Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 55, Number 236, Decatur, Adams County, 7 October 1957 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

Five Big Ten Games On Tap This Saturday CHICAGO (UP) — Hie Big Ten’s battle for the Rose Bowl berth begins in earnest this week with five conference games on tap after two weeks of non-conference practice. Minnesota and Michigan State were the early pacemakers, the Spartans because of a 54-0 opening day win over Indiana and Minnesota by virtue of a 21-17 decision over rugged Purdue Saturday. This weekend Michigan State ’ will face intra-state rival Michigan at Ann Arbor in perhaps the best game in the nation, while Minnesota will travel to Northwestern to face virtually the same team which battled the Golden Gophers to a scoreless tie a year ago, possibly costing them a Rose Bowl chance. Spartans and Gophers Get Nod Michigan State and Minnesota probably will be favorites for the games, but either one could be upset. In the other conference clashes unbeaten lowa, ineligible for the bowl because it won the title and played in the postseason classic last year, 'will be at Indiana. Illinois travels to Ohio State, and Wisconsin appears at Purdue. Only lowa was out of the bowl contention due to ineligibility. Wisconsin is unbeaten and plays its first league game. Ohio State and Illinois, each with one win and one loss, both are bowl eligibles. The Michigan State - Michigan scrap Will match two unbeaten teams, but while Minnesota has won both its starts, Northwestern has lost both of its games to non-conference rivals. Minnesota had to come from behind to down Purdue and the Boilermakers outgained the Gophers both on the ground and in the air. But Purdue lost the ball five times on fumbles. Michigan Trounces Georgia Michigan State dropped California, a 19 -0, while Michigan bounced Georgia, 26-0, in another intersections! struggle. Ohio State, aided by Don Sutherlin's 81-yard punt return for a touchdown, ttripped Washington, 35-7, and Illinois bounced beck from its loss to UCLA to drub Colgate 40-0, with reserves playing the second half. Wisconsin blasted out its second straight win, 45 - 13, over West Virginia as Danny Lewis scored <m an 86-yard run and a 63-yard pass from Sid Williams. lowa shook off the flu bug which sidelined eight of its top 22 players to break a tie in the fourth period and beat Washington State, 20-13. Notre Dame tallied twice in the first -5 minutes and went on to w/hin Indiana, 26-0, while Northwestern gave up 15 points in the first half to Oregon State and finally lost, 22-13.

High School Football Gary Roosevelt 13, Fort Wayne Central Catholie 0. Evansville Reitz 39, New Albany 6. Culver M. A. 37. Morgan Park M. •• Bloomington 12, Evansville Boose Evansville Mater Dei 39, Owensboro (Ky.) Catholic 21. College Football Minnesota 21, Purdue 17. Notre Dame 26, Indiana 0. lowa 20, Washington State 13. Michigan State 19. California 0. Ohio State 35, Washington 7. Michigan 26, Georgia 0. Wisconsin 45, West Virginia 13. Illinois 40, Colgate 0. Oregon State 22, Northwestern 13. DeF auw 26, Indiana State 6. Beloit 19, Indiana Central 7. Valparaiso 27, Evansville 7. St. Joseph’s 34, Butler 13. Franklin 23, Earlham 20. Rose Poly 50, Principia 0. Taylor 13, Anderson 7. Washington (St. Louis) 21, Wabash 13- ■ . Houston 7, Cincinnati 0. Nebraska 14, Kansas State 7. Texas (O.) 39, Miami (O.) 19. Okahoma 40. lowa State 14. Kent State 14, Ohio U. 9. Louisville 48, Toledo 20. Syracuse 27. Boston U. 20. Princeton 47, Columbia 6. ” I ; Dartsmouth 6, Penn 3. Army 27. Penn State 13. Villanova 21. Florida State 7. Brown 21. Yale 20. Holy Cross 32, Daytorf 6. Cornell 20, Harvard 6. Alabama 6, Vanderbilt 6 (tie). Tulane 20, Marquette 6. * North Carolina 13, Navy t. North Carolina State 13, Clemson 7. Tennessee 14. Mississippi State 0. Duke 14. Maryland 0. Florida 14, Kentucky 7. Miami 13, Taylor 7. Virginia 28. Wake Forest 20. Arkansas 20. Texas Christian 7. Louisiana State 19. Texas Tech 14. Rice 34. Stanford 7. Air Academy 19, Detroit 12. 11 rou have something to sen or rooms lor rent, try a Democrat W«at Ad — they bring revuiu.

Five Upsets Mark Pro Grid Contests By EARL WRIGHT United Press Sports Writer The Cleveland Browns, who hold most of the patents on football defense, and the Baltimore Colts, who have some pending, grabbed the National League's division leads today with the only perfect records after two weeks of play. The Cleveland and Baltimore defensive units provided the only hints of consistency as the 12-club league rocked under five upsets for the second straight week. The Chicago Bears, defending Western Division champions, loomed as the “bust” of the season as they took their second straight whipping. Cleveland scored a 23-12 victory over the Steelers Saturday night at Pittsburgh and took the undisputed Eastern Division lead when the Washington Redskins surprised the Cardinals Sunday at Chicago, 37-14. Baltimore upset thte Bears Saturday night, 21-10, and became the sole Western leader when the Detroit Lions scored a 24-14 Sunday victory over the Green Bay Packers. The New York Giants were favored over the Eagles by seven PQjnts Saturday night at Philadelphia and were lucky to win 24-20. In the other Sunday clash, the Forty-Niners thrilled 59,637 rooters at San Francisco by rallying to surprise the Los Angeles Rams, 23-20. Cleveland and Baltimore have 2-0 records while Philadelphia and the Bears have 0-2 marks. All the other teams have 1-1 records. Notre Dame, Army To Resume Series By TIM MORIARTY United Press Sports Writer The preliminaries out of hte way, college football heads into the “meaty” part of the season this week with two star attractions — Army vs. Notre Dame and Michigan vs. Michigan- State. The powerful Cadets and the rebounding Irish will meet at Philadelphia for the first time since 1947, when their classic series was discontinued by mutual agreement. In games this season, Notre Dame followed up-a 12-0 openinggame victory over Purdue by blanking Indiana, 26-0, last Saturday. Army galloped to a 27-13 victory over Penn State for its second straight victory. So the longawaited Irish-Cadet series renewal shapes up as a showdown between a solid Notre Dame line and Army’s raft of breakaway runners. Next Saturday’s Michigan vs. Michigan State game at Ann Arbor should prpve whether either team has the stuff to challenge defending champion Oklahoma for this year’s national title. In other major games next weekend involving top-r ank e d teams, Minnesota visits Northwestern, Texas A&M entertains Houston, Oregon State hosts Idaho, Navy visits California, lowa is at Indiana, Duke visits Rice, and Auburn entertains Kentucky.

World Series Facts MILWAUKEE (UP)—Facts and figures on the World Series: Rivals—Milwaukee Braves (National League) vs. New York Yankees (American League). Winner — First team to win four games. Series standing — Braves won 2, Yankees won 2. Game scores—New York 3, Milwaukee 1 (1st); Milwaukee 4. New York 2 (2nd) ;New York 12, Milwaukee 3 (3rd); Milwaukee 7» New York 5 (10 innings) (4th). Today’s game—The sth at Milwaukee County Stadium. Games after today—6th and 7th *if necessary) at, Yankee Stadium, New York, Wed. and Thurs. Starting times — Today, 3 p.m. e.d.t.; 7th and 7th games, 1 p.m. e.d.t. Today’s pitchers — Yankees: Whitey Ford; Braves: Lew Burdette. Odds on today’s game—Yankees favored, even-6. Series odds — Yankees favored, 7-5. Weather forecast — Partially cloudy. Fourth-game attendance— 45,804 Four-game total attendance — 226,286. Four-game financial totals—Net receipts: 31,390,250.10; players’ share (players share only in first tour games: $709,027.54; commissioner’s shares: $208,537.52; American League's shares: $118,171.25; National League’s shares: sllß,171.25; yankees’ shares: sllß,171.35; Braves’ Shares: 3118,171.25. Rival managers— Yankees:Casey Stengel; Braves: Fred Haney. Television — via NBC, Mel Allen and Al Helfer announcing. Radies— via NBC, Earl Gillespie and Bob Neal announcing. Past series records — Yankees won 17, lost 5; Braves (as Boston Braves) won 1, lost 1. BOSTON — (IP) — This sign hangs in a South End barroom: “Kindly remain seated while room is in motion.”

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YNE DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT, DECATUR, fIVBYANA

MONDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1957