SUNDAY, VOVEMBER 13, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY -PAGE SEVER' _ ______I________1________r________________________ 1'AGE SEV~S r Navy . . Columbia .0 .0 . . 34 Northwestern . . 0 Colgate. . 39 Purdue . . . 41 Minnesota . 7 Pitssburgh . 24 .. 7 20 Marquette Minnesota, Purdue Route Foes ASSOCIATED P OCT0URE PRESS N EWS v Bye Scores Two Tallies For Gopher Y PITTSBURGH-(A')-Fleet Billy Bye popped like a wraith from a giant Minnesota forward wall be- fore 42,515 fans yesterday to lead the Gophers to a 24-7 victory over the University of Pittsburgh. The 180-pound Anoka, Minn., halfback - a comparative midget running behind the big Gopher line - raced over for two touch- downs and passed for a third. * * * BYE SLANTED off tackle from five yards out in the second per- iod for the first Minnesota touch- down. He ran 29 yards later in the same stanza for another to run Minnesota's lead to 14-0 at the half. Then the stubborn Pitt Panthers threatened to make things inter- esting in the last half by unfurl- ing a passing attack for a touch- down. BUT BYE RETURNED to the game and flipped a perfect pass to quarterback Jim Malosky of Crosby-Ironton, Minn., for the score which put the game safely beyond Pitt's reach. The final Minnesota points came on a 15-yard field goal by end Gordon Soltau, of Duluth, Minn., in the fading minutes of the game. This boot made a perfect kicking day for the big end as he also spun placements through the uprights after each touchdown. The fourth down field goal came at Pitt gallantly threw Minnesota back after the Gophers negotiated a first down on the Panther two in a long march from their own 15. * * * HALFBACK LOUIS (Bimbo) Cecconi, of Donora, Pa., guided Pitt to its only score as navigator of an aerial attack which finally struck pay dirt on a heave from Cecconi to end Nick Derosa, also of Donora. The play covered 17 yards. Keres tes' Runs Crush Marquette LAFAYETTE -- (R) - Junior John Kerestes whipped through Marquette's staggering line for three touchdowns yesterday in a 41-7 Purdue victory, its first at home this season. The big fulback's performance softened 28,000 Purdue fans' re- gret for the last home-field ap- pearance of halfbacks Harry Szul- borski and Norbert Adams. Their hard running also contributed to Marquette's bad afternoon. * * * SZULBORSKI, top ground- gainer in the Western Conference for two seasons until hesinjured a leg, showed his old flash in a 20-yard end run that started Pur- due's sixth touchdown attack. Kerestes and Adams took over from there. Kerestes scored on runs of 12, 7 and 21 yards and Adams spurted 51 yards down the middle of the field. All to- gether, Purdue made 502 yards from scrimage to Marquette's 221. Even Purdue linemen got into the scoring. Defensive center Clin- ton Knitz picked a Marquette fumble out of the air in the third quarter and ran 25 yards for a touchdown. Purdue let four-year guard Earl Murray run over one of its extra points after RudyuTrbovich had placekicked four out of five. Conference Standings W L T PCT -Daily-Wally Barth OUTTA MY WAY-Stellar defense man Chuck Lentz is shown trying to elude Indiana's Bob Robertson on one of his many punt returns of yesterday's game. Chuck is currently threatening the conference record for pass interceptions and is high in the list of the leaders in punt and kickoff returns. Navy Whips Columbia; NU Tops Fighting Colgate P R E M I E R Georges Bi- dault, wartime resistance leader and later foreign minister, was confirmed by National Assembly as Fraice's premier ending coun- try's 23-day governmental crisis, LEARN I N G THE HARD W A Y-students carry desks into country school (background) near Torrice, Italy, about 56 miles southeast of Rome. The school, heavily damaged in war, has no furniture and pupils built own primitive-Iooking desks. S K Y L I N E-Ava Hall makes a pretty silhouette against the sky at Miami Beach, Fla.'- ANNAPOLIS - (A) - Navy warmed to its task in a 28 point second half to rout a fast weaken- ing Columbia football team 34-0 before 18,000 in Thompson Sta- dium yesterday. Columbia made a contest of it for the first half, limiting Navy to a 6-0 lead before taking its sixth straight shellacking in eight games. The Lions wound sup with a net rushing of only 23 yards aft- er two early scoring threats. * * * THE MIDDIES, sticking closer to the ground than usual, pound- ed out two third period touch- DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN downs and third stringers com- pleted the rout with another pair in the last two minutes. It was the Navy's third triumph against four losses and one, tie as the Middies head into their Army classic two weeks from yes- terday. EVANSTON - (A) - North- western, the faded 1949 Rose Bowl champions, leaped out of the shadows of a three game losing; streak today to maul outmanned Colgate 39-20 in an intersectional football game. The Red Raiders, making their first invasion of the Western Con- ference since beating Iowa 14-0 in 1938, were dropped for their sixth straight loss of the season. BUT THE CROWD of 40,000 "Dads' Day" rooters saw the Col- gate outfit battle until exhausted. At least six of its players had to be helped off the field-mostly from being played out-only to return as soon as they caught their breath. Northwestern, paced on the ground by Gasper Perricone, Johnny Miller and Art Mura- kowski, rushed for 351 yards to the Raiders' 140. The Wildcats scored in every quarter, piling up a 20-0 first period edge. Don Burson's passing accounted for most of Northwestern's 89 yards through the air. Ohio State........4 MICHIGAN .......4 Wisconsin .........3 Minnesota .........3 Illinois ............3 Iowa ..............3 Northwestern......2 Purdue ............1 Indiana ............0 1 1 1 2 2 3 4 4 5 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 .800 .800 .700 .600 .583 .500 .333 .200 .00-0 (Continued from Page 4) of Detroit, will speak on "Human Relations - Our Last Frontier." Canterbury Club: 9 a.m. Holy Communion followed by student breakfast at Canterbury House. 5 p.m. Evening service, followed by student supper and meeting at 6 p.m. Prof. John Coleman of the University of Toronto will speak on "What Is Wrong with Our Uni- versities?" Coffee hour follows at ' 8:30 p.m. Roger Williams Guild: Students will meetat 5:45 p.m. at the Guild rHouse for a cost supper following which they will go to the Presby- terian Church for fellowship and an address by the Rev. Mr. Laut- enslager, who will speak on "The Future of Christianity in China." Wesleyan Guild: 9:30 a.m. Stu- dent Seminar in Pine'Room, "The Inside of Christianity." 5:30 p.m. Supper and fellowship in Socialj Hall. 6:30 p.m. Worship and pro- gram. David Larson will relate his experiences from a recent visit to Europe. Bishop and Mrs. Mar- shall Reed will be honored guests during evening program. U. of M. Hostel Club: Forestry Farm Family Hike. Leave League at 2 p.m. by car or bike. Graduate Outing Club meeting, northwest Rackham 2:15 a.m. Treasure hunt and supper. Inter Arts Union: Meeting, 4 p.m., League. Room will be post- ed on the bulletin board. United World Federalists: Sem- inar: Functional Federalism, 6:30 p.m., 5:30 Thompson St. Hillel Foundation: Graduate (Continued on Page 8) Office and P' rtable Models TYPEWRITERS of all makes Sold, Bought, Repaired, Rented CHRISTMAS CARDS MORRILL'S 314 South State St. G. I. Requisitions Accepted O P E N A I R A R T . H 0 W - Overhead view of San Francisco Art Commission's outdoor, art show held in city's Union Square. Among exhibits was display of paintings by Alcatraz convicts. TO ARGENTINA- Stanton Griflis (above), of New York, former Ambassador to Poland and Egypt, has been nominated by President Truman to be Ambassador to Argentina. ^," (c f,1 Christmas Cards of all kindsI 5c each or 50e a doze 10e each or $1.00 a dozen Personalized Christmas Cards Available For As Little As AM BASSADOR-George V. Allen, as-istant secretary of state,-,as named ambassador to Yugoslavia by President Tru- man. His appointment to the Belgrade post was announced after resignation of ailing Am- bassador Cavendish W. Cannon. P N E U M A T I C Q U O N S E T H UT - This pneumatic quonset hut of cotton fabric, made for airmen stranded in Arctic, was developed by Air Materiel Command and U. S. Rubber Co. 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