6ER15,1956THE MICHIGAN DAILY p M Oklahoma S Sooners' Late Marker Beats Longhorns, 14-13 41 queezes Texas; Miami U' 4 " sets Purdue Smith Leads Hurricanes To Shock Win,20-14 DALLAS - (A') - Oklahoma's slashing red shirts stormed on un- defeated and untied with college football's greatest wining streak yesterday with a breathless, last- minute 14-13 victory over Texas. A low pass from center which Bill Porter, back to kick in the lengthening shadows of the Cot- ton Bowl, could only fall on and give the ball to Oklahoma on the Texas 11-yard line was the decid- ing point in the Sooners' magnifi- cent victory that was their twenty- Grid Scores BIG TEN Ohio State 26, Indiana 14 Wisconsin 14, Iowa 0 Northwestern 13, Minnesota 6 U of Miami 20, Purdue 14 Illinois 14, U.C.L.A. 6 (Fri. Night) EAST Geneva 20, Allegheny 7 Amherst 32, Bowdoin 20 Carnegie Tech 26, Akron 6 Colgate 35, Holy Cross 28 Champlain 20, Loyola of Montreal 0 Drexel° Tech 19, Penn Military 7 Cornell 28, Harvard 7 Rider 28, Haverford 7 Indiana (Pa.) State Teachers 20, Edinboro State 6 New Hampshire 19, Maine 0 Colby 6, Northeastern 0 Pennsylvania 42, DartmcAh 26 Rice14, Pittsburgh 7 Rutgers 26, Temple 20 Scranton 34, Gannon 7 Connecticut 13, Springfield 12 Swarthmore 9, Wagner 6 Trinity 21, Hobart 6 * Tufts 25, Bates 0 :Tulsa 27, Villanova 7 Virginia Union 7, Lincoln (Pa.) 6 Washington (Md.) 34, Bridge- water 0 Lehigh 49, Gettysburgh 6 Franklin & Marshall 25, Western Maryland 0 Maryland 25, Georgetown 14 Morgan State 32, Howard Univer- sity 0. Mt. St. Mary's 19, Waynesburg 19 King's College 31, Lycoming 0 Brockport Teachers 13, Mansfield Teachers 12 King's Point 15,RPI 14 SOUTH Florida A&M 20, Morris Brown 0 North Carolina State A&M 36, Clark 0 EAstern Kentucky State 47, Ten- nessee Tech 7 Mississippi College 33, Southwest Tennessee 0. Florida 27, Auburn 7 Georgia 27, Mississippi State 0 Michigan State 33 William & Mary 14 Wke Forest 13, North Carolina 7 Duke 7,North Carolina, State 0 Randolph Macon 26, Catholic 21 Tennessee 41, Chattanooga 0 .Vanderbilt 20, Mississippi 14 Virginia 26, Washington & Lee 21 West Virginia 46, Richmond 7 The Citadel 19, Davidson 12 MIDWEST Case 20, Ohio Wesleyan 13 Butler 33, Ball State 7 'Wheaton 73, Elmhurst 7 Wichita 34, Bradley 6 Huron 12, Dakota Wesleyan 0 ?ranklin 40, Rose Poly 0 Albion 33, Adrian St. Joseph's (Ind.) 7, Ind State 0 ¢. Dak. State 60, N. Dak. State 0 Illinois Wesleyan 49, Carthage (1Il.) 0 Colorado 28, Nebraska 19 Michigan Tech 40, Detroit Tech 7 Central Mich. 12, Bowling Green 0 SOUTHWEST Oklahoma' 14, Texas 13 Houston 27, Louisville 7 Arkansas 27, Baylor 6 FAR WEST Wyoming 40, Utah State 7 Miami (,O) 35, Western Mich. 0 North Dakota 28, South Dakota 7 Kankas 33, Iowa State 21 Missouri 28, Kansas State 7 fourth straight over a period of little more than two years. * * * BILLY VESSELS, keyman in the lacerating ground game of the Ok- lahomans dashed around right end for a touchdown and Jim Weather- all, the Texan who plays tackle for the Sooners, kicked the extra point that threw a crowd of 75,968 into pandemonium. Minutes before, slender Bobby Dillon, Texas' ace safety man, had skittered 50 yards with an intercepted pass to give Texas a 13-7 lead. Only four minutes and five sec- onds remained to play when Okla- homa scored the winning touch- down. * * * STATISTICALLY O k l a h o ma was the leader with 190 yards on the ground and 104 in the air. Texas gained 80 rushing and 116 passing. Texas had 'em but they got away. Twice the Longhorns smashed within a bean-shooter's distance of the Oklahoma goal line. Once the powerful Sooners piled up the Longhorn drive on the one-foot line. Another time, Texas lost the ball. on the five with a fumble. It was a rough, smashing game fought between the two giant, bone-crushing lines. At game's end, mad Oklahomans swarmed onto the field and up- rooted the goal posts. Wooden posts had been erected for the special benefit of Oklahoma, which is accustomed to tearing them down in its conference. Northwestern End Engineers 13-6 Victory Stonesifer Shocks Gophers with Catches EVANSTON, Ill. - (A) - Sky- reaching end Don Stonesifer speared a Big Ten record of 13 passes, including two touchdown heaves, and winged unbeaten Northwestern to a 13-6 triumph over Minnesota's groundfast Gop- hers yesterday. Stonesifer, six-foot, 194-pound Wildcat Captain, grabbed a five- yard touchdown shot from quar- terback Dick Flowers in the first period and a 10-yard scoring Flo- wers flip in the third quarter. * S * THAT WAS all the Wildcats needed for their opening Big Ten triumph and third straight verdict of the season before 45,000 at Dyche Stadium, Minnesota, in staggering to its third straight setback, had a 6-6 deadlock at halftime-a lot more than the Gophers deserved. Minnesota's touchdown came on a 38-yard play. Fullback Gary Johnson banged nine yards off tackle, then flipped a lateral to halfback Dick Gregory, who streaked the rest of the way to score. Stonesifer's glue-fingered affec- tion for Flowers' sharp-shooting produced 140 yards in his 13 grabs which broke the previous confer- ence single game record of six. That also was set by a North- western end, Max Morris, also against Minnesota, in 1945. Mor- ris' six catches covered 158 yards. The running attacks of both teams were erratic, although 210-pound Rich Athan of North- western slashed big holes in the behemoth Gopher line. The tale of the game was in the air. Flowers' passing bloomed into 19 completions, in 35 attempts, for 260 yards. State Whips Game W&M In Runaway Grandelius Stars In 33-14 Win EAST LANSING -(I)-Michi- gan State College hit football's comeback trail yesterday with a sparkling 33 to 14 victory over a dead-game but disabled William and Mary eleven. The air and ground powerful Michigan State team, playing be- fore a Homecoming crowd of 35,- 656 fans, drove almost at will through the Southerners' line. * * s ONLY IN the last period did the visitors, both of whose scores were set up by MSC bobbles, stiffen and show an attack of their own, And that was against a reserve-stud- ded Michigan State team. The hometown Spartans were paced by the play of Left Half- back Sonny Grandelius who scored two of their five touch- downs. Other' markers were made by Jesse Thomas, Leroy )rane and Don McAuliffe. Honors for the visiting Indians were claimed by Halfback Dickie Lewis, who tallied on Ed Mag- dziak's pass in the first period, and End George Heflin, who grab- bed Paul Yewcic's heave in the final standza. * s s NEW ORLEANS - (A") - Not- re Dame, her magnificant 39-game unbeaten string snapped last week, barely came back to victory yester- day over fumbling Tulane, 13-9, with short, staccato passes by Bob Williams. Williams' fine and often great passes set up the margin over a Tulane team which lost repeated chances to score during sags in it's otherwise keyed up offensive. * * * THE TULANE line was the mas- ter of the Irish forwards practi- cally from beginning to end. The big, slow line found speed and ability it hasn't shown in earlier games to blast Notre Dame's run- ning game. Late in the game Tulane's Don. Brignac fumbled on Notre Dame's three and Irishman Jerry Groom recovered. A few plays later Tulane agains fum- bled after it worked up a power- ful drive. Notre Dame and Tulane smash- ed at each other's goal line with great fury the first five minutes Once-Proud Irish Stumble To Win Over Tulane, 13-9 of the game with risky, wild foot- ball but a brand that paid hand- somely, In six quick plays Tulane bolted from its 36 to a touchdown which shocked practically everybody. Harold Waggoner did most of the damage in the one minute 15 sec- ond drive and George Kinek did the scoring. Kinek turned the Irish left end for the score after a four yard burst. Bill Bonar converted. * * * TULANE'S LEAD lasted seven plays. Williams threw once to Jim Mutscheller for 22 yards. Three plays later Williams sent the ball to John Pettibone for a 54 yard gain and the score. Joe Caprara kicked the tieing point. After the flurry, a line battle de- veloped with Tulane getting the edge. Williams was rushed, and overworked for a "T" quarterback by the Big Green Wave's front liners. Three times in the first half Tulane carried inside Notre Dame's 25. Old Nassau Tigers Take Navy_20-14 PRINCETON, N. J.-(J)-Chun-3 ky Jack Davidson and slender Dick Kazmaier rallied Princeton yester- day to defeat Navy's downtrodden football team, 20 to 14, after the Midshipmen led at the half 14-7. Davison set up the decisive touchdown in the fourth period with the longest run of the day, 64 yards, and would have gone for a score had not Bill Powers hauled him down from behind on the Navy 17-yard line. Kazmaier passed to Bob Unger for Princeton's first touchdown and his sharp slants into the line were a big factor in Princeton's offense. Princeton's victory, accomplish- ed before 35,000 was its third of the year and avenged Navy's un- expected 1949 upset of Princeton 28-7. The defeat was Navy's third in arow. LAFAYETTE - (P) - A twisting halfback, Frank Smith, scored twice after dazzling runs yesterday to lead the University of Miami from Florida to a surprising defeat of Purdue, 20-14. The Hurricanes from the South smeared the Purdue offense, which Notre Dame couldn't stop last week, and kept the Boilermakers in the midfield a good part of the afternoon. PURDUE WAS ABLE to score only on a blocked punt and a 31- yard pass. Miami's other score came on a surprjsing 53-yard run by guard Joe Lyden, who scooped In a blocked pass which bounced into the air. End Leo Martin had knocked the ball into the air as Dale Samuels threw it. Purdue's brilliant passing back, Samuels, had a bad day as the vis- itors intercepted six of the Purdue passes. IN SPITE of that, Purdue made 150 yards with 11 of 29 passes tried. Joe Hackett, the highly re- garded Miami passer, did the tossing for Miami, which neted 75 yards on eight completions of 18 tries. Halfback Jim Dooley twice in- tercepted, passes late in the game to take the ball over the desperate Purdue eleven. THE GAME was a slashing, hard-hitting one, and in the later minutes was marked by fumbles. The ball- changed hands seven times. The strong Miami front wall yielded in the center only a, few times and frequently - broke through to interfere with Pur- due's plays before they could get off, But it was Smith who was the big show, The 175-pound boy from Tuckohoe, N.Y., piled up 135 yards In 14 tries. PARTICULARLY effective was the trap play which twice fooled the Boilermakers-both times for touchdowns. in a row. tried. THE MOST sensational run of the day, however, was provided by Thomas. He took a William and Mary punt on his own 14 and zoomed 86 yards to pay dirt. The victory was particularly sweet for the Spartans, who were upset last week by Mary- land, 34-7. Coach Biggie Munn grabbed opportunity to try out some of his sophomores in pre- paration for Notre Dame two weeks hence. An expected duel between two stellar ends, Bob Carey of MSC and Vito Ragazzo of W & M, failed to develop. Carey saw only limited action due to a knee injury, but kicked three of five conversions. - . __ . __.__r.._._ . DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 4) American Chemical Society: Meeting, Wed., Oct. 18, 8 p.m., 1300 Chemistry Bldg. Dr. H. H. Storch, Chief, Research and De- velopment Branch of the Office of Synthetic Fuels of the Department of the Interior will discuss "Syn- thetic Liquid Fuel Processes." Sigma Rho Tau will hold "Or- ganization Night" on Tues., Oct. 17 at 7 p.m., 2084 E. Engineering Bldg. All engineering and archi- tectural students, including first semester freshmen, are eligible for this speech training organization. American Society of Civil Engi- neers: Opening meeting on Tues., Oct. 17, 7:30 p.m., Room 3-KLM, Union. Speaker: Don P. Reynolds, of New York Headquarters, ASCE. All civil engineering students are invited. Fortnight Skits Directors: Meet- ing, Fri., Oct. 20, 5 p.m., League. We can pull the curtains for ex- actly one minute. Every person in your skit must be at rehearsal Sun., Oct. 22, 3 p.m., League Ball- room. A copy of your skit is due at the Friday meeting along with the housemother's approval. For information call Anita Hoert at Martha Cook. I I i 'U 'I I - ml 1950-51 will be o'n sale .W SOO! 1 Fo r Only45c Have your SKIRTS (plain) PANTS SWEATERS BLOUSES SHIRTS. 18,500 student names, phone numoers, local and home addresses. "AN ESSENTIAL FOR EVERY STUDENT'S PCPDFMIC AND 0)CTPL JF"