20,195 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUGAR BOWL PROSPECTS: LSU-Ole Miss May Duel Again in Bowl NEW ORLEANS (IP)-The Sugar Bowl may see a rematch of the epic football struggle between Louisiana State and Mississippi on New Year's Day. And nothing could be sweeter for the Rebels than another shot at the Tigers. LSU and Mississippi met in Baton Rouge on Oct. 31 in the season's top game. LSU was then ranked No. 1 in the Associated Press Poll and Mississippi held the third spot. All - American halfback Billy Cannon went 99 yards on an In- credible punt return in the last 10 minutes and LSU defense stopped a Rebel drive on the one in the last few seconds for a 7-3 victory. The drums started beating even then for a rematch and such in- [GRID SELECTIONS,] Just one more day left this year to win two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "Career" with Dean Martin, Shirley MacLaine, Carolyn Jones, and Anthony Franciosa. How can you win them? Through the Grid Picks contest which closes at 12 midinght for the last time in 1959. All you have to do is pick more games correctly out of 20 than anyone else, and send in' these selections to Gridu Picks, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor. Be sure to include the score of the Michigan-Ohio State game in case of ties which has happened numerous times this year. Also put your name, address, and telephone number on the entry, mailed in preferably on a post -card, or else indicate the winners on this article and send it in. You may enter only once. Today is also the last day that we print the Sports Staff Selec- tions which finds a tie for first place, probably to be broken this week. Our final guest makes an appearance, too, and he is appropriately last year's Grid Picks winner on the Sports Staff, Chuck Kozoll, now Per- sohnel Director of The Daily. THIS WEEK'S GAMES Consensus Picks in Caps (Consensus, 104-56-.650) sistence heightened after Missis- sippi routed Tennessee 37-7 last Saturday. A week earlier Tennes- see had snapped LSU's 19-game winning streak with a 14-13,deci- sion. "I would love a chance to play LSU again," contended Missis- sippi Coach Johnny Vaught. "No matter what happens, we lost to LSU and nothing will' erase that. But we would like another shot at them." LSU Coach Paul Dietzel is mums-the-word on the subject of a rematch, or any bowl game for the Tigers for that matter. He skips around bowl talk and holds that his boys are thinking of nothing but tomorrow's season- ending date with old rival Tulane. In their regular season game, guard Bob Khayat's first quarter field goal kept the Rebels ahead well into the final period. And then it happened. Quarterback Jake Gibbs boomed a punt deep into LSU territory. Cannon took the ball on the 11, faked to his left, skipped to his right toward the sidelines and wriggled out of the grasp of five Rebel'tacklers before breaking in- to the open for the touchdown. Mississippi came back fighting, but Cannon and quarterback War- ren Rabb stopped sub quarterback Doug Elmore when he tried to shoot through tackle for a touch- down. The game ended 17 seconds later. . What's the Sugar Bowl saying? Nothing, not a word. The Bowl can't extend official invitations until the season ends, and Ole Miss doesn't finish until Nov. 28. But the word is that the Sugar Bowl has contacted both schools- unofficially. Penn State May Initiate Liberty Bowl UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. (P- Penn State football players have indicated a preference for the Liberty Bowl game in Philadelphia Dec. 19, it was learned yesterday. A reliable source said the play- ers voted almost unanimously to play in a bowl that would enable relatives, friends and alumni to attend. The source also said state offi- cials have indicated a preference for the Air Force Academy as an opponent. Texas Christian is said to be State's second choice. An Air Academy official, how- ever, announced that the Falcons would consider only a New Year's Day bowl offer because of scholas- tic examinations. TOPCOATS by Worsted-Tex and Rock Knit THANKSGIVING SALE I Topcoats - Ca rcoats $40 values $45 values .. THANKSGIVING SPECIAL $33.95 w .. .$38.95 -Daily-David Giltrow ALL-AMERICAN-This is the best description of LSU's triple- threat halfback who hopes to lead his team to victory in a pos- sible Sugar Bowl rematch with Mississippi. Earlier in the year Cannon put on a Frank Merriwell finish in defeating Ole Miss on a 99-yard punt 'runback, 7-3. He also helped stop the Rebels on the Tiger's one-yard line in the last minute of play. Final AFL Franchise Given to Boston Entry $50 values ......$42.95 $55 values ......$47.95 $60 values ......$5295 $65 values ......$57.95 Includes all the finest of fabrics-Tweeds, Velours, Saxonys, Cashmere blends and others. Sizes 34 to 48. Regulars - Longs - Shorts CARCOATS 1. Ohio St. at MICH. (Score) 2. NORTHWESTERN at Illinois 3. PURDUE at INDIANA (tie) 4. Notre Dame at IOWA 5. WISCONSIN at Minnesota 6. Iowa St. at OKLAHOMA 7. MISSOURI at Kansas 8. NEBRASKA' at Kansas St. 9. PENN ST. at Pittsburgh 10. DARTMOUTH at PRINCE- TON (tie) 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Harvard at YALE TENNESSEE at Kentucky N. Car. St. at S. CAROLINA Wake Forest at CLEMSON SMU at BAYLOR (tie)' Rice at TCU California at STANFORD Oregon St. at OREGON UCLA at SO. CALIFORNIA Wash. St. at WASHINGTON SPORTS STAFF SELECTIONS JIM BENAGH (Sports Editor, 104-56-.650)-Michigan, North- western, Purdue, Iowa, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Penn St., Dartmouth, Yale, Tenn., N. Car. St., Clemson, Baylor, TCU, Stan- ford, Oregon, So. Cal., Washington. TOM WITECKI (104-56-.650)-Michigan, Northwestern, Indi- ana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Iowa St., Missouri,~Nebraska, Penn St., Prince- ton, Yale, Tenn., S. Carolina, Clemson, Baylor, TCU, Stanford, Ore- gon, So. Cal. Washington. * * * * DAVE LYON (Associate Sports Editor, 101-56-.622)-OSU, Il- linois, Purdue, Iowa, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, Penn St., Princeotn, Yale, Tenn., S. Carolina, Clemson, SMU, TCU, Stan- ford, Oregon, So. Cal., Washington. MIKE GILLMAN (94-66-.587)-Michigan, Northwestern, Pur- due, Iowa, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Kansas, Kansas St., Penn St., Princeton, Yale, Tenn., S. Carolina, Clemson, Baylor, TCU, Stanford,. Oregon, UCLA, Washington. UZ STEINBERG (94-66-.587) - OSU, Northwestern, Purdue, Iowa, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska, Penn St., Dart- mouth, Yale, Tenn., S. Carolina, Clemson, SMU, TCU, Stanford, Ore- gon, SO. Cal., Washington. * s. . HAL APPLEBAUM (93-67-.582)-Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Iowa St., Missouri, Nebraska, Penn St., Dartmouth, Harvard, Tenn., S. Carolina ,Clemson, Baylor, TCU, California, Ore- gon, UCLA, Washington St. * * . CLIFF MARKS (89-71-.561)-Michigan, Northwestern, Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska, Penn St., Dartmouth, Yale, Ten., N. Carolina St., Clemson, SMU, TCU, California, Oregon So. Cal., Washington St. CHUCK KOZOLL (Guest Selector, 89-71-.561)-Michigan, Il- linois, Indiana, Iowa, Wsconsin, Oklahoma, Missouri, Nebraska, Penn St., Princeton, Harvard, Tenn., N. Carolina St., Wake Forest, SMU, TCU, California, Oregon St., So. California, Washington St. * * .* S FRED KATZ (Associate Sports Editor, 84-76-.525)-Concedes. ("Thank Heavens the season's over.") * #~$. M y1se:i1c: BOSTON (P) - Boston became the eighth and final member of the infant American Football League yesterday in an 11th hour, mystery-shrouded f r a n c h i s e award. William H. Sullivan, Jr., a local businessman and spokesman for the new owners, made the an- nouncement. The franchise actually was granted Wednesday night by La- mar Hunt, member of the AFL Expansion Committee and owner of the Dallas entry after he re- ceived a, guarantee check. Sullivan said the announcement was postponed in order to permit Bob Carpenter, owner of the Phil- adelphia baseball team, to state he would not seek a franchise. Boston Joins New York, Los An- geles, Dallas, Houston, Buffalo, Denver and Minneapolis-St. Paul' as members in the league which is scheduled to begin competition next September. The franchise was granteddJust in time. The AFL player draft meeting is set for Miineapolis Monday. Sullivan said there are 10 own- ers back of the Boston club, each holding an equal share but that they agreed not to identify them- selves until next month. The other mysteries include no coach, no general manager, no name and most important - no place to play. "There are owners," Sullivan assured a hastily-called press con- -1 ference "and the money is in the bank." He added the group reasoned that the first thing to do was to get the franchise, then take care of the other problems. "We don't have a place to play," he added, "but we're not worried." Rink Closed Saturday The Michigan Coliseum Ice Rink will be closed tomorrow because of the 'M'-OSU foot- ball game but regular winter public skating will start Sun- day from 3 to 5 p.m. The win- ter day schedule will be from, S to 10 p.m., Tuesdays through Fridays. 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