UESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILV PAGE' SA O R 1E _I- Steady 'l' Opens Drills For Minnesota Spirit High for Showdown Game; Brown Jug Battle To Be on Local TV Hero ARMY REBOUNDS TO BEAT PITT: Illini, Boilermakers Accomplish 'Impossible' Upsets <'? ID-, QrPWX71 car mf7KA'kT By CARL RISEMAN Michigan's football team began practice yesterday afternoon for the all-important Minnesota game coming up this Saturday. The Big Ten Conference office announced Sunday that the game at Minneapolis will be televised. The local station will be WWJ-TV (Channel 4). Game time will be 2:30 p.m. Spirit at practice was very high as most of the players were still elated over the fourth-quarter at- tack the Wolverines engineered By STEVE SALTZMAN the first- and fourth-rated collegel There was a devil on the football football teams in the nation. fields across the nation this past The flu-ridden Boilermakers, Saturday. directed by 18-year-old quarter- Purdue and Illinois, a couple of back Ross Fitchner, outgained unranked, mediocre football Michigan State on the ground, and squads, did the impossible. They recovered five MSU fumbles to toppled from the unbeaten ranks, create the biggest upset of the sea- Locker Room Madness Follows Lion's Victory -Daily-David Arnold STAN NOSKIN ... superb passer Conerly Leads New Yorl. Giants Tie for NFL Lead against the hapless Northwestern Wildcats. Also noticed for the first time was the "jelling" of the backfield into a potent offensive weapon. With Jim Pace and Brad Myers at the halfback slots, Jim Byers at fullback and either Jim Van Pelt or Stan Noskin at quarterback, the Michigan attack proved to be very effective. Noskin started his first game for Michigan and directed the team with poise. He continued to pass with extreme effectiveness. As far as injuries were concern- ed, the Wolverines have only one new casualty, Mike Shatusky, the tough little right halfback who has started every game to date, is in bad shape with a painful back injury. He was not at practice yes- terday. End Gary Prahst, who appeared briefly in Saturday's game, is in only fair shape. He is still suffering from a pulled leg muscle. John Herrnstein appeared in uniform for the first time in a week. But the star fullback didn't partake in any drills. His leg is still bothering him and the possi- bility of his playing in the Minne- sota game is questionable. The defending World Champion New York Giants began their move for another title Sunday as the fourth week of, NFL action came to a close. Paced by ol veteran Charlie Conerly, the Giants gave the Pittsburgh Steelers a very thor- ough lesson in football as they beat the Steelers 35-0. Thus the Giants rolled. to their thid straight conquest and now share the Eastern Division lead with the Cleveland Browns. Cleveland's f a v o r e d Browns passed from the unbeaten ranks as rookie quarterback Sonny Jur- genson led the Philadelphia Eagles to their first victory, 17-7. In the Western Division, the De- troit Lions defeated the Baltimore Colts ,31-27 to give the Colts their initial setback and the Lions a share of the lead with the Colts and San Francisco. The Forty Niners loom as a very definite threat to any Western Division title aspirant. They rolled to their third straight vic- tory as they handily defeated the Green Bay Packers, 24-14. "As Matson goes so goes the Cardinals." This is a very hack- neyed expression prevalent es- pecially among teams that play the Chicago Cardinals. The Washington Redskins found that there is a great deal of truth in the statement as Ollie Matson led the Cards to a 44-14 rout of the Skins. He scored twice and aver- aged 12-yds.-per try. son, as they defeated the Spartans, 20-13. Illinois Surprises The fighting Illini, a team noted for its upset potential, pulled an- other shocker as it completely sur- prised Minnesota, 34-13. The Gophers, rated fourth in national standings, never had a chance. Bobby Mitchell teamed up with Jack Delveaux and Tom Haller to stymie the Gopher defense. The combination of upsets sent the race for the Big Ten title and Rose Bowl bid into a tizzy. Oklahoma, seeking revenge for its displacement from the top position in college football this past week by MSU, had no prob- lem regaining the top rung. The combination of a Michigan State loss and a thorough trouncing of Kansas by the Sooners, 47-0, guar- antee the Sooners the right to be called the best college football team in the nation for 1957, thus far. Huber Notches Fourth In Residence A' Circuit Army, still blushing from its loss to Notre Dame last week put in a final bid for the Lambert Trophy by downing Pittsburgh, 29-13. Army showed its qualifications by scoring more points in this game than had been registered against a Pitt team in three years. Auburn Shows Power Tenth ranked Auburn showed once again its prowess as a defen- sive giant by shutting out Georgia Tech., 3-0. Unscored upon, Auburn gave its Southeastern Conference title hopes a tremendous boost with the victory. Twice Tech. had the ball within Auburn's 10, but sparkling defensive play by Jimmy Phillips stopped the Engineers cold. Observers who picked their own personal top ten teams have been shocked by the series of events which took place this past week- end. The Big Ten race especially is a mixup. Iowa and Ohio State are undefeated and lead the pack. (4; WELCOME STUDENTS?? It's a Michigan tradition to have your hair styled by our tonsorial experts. Ask upperclassmen about us. "11 HAIRCUTTERS" The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre In residence hall's 'A' footballv games yesterday, Huber House ran their victory skein to four straightas.they defeated Lloyd House 27-18. Ron Willis sparked Huber as he hit four receivers, Steve Jordan, Dave Drury, Joe Dondlinger, and Tom Southwell for T.D.'s. Undefeated Taylor House slipped by Chicago House in a hard-fought battle. Barry Mar- shall's 40-yd. run in the overtime period gave Taylor the win. Hard rushing by 240-lb. Al Krafve kept Chicago on the d e f e n s i v e throughout the game. Gomberg's one-two punch of Fred Channon and Ted McVey provided the spark as Gomberg downed Michigan House 21-6. In a game filled with interceptions, McVey ran for a touchdown and passed to Charron for two. Kelsey struck for two touch- downs and a safety in a come- from-behind effort to erase a 6-0 deficit and win 15-6. Bruce Bald- win and Bob Adams starred for Kelsey as Baldwin score one T.D. and passed to Adams for the oth- er six-pointer. Adams also had the touchback and the extra point to his credit. Lambda Chi Alpha rolled over Kappa Sigma 14-0, and Lambda Chi Alpha's 'B' team beat Phi Delta Theta 13-7 in the replay of a protested game. In other 'A' games: Anderson 6, Wenley 0; Cooley 15, Allen-Rum- sey 0; Reeves 14, Winchell 0; Scott 7, Adams 6; Strauss 13, Van Tyne 0. In 'B' games. Chicago 14, Winchell 6; Taylor 6; Anderson 0; Michigan 7, Van Tyne 0; Williams 1, Hinsdale 0; Strauss 13, Hay- den 6; Greene won by forfeit from Wenley; Huber by forfeit from Lloyd; Kelsey 14, Gomberg 6; Phi Delta Theta 7, Sigma-Phi Epsi- lon 0. Howard Cassady . . . stars at last Grid Picks Acclaims New Winner Donald S. Brinkman of 417 Lib- erty, by picking 16 of 20 Grid Picks games correctly, emerged chief survivor of the upset-filled college football weekend. His proficiency earned him two free tickets to "No Down Pay- ment," showing at .the Michigan this week. Similar prizes are of - fered to the winner of this week's contest. Just circle your favorites in the games listed below, pick the Michigan-Minnesota score, and mail or bring your entry to The Daily. THIS WEEK'S GAMES 1. MICHIGAN at Minnesota (also score) 2. Arkansas vs. Mississippi at Memphis 3. Auburn at Houston 4. Texas A&M at Baylor 5. California at Oregon 6. Duke at No. Car. State 7. La. State at Florida 8. Illinois at Michigan State 9. Iowa at Northwestern 10. Kansas at Miami (Fla.) 11. Georgia at Kentucky 12. Pittsburgh at Notre Dame 13. Ohio State at Wisconsin 14. Colorado at Oklahoma 15. Penn State at Syracuse 16. Rice at Texas 17. Washington State at USC 18. Stanford at UCLA 19. Wyoming at Utah 20. Tennessee at Maryland Hawks, Celtics Raise NBA Lid Tonight That thump, thump, thump you hear is not your heart beating from the overexertion of watch- ing Saturday's football game. It's professional basketball bouncing through the door tonight to open its twelfth season. The opening game is a replay of the Championship Series last spring, with Boston at St. Louis. Tomorrow night New York plays St. Louis and Boston plays Detroit at the Olympia in Detroit. By HAL APPLEBAUM "The guy who said it first has never been proven wrong, it's great to be a winner., These words were scrawled on the blackboard in the Detroit Lions dressing room before Sun- day's encounter with the Balti- more Colts. F o llo in g their sensational 31-27 comeback over the Colts the Lions were living proof of this statement. High School Attitude The clubhouse was reminiscent of a high school locker room aft- er the team had beaten a tradi- tional rival. Members of the press as well as assorted well wishers mobbed Bobby Layne, Hopalong Cassady, Coach George Wilson and the rest of Detroit's heroes. The Lions' comeback from a 27-3 deficit was so phenomenal that it even brought resounding cheers from the usually staid press box at the final gun. Sooners Atop Poll Again; MSU Eighth By The Associated Press The football experts who voted Michigan State into top collegiate ranking a week ago reversed their opinion yesterday and put Okla- homa back on top and the upset- victim Spartans down in eighth place. Michigan State was one of four teams knocked out of a high ranking in The Associated Press weekly poll. Detroit's number one hero was Howard "Hopalong" C a s s a d y. Cassady had his greatest day in pro ball, scoring two TDs, includ- ing the game winning marker, and catching a pass on the one yard line to set up another score. Layne Praises "Hoppy" Layne, a goat in the first half, and then the engineer of the Lions' comeback, had high praise for Cassady. "Cassady is a fine runner and he's developing into an outstand- ing receiver. Last year he worried too much about catching the ball, this year he is more concerned with running the pass patterns correctly. As a result he has be- come a better receiver," said Layne. "Early in the fourth quarter Cassady told me that he thought we could run a pass pattern along the left sideline," confided Layne, "The first timeaIdhad a chance to try it I did and it resulted in the game-winning touchdown." Next week the Lions, now in a three-way tie for first, meet the Rams in Los Angeles in the open- ing game of a three week road trip which also takes them to San Francisco and Washington. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 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