SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rAGE SEVEV E PAGE SEVEN UnbeatenStreaks End for Spartans, Georgia Tech Boilermakers Stop MSC Win Skein at 28 Straight Notre Dame Triumphs Over Engineers, 27-14 Packers Fall FOOTBALL SCORES i To Steelers In NFL Tilt (Continued from Page 1) a member of the conference, had- n't been beaten since it dropped a 34-7 decision to Maryland in 1954. Michigan State's best drive ended with Froncie Gutman's snatch of a Yeweic pass on the Purdue 28. Michigan State had reached the Purdue 17, largely on a 26-yard pass from Yewclc to end Bill Quinlon. It never again came so close except on Boldon's nullified long run. Rex Brock played the best game, of his career, gaining 82 yards in 18 rushes. PHIL REICHERT made two unsuccessful field goal attempts for Purdue from the 20 and 15- yard stripes before the Boilermak- ers hammered over their big touch- down. Ehrman's interception of Yew- cic's pass intended for end Don Dohoney started Purdue's win- ning drive from its 22-yard line. The Boilermakers pulled a pen- alty for an illegal formation and Brock punted from his 30, only to get the ball back on Michi- gan State's roughing. Soccer Club Defeats Ohio Wesleyan. 5-2 Playing irr a semi-drizzle and on a muddy field, the Wolverine Soc- cer Club downed Ohio Wesleyan University, 5-2, yesterday morn- ing. All of the goals were scored by one player, Hank Reichart, who booted them in during the first half of the game. The first was kicked in after seven minutes of the first period with the second coming two minutes later. * * * REICHART gave Michigan a 3-0 lead when an Ohio player touched the ball with his hands and the Wolverines were awarded a pen- alty shot. Ohio Wesleyan came back with a goal with five minutes to go in the second period. The Michigan; team then rebounded with two more goals near the end of the second quarter. The Ohio aggrega- tion scored its final goal with 30 seconds to go in the third period. Pobojewski, Neves and Brock al- ternated in the 12 plays climaxed by Pobojewski's touchdown. It took the Boilermakers three smashes from the Michigan State 1 and the victory-hungry Purdue crowd was in such a frenzy that the players could not hear the signals. * * * IT WAS the second time in re- cent years that Purdue ended a great winning streak. In 1949 Purdue upset Notre Dame 28-14 after the Fighting Irish had won 39 straight games. Michigan State 0 0 0 0-0 Purdue 0 0 0 6-6 LEROY BOLDEN . . 94-yard run wasted SOUTH BEND, Ind.-(P)-Notre Dame, the nation's No. 1 team, survived a tooth-and-nail second half without stricken Coach Frank Leahy yesterday to shatter Georgia Tech's vaunted 31-game unbeaten streak 27-14. It was a dramatic, bitterly fought game that really started after Notre Dame left the field at halftime leading 7-0, but came back without Leahy who collapsed with a "muscular spasm" in the lower chest. LEAHY WAS TAKEN to a hos-' pital in the third quarter about the time Tech bounced back with a 70-yard scoring drive before Notre Dame with lightning swift- ness scored two touchdowns on a short pass and a bad pass by Tech's third string center into the end zone. Georgia Tech, last beaten by Alabama 54-19 on Nov. 18, 1950, made one more comeback, scor- ing in the third two minutes of the last quarter on a pass cov- ering 53 yards, from brilliant freshman quarterback Wade Mitchell to halfback Billy Teas. Crumbling under the bruising Irish attack as the end neared, first six-pointer against Tech in 22 games. The aerial score was Notre Dame's second touchdown which broke a 7-7 tie in the third quar- ter and capped a 56-yard drive. It came on a nine-yard shot from quarterback Ralph Gugliel- mi to halfback Joe Heap. Only a few minutes later, the Irish scored the clinching touch- down, a "gift" from Jim Morris, third string Tech center. Snapping back for a punt, Morris centered the ball high over punter Jim Carlen, a thirdvstring guard, standing in the end zone. * * .* USC Drubs California, 3- Uclanswhip WashingtonState1 TACKLE Art Hunter fell on ball midway in the end zone the Notre Dame touchdown. thei for PITTSBURGH - (W) - Half- back Jim Popcorn Brandt, making his first start of the season, and fullback Frank Rogel powered the Pittsburgh Steelers to a thump- ing 31-14 victory over the Green Bay Packers last night in a Na- tional Football League game. Brandt, an understudy all sea- son to Ray Mathews, scored two touchdowns on short line plunges. Rogel's bull-like thrusts helped the Steelers to two others. * * * QUARTERBACK Jimmy Finks sneaked over for the first Steeler touchdown and Lynn Chandnois skirted left end for six yards for the other score. Tackle Nick Bolko- vac booted a 45-yard field goal and kicked four extra points for Pittsburgh. Quarterback Babe Parilli scor- ed Green Bay's first touchdown in the third period from one- yard out after the Packers had recovered a fumble by Chand- nois on the Steeler 43. The Steelers' rock-ribbed de- fense bottled up the Green Bay attack completely in the first half. The Packers got only one first down, that on an offside penalty. Minnesota 22, Michigan 0 Purdue 6, Michigan State 0 Illinois 20, Syracuse 13 Ohio State 20, Wisconsin 19 Iowa 19, Indiana 13 Northwestern 27, Pittsburgh 21 Fordham 40, Rutgers 13 Colgate 7, Yale 7 (tie) Army 40, Columbia 7 Penn 9, Navy 6 Cornell 26, Princeton 19 Delaware 30, Connecticut 14 Maine 37, Bates 7 Brown 6, Holy Cross 0' Penn State 27, Texas Chris- tian 21 Harvard 20, Dartmouth 14 Lafayette 7, Bucknell 6 Amherst 20, Wesleyan 20 (tie) Notre Dame 27, Georgia Tech 14 Marquette 20, College of Paci- fic 20 Missouri 23, Nebraska 7 Drake 12, Iowa State 7 Butler 47, Indiana State 12 Rose Poly 27, Illinois College 0 Indiana Central 18, Hanover 6 Wabash 28, Sewanee 7 Camp Atterbury, Ind. 26, Xa- vier Ohio Freshmen 13 Earlham 18, Taylor 13 Anderson 12, Manchester 8 Albion 19, DePauw 0 Georgia 27, North Carolina 14 Tennessee 59, Louisville 6 West Virginia 52, VMI 20 Virginia Tech 32, Washing- ton & Lee 12 William & Mary 12, George Washington 7 Alabama 7, Mississippi State 7 (tie) Mississippi 28, Arkansas 0 Auburn 34, Tulane 7 Duke 31, North Carolina State 0 Florida 21, L.S.U. 21 (tie) Furman 34, Davidson 0 Vanderbilt 28, Virginia 13 Tufts 12, Williams 9 Kansas State 21, Wichita 0. Oklahoma 27, Colorado 20 S.M.U. 14, Kansas 6 Baylor 14, Texas A&M 13 Rice 18, Texas 13 New Mexico 41, Montana 13 Washington U. 18, Western Mines 7 Oregon 26, San Jose State 13 Utah 13, Wyoming 12 UCLA 44, Washington State 7 Southern California 32, Cali- fornia 20 Stanford 13, Washington 7 Oregon State 19, Idaho 0 Detroit 18, Oklahoma A&M 14 Wake Forest 13, Richmond 13 (tie) Kentucky 19, Villanova 0 Brandeis 6, Wayne 0 Houston 24, Arizona State Tempe 20 BASKETBALL EXHIBITION New York Knickerbockers 81, College All-Stars 71 Guard Menil Mavraides con- verted after the first three Notre Dame touchdowns, missing his fourth attempt. 4, : By The Associated Press BERKELEY, Calif. - Southern California's mighty Trojans de- livered a smashing blow to Cali- fornia's Rose Bowl hopes yester- day when they thundered to a 32-20 victory over the Bears in their annual football thriller. The game was witnessed by 78,- 000 persons-the largest crowd for a Pacific Coast Conference game I so far this year. THE TROJANS, defending PCC champions, winners last New Years in the Rose Bowl and in- eligible to return, sidetracked the Bears on a field cluttered with fumbles by the home team. Southern California went 58 yards almost on sheer power to score in the first period. Three more TDs followed California fumbles in the second period. One was from the Cal 7, another fronm the 5 and the last from the 4. The Trojans pulverizing defen- sive charges had a lot to do with the Bear miscues. A third period touchdown by USC climaxed a 66- yard thrust. * * * LOS ANGELES -- Washington State annoyed UCLA for the first five minutes of ° their Pacific Coast Conference game yesterday, then absorbed a 44-7 whipping. aged to travel 37 yards in nine laborious plays and two UCLA offsides to score the touchdown. Then began a nightmare under the sun for the visitors, featured by a 68-yard run, plus another for 38 by UCLA All-America candi- date halfback Paul Cameron. IN THE final seconds of the game, halfback Don Stalwick in- tercepted a Washington State pass and raced it back 70 yards for the seventh and final touchdown for UCLA. Cameron led the Bruins as he gained 121 yards running, passed for 47 and scored two touchdowns. Beavers Score ... MOSCOW, Idaho -- (AP) - The Oregon State Beavers broke a sea- son-long touchdown famine Satur- day with three for a 19-0 victory over Idaho in a slow battle be- tween two Pacific Coast Conference also rans. The Beavers, blanked five straight times before, scored in the first 3% minutes and then put together two long drives in the second half. The roaring partisan crowd of 58,254 was convinced after full- back Neil Worden pierced seven yards for the first Irish score that the befuddled Southerners were due for a sound trimming. *, * * Tech yielded the fourth~Notre ruIT WAS bang-bang-bang by a Dame touchdown on a two-yard! ruthless running attack 'which smash by halfback Johnny Latt- swept the Irish 80 yards to their ner. 7-0 lead in the game's first 10 * * jplays. THE ever-exploiting Irish, in Georgia Tech 0 0 7 7-14 smashing to their fourth victory Notre Dame 7 0 14 6-27 of the season, scored the most touchdowns in one game against NHL HOCKEY Tech since the Engineer streak Montreal' 1, Detroit 0 began. They also passed to the' Boston 3, Toronto 2 RECORD DANCE... TONIGHT! FREE! UNION TERRACE ROOM Il Read and Use UCLA fumbled away the ball two plays after the opening kickoff and the Cougars man. Daily Classifieds fil E d ,y AS SEEN IN CKtARM. c 40. X. r costume GARGOYLEC The Magazine for Plumbers OUT WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28 color rnoceasis ' o ,f~ Your favorite sueded leather classics ,,, in fresh, young colors to juggle with all your casual clothes! Supple, soft, a joy to wear ... and so-o good looking, you'll wish you could wear two pairs of these Penobscot Trampeze at a time. C 1 0 W