Teninga punt to begin the first touchdown march. Morris passed to end Gene Martin for 11 yards. Two line plays failed to gain and Titus took a lateral from Morris and streaked to the Wolverine eight- yard line, running behind the blocking of guard Pinky Phleger who escorted him all the way. Ti- tus and Erickson then alternated and moved the ball to the two from where Erickson went wide for the score. Marty Feldman missed the conversion. The Wolverines sandwiched their final touchdown between the two Stanford scores. It came on another long pass, this time Teninga threw and Don Kuick, reserve right half, caught it in the end zone. Chuck Coker, 225-pound full- back went over for Stanford's sec- ond touchdown, hurtling across from the one yard line after a series of passes from Morris to end Dan Mervin had set up the score. Mervin then converted. Michigan's overall supremacy in the statistical department was challenged only in the first down department where the Indians ac- cumulated a 13-10 advantage. All but three coming in the second half. Michigan, usually primarily a running team, rolled up more yardage on passes than on the3 ground. With Chappuis, Derri- cotte, and Teninga joined by five othersMichigan tossers, the Wol- verines went overland for 252 yards, while running for only 184, 96 of which were gained by Weis- enburger. Defensively the entire first two teams were much more efficient than against Michigan State a week ago. fin~,ti 4eaft/IeI. r: . " , } s. 15 lL i'' Y Football Scores By The Associated Press Mis'sissippi33,S. Carolina 0. EAST Arkansas 6, TCU 4. Colgate 20, Kingspoint 0. Oklahoma, 26, Texas A&M 14. Columbia 13, Navy 6. SMU 35, Missouri 19. Army 47, Colorado 0. Virginia 41, Virginia Tech 7. Holy Cross 19, Temple 16. WEST Penn 59, Lafayette 0. Yale 14, Cornell 0. California 45, St. Mary's 6. Princeton 21, Brown 7. Oregon State 14, Washington 7. Penn State 54, Bucknell 0. USC 7, Rice 7 (tie). Dartmouth 28, Syracuse 7. Harvard 19, Boston U. 14Washington State 7, Idaho 0. N.Y.U. 19, Brooklyn College 0. Nevada 13, Oregon 6. Amherst 13, Coast Guard 0. Wyoming 12, Brigham Young 7. SOUTH Kansas 27, Iowa State 7. Georgia Tech 20, Tulane 0. Ohio University 14, Butler 7. Vanderbilt 14, Alabama 7. Western Mich. 14, Wash. U. 0. Duke 19, Tennessee 7. Utah 35, Hawaii 0. William and Mary 56, Citadel 7. Arizona 40, Montana 7. Wake Forest 16, Clemson 14. Cincinnati 20, St. Bonaventure 14. 4 . :. e: .1 ' z s a x ~ °, . - kt ; 1 1 /I 0 Jantzen JANTZEN SKI SWEATERS 1095 M O E L70E1'ttA5hip4 907 South State 711 North University II i tV 4 BROWN REVERSE CALF 14twn~iead I O , t N t . .: :> , 24 95 LIFE... 4.25 (instead of 5.50) TIME...45 1.2' designed by IPLTEE EAISO gd/ In forest green, -wine or town brown calf 4 41 I the ATOMIC AGE-less dress you will wear this stunning two-piece dress season after season. Another classic by Loretta Original in Comfort galore in soft-feeling brown reverse calf. IoLrs inst keen you rolling along. Thick, pliable I I