SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1950 PAGE TWO IBUSINESS SERVICES FOR SALE MICHIGAN DAILY GOOD RENTAL TYPEWRITERS now FUR COAT & MUFF-Bargain, % length, Phone 23-24-1 available at Office Equipment Ser- size 14. Ph. 2-0489. ) 112 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. vice Company, 215 E. Liberty. Guar- anteed repair service on all makes of CHRISTMAS Gift Rates on TIME and CLASSIFIEDADVERTISING typewriters. )6B LIFE now available. Phone Student RATES ---A STEIN--Experined typist. 308 Periodical Agency 2-8242 to order. )2 LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS S. State. Legal, Master, Doctors dis- CANARIES, parakeets, finches, and 2 .54 1.21 1.76 sertations, etc. 2-9848 or 2-4228. )12B cockatiel. New and used cages. 562 S. 3 .63 1.60 2.65- Seventh at West Madison. )2B TYPING - Accurate wor, reasonable ns s. 4g .8va 2.02 ale rates. Phone 3-4040. )3B BOOK SHELVES, bathinette, refrigera- Figue 5aveageword toa lne.tor, ice box, bunk bd. 518 E. William. Classified deadline daily except WASHING - Finished work and hand ) 12R Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, ironing if preferred. Also rough dry 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. and wet washing. Free pick-up and FOR THOSE WINTRY NIGHTS, Flan- delivery. Ph. 2-9020. )1B nelette pajamas from COUSINS on - -*---*State Stree. Warm as toast, in pat- BUSINESS SERVICES TYPEWRITERS AND FOUNTAIN PENS terns or solids that are color fast. Sales, Rentals, and Service "Sanforized" shrunk, too! )3 EXPERIENCED TYPIST wishes typing Morrill's - 314 S. State St. )4B- to do in home. Phone 2-4942. )29B MENS RUBBER FOOTWEAR-Toe Rub- TYPING done in my home. Call 2-3357. bers $1.49, ankle-high galoshes $3.75, KIDDIE KA RE )27B 4-buckle dress galoshes $3.75, high 3-1121. zipper galoshes $4.88. Open 'till 6 p.m. Reliable sitters available. Ph. 3- l2 Read Daily Classifieds Sams Store, 122 E. Washington. )5 ROOMS FOR RENT TOURIST HOME for Overnight Guests. Bath, shower, reasonable rates, 518 E. Williams St. Phone 3-8454. )12R 3RD FLOOR STUDIO NEAR CAMPUS- Prefer two to four art or arch. men .,. , students. Linens, use of dark room. Student landlord. Ph. 2-8545, 6-7. j" 0-_)23R ROOMS available for students' guests k.....football week-ends. Private home ac- commodations. Phone 2-9850, 11:00- 1:00 or 6:30-9:30 p.m. )14R PERSONAL >t< :.POLYT ECH P..L.TECH WILL GIVE piano lessons. School of INSTITUTE Music senior. Phone 2-8242. )2 STILL THE BEST BUY IN TOWN! 3 meals a day $9.00 a week. Club 211, Program of Folk Songs, J. D. Miller's Cafeteria. )2P Church Numbers and LEARN TZ DANCE the CI'assics. Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 122 E. Liberty Phone 8161 )1P Tickets $3.00-$2.40-$1.80 GIRLS! Catch a batch. Ossi Elokas, Conductor at Burton Tower Learn to dance with OssiEloks, ondutorRAY HATCH DANCE STUDIO 209 South State Phone 5083 MESSIA H - TICKETS 70c - 5c __ ____ __ 10 ENSIANS for $1.00. Those are your SATURDAY DEC. 9, 8:30 - SUNDAY, DEC. 10, 2:30 earnings every time you sell 10 Michi- _________________________________________ ganensians. Start selling today i If - - - interested call at the Ensian offices of the Publications Building. Today Tuesday LOST AND FOUND Monday Wednesday LOST-Ronson Adonis lighter initialed NO. MAIN-OPP. COURTHOUSE MAT. 30c NIGHTS & SUN. 40C A. L. K. Phone 9434. Anne Kermath. )88L TAH MANHUNT! p NSCIENCE DO YOU KNOW . .. that Lou CRI CIECE Boudreau became player-manager L-VS.CRIME! of the Cleveland Indians at the -~ .. age of 24. DO YOU KNOW. . . that the Aetod by ippe Pabe, - Los Angeles Rams and the New >n' .E ,,v,, *tJohn HOWARD-Adele JERENS York Yankees gained over 1100 yards in a National Football sk IS League game last week. * * * DO YOU KNOW . . . that Pee Wee Reese of the Brooklyn Dod- £il4e t *u' C/, i ta4I gers was never tossed out of a game by an umpire until he played in the 1000th game of his career. / r - hTYPEWRITERS -'-.r Rented _,.,r "",, ;Sold I for All your Family Bouht and Friends Repaired Buy your Christmas Cards now. CHECK THE LIST BELOW: Fountain Pens repaired by a factory trained man. Gifts for Her Gifts for Him MORRILL'S Silk and wool scarfs Large thirsty bath sheets 314 S. State Ph. 7177 Jewel cases and sewing kits Bar-B-Q sets Handkerchiefs for every taste Bar aprons and towels - and occasion Handkerchiefs, white, colored Cocktail and tea napkins borders, and initialed for a Guest, fingertip, tea or bath more personal touch towels White or colored sheets and Little Sister pillow cases NOW SHOWING Bridge or luncheon sets or Brother RC Place mats ICHniADfflPA FBARBARA Tablecloths with matching Scarfs and handkerchiefs WINKUUU BiD napkins These are just a few sugges- Blankets tions. Come in and we will Bedspreads gladly help you to finish your P shopping early so you can en- b joy the holidays to the utmost. Gage Linen Shop 11 NICKELS ARCADE Open 9:00 to 5:30 Quality has no substitute Ui THE MICHIGAN DAILY .a .i+. ar . . ".a s ~A is i V .L R i " i! i .R Z i./ Z hllini Upset by Northwestern RECORD STREAK EXTENDED: -4 Oklahoma Downs Nebraska, 49-35 I 'Second Half Surgegby 'Cats Kills Illinois Bowl Bid, 14w7 l!", NORMAN, Okla.-G'P)--Oklaho- mra's 'mighty Sooners extended the longest winning streak in modern football to 30 games yesterday by outscoring Nebraska, 49-35, and immediately began wrestling with the temptation to take a third straight trip to the Sugar Bowl. But Coach Bud Wilkinson made it plain his team will not consider a bid on a post-season bowl con- test until after it finishes its sea- son on Dec. 2 against Oklahoma, A. and M. at Stillwater. * * * RATED AS the nation's classiest outfit in the Associated Press poll, Oklahoma found itself held to a 21-21 deadlock in the first half as the result of a brilliant three-' touchdown splurge by Bobby Rey- nolds, Nebraska Sophomore flash. But the rugged Oklahoma line solved Reynolds' magic in the} second half and in the end it was the Sooner Sophomore ace, Billy Vessels, who stole the show by scoring three touchdowns and passing for a fourth. The triumph brought the Soon- ers their third straight Big Seven conference title and made them the No. 1 prospect for a bowl bid. *. * * IT WAS anybody's guess as to whether they would return to theI Sugar Bowl, where they have tri- umphed the past two years, but they left little doubt that theyI belonged in somebody's post-sea-I son classic. a A crowd of 54,000, largest everI to see a Big Seven contest, saw the Sooners start off as if they intended to run the Cornhuskers right out, of the park. Claude Arnold, a durable gent with 20-20 eyes and a 30-30 arm, sped 16 yards for one touchdown and passed 23 yards to Leon Heath for another as Oklahoma scored the first two times it gota its hands on the ball. THEN THE amazing Reynolds went to work. A fumble gave Ne- braska the ball at the Sooner 20 and on the next play Reynolds squirted into the end zone. Reynolds scored again on a 14-yard gallop in the second period at the end of a 64-yard drive. Another Oklahoma fum- ble put Nebraska only 16 yards from the goal and it was Rey- nolds again who sprinted to the end zone. Rambling Robert's third straight conversion gave Nebraska its only lead, 21-14. The Sooners tied it up before halftime on a seven-yard dash by Vessels, set up by a 59-yard pass and a run from Arnold to Heath. The third of Big Jim Weatherall's seven conversions sent the teams to rest in tight deadlock. That was the end for Reynolds and his mates. But even in defeat, Reynolds' 23 points on three touch- downs and five conversions gave him a season's total of 157 and the national scoring lead. NEBRASKA 7 14 7 OKLAHOMA 14 7 21 7-35 7-49 Purdue Upsets Indiana, 13-0 As Subs Score Touchdowns LAFAYETTE-(A)-An injury- ridden Purdue football team that had lost seven of eight games pack- ed up its troubles yesterday in a 13-0 victory over its ancient rival from Indiana University. A couple of subs from far down the Purdue roster came through in the bitter clash with tempers turned as brittle as the frozen ground. * * * HALFBACK Johnny Durham, Purdue junior who had played about 10 minutes this season, started for the first time and ran the opening. kickoff back 85 yards for a touchdown. He went right down the middle and not an I.U. player laid a hand on him. Sub quarterback Curtis Jones became Purdue's other hero, scoring in the second after in- tercepting Dick Ashburner's pass on the Indiana 26. The Hoosier classic for the Old Oaken Bucket trophy brought out 45,000 fans in spite of snow, icy roads and a temperature at kick- off time of 17 degrees. The tem- HOCKEY RESULTS Detroit 4 Chicago 1 Toronto 4 Canadiens 1 perature dropped steadily during the game. Surprisingly few of the fans went home as Indiana repeat- edly started drives that failed to dent Purdue's two-touchdown ad- vantage. . * * * BOTH TEAMS played a little! harder than the rules allow in try- ing to improve their Big Ten rec- ords. Purdue was penalized 153 yards. Indiana lost 88 yards on penalties and its tackle, Joe Ma- tesic, was ordered out of the game in the second period for unnecessary roughness. Indiana gained 172 yards rush- ing to Purdue's 122, but picked up only 10 yards passing to Purdue's 110. Purdue's Dale Samuels won the anticipated aerial battle of sophomore quarterback- with In- diana's Lou D'Achille. Fumbles happened repeatedly- four each for each team. Indiana 0 0 0 0-0 Purdue 7 6 0 0-13 EVANSTON- (P) -Illinois, the' nation's sixth-ranked team, had its Rose Bowl hopes chilled to cold ashes by a rallying Northwestern team which stunned the Illini 14 to 7 on Dyche Stadium's frozen turf yesterday. The dramatic Big Ten finale be- fore 50,000 shivering fans produc- ed an upset by inspired North- western which scored twice in the final half to erase a 7-0 Illinois lead which the Illini fashioned in the first two minutes and 27 sec- onds of the game. THE LOSS killed Illinois Rose Bowl chances, leaving the Illini with a 4-2 league record. The Rose Bowl assignment unofficially went to Michigan and also, the Big Ten title, with the Wolverines' 9 to 3 triumph over Ohio State at Columbus, Ohio. That gave Michigan a fin- al record if four wins, one loss and one tie, and a percentage of .750 since Conference ties count a half game won. The Illini, in their surprising setback, dropped clear to fourth place in the final Big Ten stand- ings. A TWO TOUCHDOWN under- dog, Northwestern tied the score in the third period on Rich Ath- an's 20-yard touchdown sprint, and finished off the fading Illini in the last quarter on Gene Mill- er's 14-yard scoring spurt. Norm Kragseth booted both extra Wildcat points which proved unnecessary as Illinois failed to make a serious threat after Johnny Karras skirted Northwestern's left end from thej 14 for a touchdown in the open- ing quarter. Illinois' great defense collapsed in sub-20-degree weather before the inspired line smashing of fiery Johnny Miller, 178 pound Chicago senior, 210 pound Athan, a junior from Sheboygan, Wis., and Gene Miller, 195 pound senior from Gary, Ind. * * * THE WILDCATS came wat for the second half, a snarling, slash- ing pack. Illinois was knocked back on its heels by a 60-yard drive by the Wildcats after receiving the second half kickoff. Knowing that the resurging Wildcats were depriving them not only from their second Rose Bowl trip since 1947, but also the Big Ten title, Illinois still could only gain 16 yards in the second half. The game started as though Il- linois would carve the Wildcats into small bits. On Northwestern's first play of the game, Dick Flow- ers' pass was intercepted by Al Brosky on Northwestern's 42. * * * SEVEN PLAYS later, .Karras cruised wide around Northwest- ern's left end for what proved to be the Illinois touchdown. Sam Rebecca booted the point and it was 7 to 0 for a confident Illinois team. But after Illinois twice faltered following a pair of 35 yard drives to Northwestern's 30 in the sec- ond period, Northwestern com- pletely stole the play from the Il- lini. While the Wildcats were churn- ing to their two touchdowns and 166 yards in the final half, Illi- nois never got past its own 30 in the third period and its 35 in the last period. U "THE TRUTH ABOUT THE HYDROGEN BOMB" r I fea,' the I/at- Ending Sunday An Intimate Theatre Bringing Cinema Triumphs From All Nations Who has has known about the Hydrogen Bomb for years, but only now is he permitted to tell the American people about it. Who wants the American people to judge the Hydrogen Bomb on the facts and make up their own minds about it. Who is truly a magnificent speaker, describing the Hydrogen- Bomb with profound clarity in an authoritative, comprehensible manner. WILLIAM L. LAWRENCE Science Reporter, N.Y. Times Wednesday, Nov. 29 -8:30 P.M. Tickets $1.50 - $1.20 - 60c (tax incU, Box Office Open Nov. 28-29 1950-51 LECTURE COURSE HILL AUDITORIUM MINIATURES "PLUTO AND THE GOPHER" Whimsy by Disney WILLIAM LAURENCE "BARNYARD SKIT-ING" I emam w STARTS r OA I .1 SkC tiCAitma4 AT THE CAMPUS BO ,me OTERY - = THE VERY FINEST IN SHOES AND SLIPPERS FOR MEN AND WOMEN AT FORMER PRICES I i®i II ~ ~ I FW U '"-~.n_ '~UI I 'r ~ -~ .. ::,:.:::::: RA9rQ:;:.