PAGE SIX TH E MICHIGEAN n)ATTy SUNDAY. OCTOBER -17: 1949 a as a.! 11a it, iL1V1'11\ L2'111J .1 A~i\67t713Dy V4/i'ia'W1"tIA a1 i flAB .On Offense"... No th Carolina Defeats Tough State Rival, 14-0 Notre Dame Romps to Easy Win, 44-13S; Missouri Sinks Hapless Middies, 35-14 ...On Defense'... PROOF POSITIVE-Loyal Michigan followers who were wondering what hope the Wolverine team possibly would have this season, now have vivid proof that the Maize and Blue gridiron power has lost little of its punch, either on offense or defense. On the left Pete Elliott is clearing the way for Chuck Ortmann. The picture on the right depicts a typical scene of Michigan's stellar defensive work yesterday. Dick Kempthorn (38,) trips up Northwestern's Art Murakowski while Al Wahl (72) moves in to make sure. These pictures were taken yesterday by the Daily's special football photographer, Alex L'Manian. NINE TOUCHDOWNS! MSC Romps Over Artona, 617 NEW YORK - (-- Michigan and Notre Dame, those twin giants of Midwestern football, won greater stature today with lop- sided triumphs. The Wolverines shackled North- western so completely that the Evanston, Ill., outfit gained only 47 yards on the ground while los- ing 28 to 0. MEANWHILE, Notre Dame toyed with Nebraska, 44 to 13. That made it 21 games in a row since the South Bend Irish suf- fered their last defeat. Notre Dame had four touchdowns in the bank before the Huskers, once proud rulers of the Midlands, put their offense into gear. North Carolina, voted the na- tion's best college team this week, had to hustle to maintain that position, finally breaking loose in the final half to dump North Carolina State, 14 to 0. That put the Tar Heels on top in the Soutern Conference. Georgia Tech moved out, front in the neighboring Southeast cir- cuit, trouncing Auburn with ease, 27 to 0. MISSOURI FOLLOWED its up- set of Southern Methodist with a smooth 35 to 14 victory over luck- less Navy. The Tigers turn next to Big Seven competition, where they are co-favorites with Okla- homa and Kansas. The Sooners banged Kansas State, 42 to 0, while the Kansans hurried home from last night's win over George Washington. Iowa State celebrat- ed its homecoming with an 18 to 7 verdict over Colorado. Columbia, famed for its year- ly upsets, almost registered an- other, bowing to Pennsylvania, 20 to 14, when a Quaker pass was ruled complete on the three- yard line with only seconds to play. The Penns banged over in one play for the deciding mark- er. Army trimmed Harvard, 20 to 7, and Cornell took Syracuse, 34 to 7 with both victors remaining in the unbeaten group. For the first time in 76 years of trying Rut- gers knocked off Princeton on the latter's home field, 22 to 6. It was the third straight defeat for the W. L. Michigan . .2 0 Northwest. 2 1 Indiana ...2 1 Wisconsin .1 1 Ohio State .1 1 Minnesota .1 1 Purdue . . . .1 2 Iowa......1 2 Illinois . . ..0 2 T. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PF. 68 40 42 27 24 22 20 27 16 OP. Pct. 0 1.000 44 .667 24 .667 51 .500 14 .500 19 .500 74 .333 34 .333 26 .00,0 Tigers, who also lost their goal posts Penn State crushed West Vir- ginia, 37 to 7, and Brown spilled Holy Cross, 14 to -. Pittsburgh won from Marquette, 21 to 7, for its second straight, the longest Pitt winning streak since 1945. Big Nine Standings Football Scores EAST LANSING, Mich.-()-- Michigan State backs gamboled at will through University of Ari- zona territory for a nine-touch- down 61-7 victory over the We,3t- erners witnessed by 36,616 home- coming fans here yesterday. The crushing Spartan ground attack racked up two touchdowns a period with one extra tally thrown in for good measure through an intercepted pass just before the rout ended. Spartan left half George Guerre, of Flint, Mich., set the pattern for the day when he broke away for 50 yards the first time Michigan State had the ball. His running mate, right half Lynnm Chandnois, also from Flint, scored the touchdown from the six-yard line. Chandnois scored another from 13, set up by his own 28-yard gal- lop, before he retired to let the second stringers take over. Le- Roy Crane, second string back from Mt. Pleasant, Mich., also contributed two tallies, one on - 65-yard jaunt through the entire Arizona team, the most spectacu- lar run of the day. Michigan State was coasting on a 27-0 lead at halftime and the eager Substitute backs were al- lowed in to score five more touch- downs. A third stringer, James Cramor also of Flint, intercepted a pass for a 37-yard jaunt for the final Spartan scot e. Michigan State made good on scven of the nine conversion tries with George Smith booting five and Pete Fusi two. Not Best By Guess- Best By Test- '49 'Ensian EAST Army 20, Harvard 7. Brown 14, Holy Cross 6. Cornell 34, Syracuse 7. Dartmouth 41, Colgate 16. Pennsylvania 20, Columbia 14. Rutgers 22, Princeton 6. Pittsburgh 21, Marquette 7. Missouri 35, Navy 14. Penn State 37, West Virginia 7. Tufts 26, Rochester 7. Amherst 27, Colby 14. Rhode Island State 19, Massa- chusetts 12. Franklin & Marshall 19, Car- negie Tech. 0. Vermont 14, Norwich 0 Oberlin 13, Hamilton 6 Lehigh 14, Gettysburg 13 MIDWEST Yale 17, Wisconsin 7. Minnesota 6, Illinois 0. Hope 7, Hillsdale 0. Alma 13, Albion 7. North Dakota State 13, South Dakota State 7. Ohio Wesleyan 26, Case 13. Lawrence 26, Monmouth 0. Illinois Normal 16, Valparaiso 14. DePauw 18, Grinnell (Iowa) 0. Kalamazoo 14, Adrian 13. Notre Dame 44, Nebraska 13 Ohio State 17, Indiana 0 Iowa State 18, Colorado 7 Purdue 20, Iowa 13 Denison 27, Wooster 0 Ohio U. 37, Western Reserve 7 Oklahoma 42, Kansas State 0 Georgetown 13, Tulsa 7 SOUTH Tennessee 21, Alabama 6. Georgia Tech 27, Auburn 0. Duke 13, Maryland 12. North Carolina 14, North Car- olina State 0. Mississippi State 27, Cincinnati 9. Texas Christian 27, Texas A & M, 14. Vanderbilt 26, Kentucky 7 Tulane 20, Mississippi 7 Virginia 41, Wash. & Lee 6 William & Mary 30, Virginia Tech 0 Texas 14, Arkansas 6 FAR WEST' California 42, Oregon State 0. Oregon 8, Southern California 7. Stanford 34, UCLA 14. Washington State 10, Wash- ington 0. Oklahoma A & M 27, San Fran- cisco 20. I-M NEWS Fencing classes will start at the I-M Building this Monday., All men who signed up for the classes on the I.M. bulletin board are re- quested to report next week, Mon- day through Thursday, between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. at the I.M. building. Soap's the Important Thing That's Why .. . WE GIVE IT FREE EXPLANATION: The right soap is as important to our business as it is to your wash. After research and experiments we have found that 5 soaps are essential for the 5 main classes of washes. Work clothes, diapers, curtains, lingerie and general washes each need a different soap or detergent 0 s " 0 " +r 0 " w w " " " 0 for best results. / the TAP SOLE for extra wear! NEW COLOR for extra style! Modern Viking styling in this moe-front Mansfield. Fall's fashion news in a deep wine color of fine leathers. Extra wear too in the icather soic securely tapped to a husky rubber one! Famed fit for comfort is in- hereiit in all Mansfields . .. shoes that pocket savings for you! CORUS BOOTEIY 304 South State .r. Rather than take a chance that you'll use wrong soap, we furnish the proper soap free so that we'll know you get the best results possible. PACKARD. Self-Service Laundry Ann Arbor's Original and Largest Self-Service Laundry; Greene's Cleaners Pickup Station Open Evenings for Your Convenience Stories of America's greatestt eams -low THE BGNN By Howard Roberts The thrill-packed saga of over fifty years of gridiron conflict in the country's toughest collegiate league, the Western Conference. Tracing the origin of the Con- ference, THE BIG NINE portrays its eventful history in terms of its leaders, players and coaches -Yost, Zuppke, Stagg, Grange, Nagurski, Kinnick and all the other star performers. Illustrated with 16 pages of action photographs * $3.00 Buy at F LLETT'S State Street at N. University Coed fencing will be day evenings between 10:00. All students are held Fri- 8:00 and invited. 715 Packard (near State) Phone 2-4 241 , _ ,0 194MCHGAENiAN A You can still get your picture in the 1949 Ensian if you are getting a degree in February, June, or Aug- '11 LAST CH IANCE 4Ike i to MINN SPONSORED BY THE WOLVERINE CLUB ust. open The Ensian Business Office is every day except Saturday from 2 P.M. to 5 P.M. and Sunday f TICKET SALE CLOSES Call 2-6482 for information. MONDAY at 10 R.M. I I _.__