SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY _U D. O E M E._ ._5, a _I . I AA L PAGE FTVE Two Teams Streltaf tilell C7 z >l Hopes ° .... £ ; the pey/ ite- WITH DAVE GREY reg Sate Upsets Stanford, 20-19; Tennessee Shuts Out Georgia Tech, 6-0 College Grid Scores Dartmouth 14, Columbia 0 Colorado 14, Missourai 14 Syracuse 41, Holy Cross 20 West Virginia 13, VMI 6 Army 34, William and Mary 6 North Carolina 21, Virginia7 Nebraska 26, Kansas 20 Texas Tech 21, Texas Christian 7 Auburn 27, Miss. State 20 Drake 26, Detroit 13 00 L L E t T Anything Does Happen The Big Ten is a brutally powerful football conference in which the phrase "anything can happen., ..and usually does" seems to hold true every weekend. There were two quite important games yesterday: Iowa beat Minnesota and Michigan beat Illinois. Just take the scramble that lies ahead. On the inside track for the Conference title are Ohio State, Michigan State, and Iowa. There is a good chance that there will be a tie for the valued champion- ship, but still most of the interest falls on who will get the Rose Bowl bid by capturing-at least-third place. In the thick of the Rose Bowl fight are three teams-Iowa, Minnesota, and Michigan. And the chips are down next weekend when Iowa meets Ohio State at Iowa City and Minnesota faces Michi- gan State at Minneaoplis. When Michigan meets a "so-called brea- ther" in Indiana here, the Wolve- rines main problem will be keeping their thoughts on the game in ~ the Stadium. For again here's the complex situation from the biased-Blue standpoint. In order to have a "California's chance" going into the final game against Ohio State at Columbus, Michigan must count on two of its very strong arch rivals-OSU and MSU-to win. If Michigan State can defeat Minnesota, and Ohio State can de- feat Iowa, the outcome of the Rose Bowl bid will hinge once again entirely on the Michigan- Ohio State clash. The 7-defeat of Minnesota now puts Iowa in the best spot, JIM PACE because 1) it can clinch the bid .nearly 200 yards by beating OSU and 2) the Hawk- eyes can still make the trip if they lose to Ohio State and Michigan loses at Columbus. But Minnesota, too, can still sneak in with wins over MSU and Wisconsin. It's almost enough to make ope forget about Michigan's sweet revenge over Illinois. As against Iowa, yesterday's game was another close one that saw the Michigan machine eventually gain momentum with a solid running attack. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan and staff seemed to beat the Illini at their own game with a speedy attack run primarily from the T- formation Noticeably missing was the shift on the few single wing plays, as the Wolverines sped up their signal calling. Also a slight difference in the unbalanced offensive line had the left end and tackle on the "weak side" spaced out more as in the split-T formation. The Score Could Have Been Higher... The score could easily have been higher with all the breaks that stalled long drives on both sides. Especially significant was how well the pass patterns for both teams were clicking to get a man free. The only thing missing was the completions. A couple of more accu- rate throws at the right time could have altered the total scoring by a couple of touchdowns. Jim Pace with approximately 200 yards gained via runs, passes, and kick returns was Michigan's chief counter attack to the light- ning-fast backfield of the Illini. The Blue defense had to be alert all day against the dangerous end sweeps, flankers, pitch-outs and laterals. After the first few agonizing moments of play, the defense was more-than-equal to its task. Syracuse Passes Whip Holy Cross SYRACUSE, N. Y. ()-Syracuse B EST S pulled a surprise passing attack out of a hat yesterday and stirred in a huge dose of defensive alert- FICT ness to conjure up a 41-20 victory over Holy Cross in Archbold Stadi- A Certain Smile by Sagen um, making them eligible for a The Last Hurrah by O'C possible Shrine Bowl bid. Auntie Maine by Dennis - Holy Cross reserve quarterbackb Tom Greene passed for three b touchdowns, one on a spectacular The Ninth Wave by Burdicl leaping end zone catch by end Dick Arcand. NON-Fl The Nun's Story by Hulm Days Left Arthritis and Common Sen The Unicorn and Other P until How to Live 365 Days a Y The Mind Goes Forth by O S.G.C. Elections 316 South State Street botre whpped their d Tennsyes game to the air to beat the In-1 terday and thus were almost as- dians at their specialty. sured of appearing in Bowl games. First, substitute tailback Paul Oregon State beat Stanford's Lowe threw a pa.As to Earnel Dur- John Brodie at his own passing den on a play cvering 59 yards game yesterday edging the Indians, to the Stanford 15. Two plays later 20-19, and virtually wrapping up ;Paul Lowe, tailb ack, scored on a its first Pacific Coast title and nine yard drive t h'rough the Stan- Rose Bowl bid since 1941. ford line. The Beavers could meet Iowa in Oregon tied the game as tail-' a rematch in the Pasadena Bowl. back Joc Francin threw a 21 yard' Iowa beat Oregon State, 14-13, in pass to end Frank Negri in the end an early season game. zone. John Clarke clinched it as SfA d H dLhe made good tbh conversion. hind Georgia Tech. The victory made the Vols the top choice for a Cotton or Sugar Bowl bid and gave them 4 good chance of re- placing Oklahoma as the nation's no. 1 football team. Fullback Tommy Bronson actually got the Vol's score mid- way of the third period on a one yard plunge, but it was Johnny Major's passes to Buddy Cruze- a 19-yarder to Tech's 46 and a 45- yarder to the one-that made it possible. WILKINSONS Monday 'til 8:30 Tues.-Sat. 9 to 5:30 E CLENDON THOMAS ... Scores twice for Sooners TEXAS A&M ROLLS a, Aaor a Jeaa Stanford had led, 19-7, going into the final period. Then the Beavers switched from a running Tennessee Tops Tech In a battle be tween two unbeat- ens, Tennessee topped Georgia Tech, 6-0. Tennessee went. into the gamel a touchdown undierdog and ranked third nationally, one notch be- FAMOUS FOR DIFFERENT GIFTS NHL Scores Boston 3, Montreal 1 Detroit 6, New York 4 Toronto 4, Chicago 1 Clemson, Coorado Tie; Bolster Bowl Bid H pes SCVIWARZKOPF Texas A&M and Clemson, by _ _ _ Lay-Away For Christmas Now. JJ '>? ' i x ,,;'P winning and tying respectively, re- son for undefeate C son un- ning in front as representative mained undefeated and greatly of the Atlantic Coast Conference enhanced their chances for 1956 for the Orange Bowl. Clemson tied bowl bids. Florida, 20-20, in its second game Texas A&M's scythe-like ground of the season. attack, featuring mighty John In other important games, Okla- Crow, and a defense that rattled homa continued its fabulous win- Southern Methodist to its cleats,; ing skein by downing Iqwa State, l swept to a crushing 33-7 victory 44-0, and Texas Tech up.et highly and first place in the Southwest rated Texas Christian, 21-7. In a Conference football race yester- Big Seven game, Colorado, by tying. day. Missouri, moved into line as Okla- Maryland converted a fumble homa's probable substitute to the into a last quarter touchdown yes- Orange Bowl. terday to tie Clemson, 6-6, in a 57th Straight brutal defensive battle which The victory, Oklahoma's 57th soured but didn't spoil outright straight in the conference gave the Orange Bowl aspirations of the Sooners the all time Collegiate Tigers from South Carolina. Record for consecutive games won. It was the second tie this sea- Oklahoma's t o u c h d o w n twins, Clendon Thomas and Tommy Mc- Donald each accounted for a pair of touchdowns in the Sooner vic- OSU ties ory, A third string Texas Tech full- h back Charlie Dixon, dashed off Ia 17 the bench today to stage a rout of Texas Christian University in s " a stunning 21-7 upset of the de- ietine 35-1 nding S o u t h w e s t Conference Champions. Colorado turned two Missouri COLUMBUS, Ohio (A)-Ohio fumbles into touchdowns on passes State's relentless infantry attack from Boyd Dowler to Frank Clarke ground out 465 yards against de- and came off with a 14-14 tie Sat- fensively iiadequate Indiana yes- urday that virtually clinched on terday as the Bucks defeated the Orange Bowl trip for the Buffs as Hoosiers, 35-14, for their 17th a Big Seven substitute for Okla- straight Big Tenaconquest. homa. The ground assault set a new conference record, erasing the 454-yard rushing mark established by Purdue against Indiana in 1948. PERSONAL CHRISTMAS CARDS ELLER Sr excellent Sample Books of personalized cards are now ION $on display. $2.95,We suggest that you make nnor --- $4.00 your selection NOW! $3.50 * r - $3.95 ? OVERBECK k $3.95 CTION 1216 S. University Ave. Ii_ T__I____________ Eminent German Opera Star EXTRA SERIES WE rD. 8:030 NOV. 14 HILL AUDITORIUM Tickets at University Musical Society-Burton Tower and at dill Auditorium Box Office After 7 P.M. Day of Concert A. Lipvue, lipstick case with at- tached mirror, $2. 8. Matching Pillbox $1. C. Matching Lighter, $2.50. D. Matching hinged comb case -with comb $2. E. Matching Cigarette Box $2. Gold-tone metal and white with, inlaid multi-color dots. Each item in soft protecting carry bag. Circle all these imported items for her gift list! $1.00 Deposit Holds Your Selection Charge, Use Lay-Away Plan. $1.00 weekly Budget Plan W"ilkinson Luggage Shop mwa offices P-"Tjbh. to serve you I ! MAIN OFFICE 101-107 S. Main St. ! NICKELS ARCADE 330 S. State Street ! NEAR 'ENGINE ARCH' 1108 South University ! PACKARD-BROCKMAN 1923 Packard * WH ITMORE LAKE 9571 N. Main St. 327 S. 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