Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 53, Number 272, Decatur, Adams County, 18 November 1955 — Page 7

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 18, IHI

Saturday Last Big Day For College Grids "NEW YORK (INS) — College football's last big blowout Saturday will decide the Big Ten, Pacific Coast-, Big Seven and Ivy League championships and the opponents for the granddaddy of all bowl games, the Rose Bowl. The Sugar and Cotton Bowl combatants may not be decided until the clock runs out on Nov. 26 but three games Saturday—Ohio State at Michigan, UCLA at Southern California and Oregon State at Oregon—will produce one of four possible combinations for the 41st battle of the roses. Biggest attraction, of course, is the 52nd meeting of arch-enemies Michigan and Ohio State before a sellout crowd of 98,000 fans at Ann Adbor and a nationwide radio audience. On this one rides the Rose Bowl hopes of Michigan and the Big Ten title aspirations of Ohio State. The Buckeyes, who lost only to StanTHANKSGIVING party Sunday Night 7:30 yb to 1 10:30 HAPPY HOURS ROLLER RINK Mr. A Mrs. J. C. Miller, owners

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ford and Duke, are prohibited by conference rules from repeating at Pasadena this year but they’re loaded down with Incentive. For one thing, an upset would avenge the 1950 loss to Michigan in the celebrated Blizzard Bowl at Columbus which crushed the Buckeyes’ bowl hopes. For another, it would be Ohio’s first successful Invasion of Ann Arbor in 18 years. More important It would give OSU two titles for the first time in almost 40 years. The Bucks too have knocked off 12 straight conference opponents over the last two years and are only three games shy of the all time Big Ten record set by Michigan from 1946 to ’49. Third-ranking Michigan, whose only loss was to Illinois, must beat Hopalong Cassady and Co. or watch Michigan State go to the Rose Bowl. The Spartans and Wolverine have identical 5-1 records but Michigan State winds up the season against a non-conference foe, Marquette. The Wolverines, the conference’s second best defensive team, are a one-touchdown choice according to the wizards of odds. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan isn’t giving away any trade secrets but the Wolverines are expected to throw a seven-man line against a foe which has ground out more than 300 yards Bushing per game. The sleeper for Woody Hayes may be a simple forward pass. In five conference games Ohio State has thrown only 23 passes, with only eight completions for 73 yards. UCLA must come away from rugged Southern Cal with a victory or chance losing the Pacific Coast crown and Rose Bowl berth that goes with it to Oregon State. The Bruins, w-ho lost ace tailback Ronnie Knox via a broken leg last Saturday, are nine-point favorites in the NCAA’s television game of the week but an upset, acompanied by an Oregon State win at Oregon, would send the Beavers against either Michigan or MSU. The nation’s No. 1 team, Oklahoma, already has "Wen given the green light for the Orange Bowl berth opposite similarly undefeat-

Week's Schedule For Adams County Basketball Teams Dial 3-2171 For Score* Friday Geneva at Yellow Jackets. Commodores at Monmouth. Pleasant Mills at Willshire. Jefferson vs Adams Central at Geneva. Berne at Portland. ed Maryland but can wrap up the Big Seven conference bunting with a victory at Nebraska. The Sooners are three-touch-down favorites to extend the nation's longest winning streak to 28 at the expense of the Cornhuskers, whose Bill Glassford announced Thursday night he’s quitting as coach after the game. Princeton can sew up the Ivy flag by turning back Dartmouth but a setbaok. plus a Yale victory over Harvard, means the Elis take it. The Sugar Bowl picture is as confusing as ever with five Southeastern Conference teams still in the running. Os the five, Mississippi and tenth-ranked Georgia Tech sit idle this weekend. Aub-1 urn steps out to meet the Atlantic i Coast Conference's rugged Clem son, Tennessee goes to Kentucky i and ,Vanderbilt takes on Florida. The other side is just as muddled since West Virginia was beat- i en last week by Pitt. Both Sugar ! and Gator Bowl officials are said to be making eyes now at the Panthers. who jburney this week to ; Penn State while the Mountaineers I host Syracuse. Cotton Bowl officials aren't too ’ sure either. Seventh-ranked Texas A&M. probable Southwest Confer-1 ence winner, can’t accept because it's on NCAA probation. Eighthranked TCU, whfth entertains ’ Rice, likely will be asked. The ' Aggies are idle this week. The i other contestant for the Dallas bat- 1 tl r e, still is a mystery, although Navy or one of the four Southeast Conference challengers who miss out on the Sugar Bowl might be in- . vited. Maryland, the No. 2 team in the country, is favored to .ring up its , 15th straight victory when it closes against visiting George Washington. Other top games include: ■ lowa —at sixth-ranking Notre j Dame. Wake Forest at Duke, Vil-. lanova at Houston, Temple at Bos-■ ton U., Cdlifornia at Stanford, towaj State at Colorado. Rutgers at Columbia. Holy Cross at Connecticut. Illinois at Northwestern, Purdue | at Indiana, Lafayette at Lehigh and Wisconsin at Minnesota. Klenks Winner In Klenk's of Decatur defeated theGladieux Oilers, 62-48. in a Vim league game Thursday night at the' Lincoln gym here. In other local i games. Woodburn defeated Air National Guard. 61-53, and Lowell \ Electric downed the Crusaders,: 47-37. No games will be played next \ week because of the Thanksgiving I holiday. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

Picks Buckeyes To Score Upset Over Michigan (Editor’s note: Harry Wismer who has 82 right and 23 wrong in his college football predictions for a .781 jpertentage, herewith preserits his selections for this week's major games.) By HARRY WISMER Famous Sports Commentator (Copyright, 1955, By 1.N.5.) Five years ago this week Michigan buried Ohio State’s Rose Bowl dreams in the snow at Ohio Stadium. Now the shoe is on the other foot and the Buckeyes are promising revenge before 98,000 fans at Ann Arbor, The Bucks, who lost only to Stanford and Duke this season, can't repeat at Pasadena this year bu( a victory for them will send I Michigan State, not Michigan, to • the Tournament of ißoses. ColumI bus, Ohio, would like nothing beti ter. The Wolverines, ranked as the ! nation’s No. 1 team until they were upset by Illinois for their only defeat. They have speed, power and deception. They have quarterI backs Jim Maddock and Lou Balj dacci, halfbacks Tony Branoff and Terry Barr and probably the coun- ! try's best one-two combinations at - the terminal spots in Ron Kramer and Tom Maentz. The Buckeyes haven’t successfully invaded the Wolverine lair in 18 years. But the wait may be 1 over. i Woody Hayes has the magnifii cent All-American Hopalong Cas- : sady, who has helped keep the i Buckeyes unbeaten in 12 straight Big Ten games over the past two ■ years. The Wolverines are pulling out the stops for this one but 1 think the situation is ripe for an I upset : 14 to 13, for OSU. Here are my choices in other top games: UCLA 21, Southern California 14 . . . Bruins going to Rose Bowl. Pittsburgh 14. Penn State 12 . . . | Panthers too rough. , Oklahoma 28, Nebraska 7 . . . ' Nebraska tough but not enough. | Purdue 14, Indiana 10 .. . Boil- ' ermakers keep old oaken bucket. Notre Dame 14, lowa 7 . . . No i upset for Hawkeyes this time. Texas Christian 20. Rice 10 . . . ! Jim Swink rides again. | Stanford 20, 'California 12 . . . Too many Indians. Miami (Fla.) 21, Alabama 14 . . . Hurricanes best the Tide. ' Princeton 14, Dartmouth 7 . . . . Ivy League crown to Tigers. Yale 20. Harvard 12 . . . Elis re--4 bounding strong. Tennessee 17. Kentucky -7— Chalk one up for Bowden Wyatt. National Football League Philadelphia 24. New York 21 . . Eagles will do it again. Washington 21. Chicago Cardi- | nals 17 . . . This one will be close. Cleveland 35, Pittsburgh 20 . .. . Browns keeping eastern division | lead. Green Bay 27, San Francisco 21! | . . . Home edge to Packers. Los Angeles 24, Baltimore 21 ... ! Better bench for Rams. Chicago Bears 28, Detroit 21 . • Sixth straight for Bears. Eagles, Montpelier Leading EIC Race Monmouth and Montpelier, each with two victories and no defeats, are leading the early race in the Eastern Indiana conference, according to reports by la>ren S. Jones, Monmouth principal and secretary of the conference. Redkey is also undefeated in loop play but has had only one game, while four’ schools have not yet opened conference play. Only one conference game is scheduled next week,_the Bryant Owls meeting the Hartford Gorillas at the Hartford gym Tuesday night. The conference standings: W L Pqt. Monmouth 2. 0 1.000 Montpelier .. 2 0 1,000 Redkey 1 0 1.000 Adams Central „11 .500 Albany - 0 « - 00 " Berne **... 0 0 .000 Bryant -. 0 0 .000 Roll ._ 0 tr .00u Hartford 0 1 .000 Lancaster 0 1 .000 Fennville .’.O 1 .000 Geneva .0 . 2 .000 Jet Pilot Killed As Planes Collide LANCASTER. Calif (INS) -A jet pilot was killed Thursday when two marine corps Gt’umann F9F PaPnthers collided over, the Mojave Desert. The dead pilot was identified aLt. Donald R. Roland, formerly of Itasca. 111. The pilot of the other plane, Lt. Robert F. Heinecken* of Riverside, Calif., made an emergency landing and was uninjured ! Tire«planes were from the . El 1 Toro marine air base. - j

Si. Joseph Whips Monmouth, 38 To 8 Decatur St. Joseph whipped the Monmouth junior high team, 38-8, at the Commodore gym Thursday afternoon. The winners led at all periods. 18-2, 24-4 and 30-6. Nine different players broke into the scoring column for St. Joseph, none scoring more than six .points. Four different players registered pne field goal each for Monmouth. Monmouth FG FT TP J. Miller 0 0 0 Peck 0 0 0 R. FuhrmanT 0 2 Caston 0 0 0 M .Car . 000 Morses .0 0 0 Blume 1 0 2 Rhoades 10 2 Fast 1 0 2 Totals 4 0 8 St. Joseph FG FT TP Gage 2 0 4 '9churger ..;...2 (I 4 S. Omlor 2 0 4 J. Baker 2 0 4 Heiman 2 ~0 4 Reed 2 0 %4 J. Omlor 10 2 V. Gase 0 0 0 De La Rlveria ....3 0 6 Gross 3 0 6 Mills 0 0 0 Totals 19 0 38 j . .. r. Trade in a Good Town — Decatur

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Pro Boslcetbon New York llfl, Fort Wayne 88. Philadelphia 106, Boston 92. Syracuse 105, Minneapolis 91. BOWLINE SCORES Merchants League W L Smith Scrap Iron ..—i 248’.4 Holtlmuse Drug.... 23 1(1 Krick-Tyndall Np. 1 Old Crown Beer 19 14 State Gardens 16 17 V. F. W. 14 16 Blackwell 14 16 Farmers Grain .—*.i_ 12 21 Krick-Tyndall No. 2 .... 10 33 Ztntsmaster ... 10 21 High series: Don Wefel 585 (238-165-182). High games: R. Ladd 212, DeVore 220, Hodle 207, Scheuman 213. American Legion League W L Pta. Burke Insurance 20 10 27 Mies Recreation . 17 13 25'! Fuellings 18 12 24 First State Bank . 17% 12% 22% Bultemeier Con. .16 14 22 Macklins ...13 17 16 Ashbauehers 10 20 12 Team No. 8 8% 21% 10% Burke Insurance won two from Ashbauchers, Fuellings won two from Macklins. First State Bank won three from Bultemeier Construction, and Mies Recreation won two from Team No. 8. 200 scores — Geisler 200-203, Beiberich 206, Gallmeyer 246, Cochran 269, Mies 203, £wlck 215. Bulmahu E. 207. Bienz 203. 6Cfd series — Cochran 645 (181-195-269).

Oklahoma, Pitt On Notre Dame Schedule SOUTH BEND, Ind. (INS) —Oklahoma, currently ranked number one in the nation by International News S< rvloe, and PWtsburglh, which last week wrecked West Virginia's undefeated record, will 1 appear on Notre Dame’s 1956 football schedule. They replace Pennsylvania and Miami of Florida and make up a schedule which athletic director Edward W. Krause called “one of

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the most difficult ever attempted at Notre Dame.” Other foes are Southern Methodist, Indiana, Purdue, Michigan State, Nary, North Carolina and lowaCountry Conservation Club Meets Monday The Country conservation club will meet at 8 o'clock Monday evening at the St. John’s Lutheran school. All members are urged to I be present.