PAGE TWO T-8- MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 26.1954r PAGE TWO THE 1~flCflIGAN DAILY v NDAYas . ai:PTV1W~RFR 26. 1tidi. c Favorites Upset as Grid Season Gets Under may Collegiate Grid Scores Yale 27, Connecticut 0 Northwestern 27, Iowa State 14 Dartmouth 27, Holy Cross 26 Colgate 19, Cornell 14 Princeton 10, Rutgers 8 Navy 27, William and Mary 0 Defiance 7, Adrian 6 Arkansas 41, Tulsa 0 Washington (St. Louis) 58, Mo. Mines 14 UCLA 32, Kansas 7 Central Michigan 25, Western Michi- gan 13 Louisiana 26, Albright 0 Tennessee 19, Mississippi St. 7 Memphis State 13, Tulane 13 Amhearst 32, Colby 12 Va. Tech 32, Wake Forest 0 Tennessee State 18, Va. State 0 V.M.I. 16, George Washington 14 North Carolina 20, North Carolina State 6 Georgia 14, Clemson 7 Virginia 27, Lehigh 21 Auburn 45, Chattanooga 0 Colodardo 46, Colorado A&M 0 California 45, San Jose State 0 Brown 18, Columbia 7 Tennessee 19, Mississippi State 7 Kansas State 21, Wyoming 13 Northwestern 27, Iowa State 14 Boston U 33, Brandeis 0 Western Kentucky 24, East Tenn. State 6 Boston 12, Detroit 7 Michigan Normal 32, Hillsdale 13 Cincinnati 42, Dayton 13 Miami (Ohio) 46, Bowling Green 7 Western Reserve 12, Toledo 7 Alabama 12, LSU 0 LOWEST PRICES = Missourible LAFAYETTE, Ind. (T)-Leon- ard Dawson, a six-foot sopho- more playing his first college football game, rifled four touchdoyn passes for a big, alert Purdue team yesterday in a 31-4 rout of the Missouri Tig- ers. Sophomore end Bob Knoenle hauled down two of Dawson's touchdown passes and also dis- tinguished, himself by recover- ing a Missouri fumble that set up Purdue's first touchdown. It was Purdue's first opening gave victory in eight years, Penn State Surprises Illini; South Carolina Stuns Army' Sooners Win in Near Upset; Irish Trounce Texas, 2 1-0 Illini Running Attack By Nittany Lion Line; Held in Check Army's Kyasky Hurt CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (P) - Penn State, sharp defensively and with a tolhado-like attack led by quar- terback Don Bailey and halfback Lennly Moore, subdued highly fa- vored Illinois and its sputtering runners to score A. 14-12 upset Saturday. Although J. C. Caroline and sophomore Abe Woodson, the Il- lini's heralded ball carriers occa- sionally broke loose for good gains, they were grounded by Penn State's great ends and tacklers at times when it would have counted' most. Arnelle Recovers Fumble It was Illinois' first opening sea- son loss since being whipped by Camp Grant (Ill.) in 1943. Jesse Arnelle, 6-5, 228-pound IF OFFICER'S SHOES U.S. Army -Navy Type OXFORDS " ARMY - BROWN o NAVY - BLACK Duke Crushes Pennsylvania By 52-0 Count PHILADELPHIA (P)-Byron Al- dridge broke down the door and a hard-hitting Duke poured through to a crushing 52-0 victory over Pennsylvania Saturday in an in- tersectional football opener at Franklin Field. Coach Bill Murray cleaned his bench of 40 men and finished with third and fourth stringers in handing Penn its first humiliating defeat since Army's Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis rolled up a 61-0 trouncing in 1945. It was a sad debut for Penn's new coach, Steve Sebo, who brought in a new regime from Michigan State. Aldridge personally marshaled a 76-yard touchdown drive which broke a scoreless deadlock late in the second period and set Duke's awesome scoring machine into mo- tion. Then the Blue Devils pushed over two more touchdowns in the third period and five in the fourth. junior end for Penn State, recov- ered Mickey Bates' fumble on the Illinis 28 in the first quarter and Bailey eventually shot a 24-yard scoring pass to Arnelle. Jim Gar- rity booted his first of two critical extra points. The Nittany Lions added their other seven points in the second period. Bailey set it up with a 50- yard run, longest of the day., He then broke loose for six yards andi as he was about to be tackled lat- eraled to Moore ,who sped the fin- al 12 to score. Woodson Scores Early Quarterback Em Lindbeck, on a screen pass to Woodson, was good for a 20-yard Illinois touchdown in the first four minutes of the game. Illinois tallied again in the third, Woodson zigzagging the final 17 yards to cap a 77-yard drive. But after the first touchdown, Caroline's try for point was wide. And on the second, Bob Wiman's attempt hit the horizontal bar and bounced back. Penn State Line Strong Penn State displayed midseason form and was so strong down the middle that Illinois fullback Bates seldom took a shot at it. The re- sult was that the ends and line- backers concentrated most atten- tion on the flanks, and Caroline. and Woodson usually found a gang waiting to ambush them. Penn State ...... 7 7 0 0-14 Illinois.........6 0 6 0-12 Penn State scoring: Touchdowns Ar- nelle, Moore, Conversions, Garrity 2. Illinois Scoring: Touchdowns Wood- son 2. * * * WEST POINT (;P)-South Caro- lina double-platooned a green and undermanned Army football team with a horde of fleet backs Sat- urday and handed the Cadets a crushing 34-20 defeat in their opening game of the season. Four of the five South Carolina touchdowns were scored on the ground and three of them on drives of 96- 97 and 80 yards. Kyasky Injured Army suffered a crushing blow when Bob Kyasky, heralded soph- omore halfback who had done much to keep the Cadets in the game, went out with an injured shoulder just after South Caro- lina had tied the score 14-14 late in the second quarter. * * * Kyasky's injury coupled with the disappointing showing of the team that was rated the best in the East previous to yesterday's upset,, considerably raises the hopes of Michigan's Wolverines, Army's next opponent. Army, who has never lost to a Michigan team will definitely be on the rebound and looking for a way to salvage its high national rankings. J. C. CAROLINE .. failed to convert Gators .Beat Engineers In Big Upset ATLANTA (R)-Jackie Simpson and Mal Hammack led a battling gang of Florida Gators to a 13-12 upset victory yesterday over Geor- gia Tech, the nation's fifth-rank- ing football power. The speed of Simpson and the tremendous power of Hammack was more than Tech's tackle- weak defenses could stop. A dan- gerous Gator passing attack kept Tech off balance. Florida drew first blood in the third quarter, Simpson racing around his own right end from the four to climax a 52-yard march. Dick Allen converted. NORMAN (AP)-Oklahoma, the nation's No. 1 football team, ex- ploded with two touchdowns with- in five minutes in the last quar- ter to come from behind and whip underated Texas Christian 21-16 yesterday. The Sooners lost their star split "T" quarterback, with a broken shoulder just before the half and sophomore Jim Harris took over skillfully to direct OU to its 11th victory and the second this year. Time Runs Out on TAU TCU was rated a three-touch down underdog and looked like it had the upset of the day in the making. Sparked by its amazing stable of sophomores, ,TCU drove to the Oklahoma eight when the fiinal gun went off. Harris scored two of Oklahoma's touchdowns, one on a 69 - yard punt return. Bob Herndon added the other tally on a 10-yard drive through center after half back Buddy Leake had set up the score with a 50-yard punt return. Calame May Not Play The victory proved costly for Ok- lahoma because it was learned aft- er the game that Calame's injury may keep him out for the rest of the season. With the crowd of 50,000 stand- ing and screaming, the Sooners came back fast for their two big touchdowns. The tally that pulled Oklahoma up to 14-16 came at the end of a 75-yard march sparked by fullback Bob Burris who made smashing runs of 12 and 19 yards. Harris then rammed two yards to score. * * * SOUTH BEND (W) - sQuarter- back Ralph Guglielmi scored two touchdowns and passed to a third as Notre Dame's fighting Irish gave new Coach Terry Brannan a tri- umphant sendoff 21 - 0 over the stubborn Texas Longhorns yester- day. Guglielmi also made two great pass interceptions to harass the game Texans, who twice fumbled the ball away within Notre Dames 10 when they were very much in the game. Leahy Looks On With his former coach, retired Frank Leahy, watching from a box seat among the 57,594 fans, Bren- nan uncovered an Irish team that gave all the indication of living up to its No. 1 ranking In the pre- season Associated Press poll. Notre Dame moved ahead 7-0 in the second period on Guglielmi's 19-yard pass to end Dan Shannon. The Irish made it 14-0 In the third quarter with a 79-yard match in 10 plays, capped by Guglielmi's one yard smash. Gophers Rally, Trip 'Hgushers MINNEAPOLIS ()-Minnesta stumbled through a maze of blown chances in the first half to subdue Nebraska 19-7 Saturday. Quarterback Geno Cappelletti lanced nine yards on a split 'T keeper for a first-quarter touch- down and sped 16 to set up the Gophers' decisive score in the third quarter. .. wear the SUPPORTER for all sports f i Experienced athletes play safe bf wearing a supporter when partici- pating in their favorite sport And their choice is the famous PAL supporter. A comfortable all elastic supporter- gives you that $17S needed protection. Long wearing tool t t Especially suitable for - Navy R.O.T.C., Air Force R.O.T.C. and Marching Band members. Sizes 6 to 12 - A to F widths. Sizes 13 to 14 - 7.95. These shoes are made over comfortable army-navy lasts. SAM'S 122 East Washington Street SAMUEL J. BENJAMIN, '27 Lit., Owner ONE-SIDED WINS: Wisconsin Slams Marquette; OSU Downs Hoosiers, 28-0 SAVE AT SAM'S STORE I I Wanted!a Assistant wrestling coach Bob Betzig has issued the season's first call for any University stu- dent who would rather spend his afternoons rolled, bent, or folded than in an upright posi- tion. Anyone who has the slightest interest in the sport is urged to appear at the wrestling room of the Sports Building, at 4:15 on Monday. Experience is definite- ly not necessary to attend this meeting. Fifty percent of those men who appear at these initial meetings have never been on a mat before. MADISON (P)-A power-packedv Wisconsin football team that scor- ed in every quarter swamped Mar- quette 52-14 before a shirt-sleeved crowd of 52,819 in the season open- er yesterday. f The Badgers counted twice in the early stages .to lead 13-0, but Marquette snapped back spec- tacularly to take a 14-13 lead. After that, however, the Badgers climbed ahead 20-14 and won go- ing away. Bratt Scores Three Clary Bratt, tall senior halfback, scored three times for the Badg- ers. He opened the touchdown pa- rade by taking a 29-yard pass from quarterback Jimmy , Miller and twice taking pitchouts to go all the way-once from 17 yards out and another time from the five. Marquette counted twice within the spec of one minute in the sec- ond quar~er to grab the lead mo- mentarily. COLUMBUS (') - Ohio State turned loose its touchdown twins, Hopalong Cassady and Bob Wat- kins, for two scores each yester- day to overwhelm undermanned Indiana 28-0. Cassady scored the first touch- down on a four-yard pitchout sweep around end with only sev- en seconds to go in the opening quarter. He raced 68 yards after plucking a fumble out of the air for the first of Ohio's two last-pe- riod counters. Indiana Leads in First Downs Watkins scored on an eight- yard sweep around left end in the third period and on a 12-yard dash through the middle for the final score. Indiana had 18 first downs to Ohio's 15, but did most of its gaining between the 20-yard lines. The Hoosiers were unable to dent the Buckeye defense when in scor- ing territory. WANTED! 1000 HEADS be they square, flat or rounded for that crew-cut at The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater ,f x RC F 2 FOURTH AVE. PHONE NO 2-5604 REGULAR $15.95 VALUE! l [jhe Quarry 320 SOUTH STAN l 4 SIZES 61/z to 12 WIDTHS B to D GENUINE LEATHER SOLES RUBBER HEELS Sterling and Gold Discs with long chains Hand Engraved Names and Monograms a 0 0 Hallers Jewelers 8 RAPID SERVICE WATCH REPAIRS 717 North University - Near Hill Auditorium aO n ? O(y ( t) ?t""> !{)<"">O Genuine SHELL CORDOVAN WARDS CUSHION FOOT SOX For Every Man's Comfort f 3 PAIR~ Delicious STEAK, CHICKEN, SEAFOOD Your Favorite BEER, WINE, and Slack length -. ,. ;:r.:{.. :..,. ,« y..,..'., !6°", '! £ :' in 5::;,::;2'9>. . .. I I - 1<