SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1949 TE MICHIGA NAILY, <4" FINAL CURTAIN-Playing their last game for the Maize and Blue Result of To day's Game Decide Most Bowl Bids NEW YORK - (A') - The 1948 Another major battlefron football season ends for many of Lawrence, Kas., where Oklal the nation's major college teams meets Kansas in a Big Seven today with some of them eyeing fray. Oklahoma can nail places in the Rose, Sugar, Cotton, championship by winning, b Orange and other assorted bowls. Kansas upsets the Sooners th Everything should follow the cisions would be postponed script, with the current confer- Kansas and Missouri tangle ence big shots doing the expect- week. ed and then sitting back to await .. * * telephone calls for the coveted New CLEMSON, UNDEFEATED Year's Day jackpots. leading the Southern Confer So, with several long-standing goes outside to meet Duquesn rivals colliding, the situation is should have no trouble. Th ripe for an upset or two. tussle in the Southern lo slated for Chapel Hill, where SOUTHERN Methodist has an takes on unbeaten, but once eye on half of Dallas' Cotton Bowl North Carolina. swag. Oklahoma or Kansas could be persuaded to enjoy Miami's Fast-traveling Georgia, Orange Bowl climate, along with beaten in Southeast Con Clemson. Tulane, Georgia, North ence play, has a date with Carolina and others wouldn't mind man before the "big one" the crowds trying to jam into the week with Georgia Tech. Tu Sugar Bowl in New Orleans. works out against Cincinna Northwestern entertains Illi- preparation for its annual fr nois at Evanston today, and a with Louisiana State Nov. 27" Wildcat victory will give them Notre Dame, No. 2 in the the Rose Bowl trip for sure. An and Army, No. 3, are idle, a Illinois upset, plus a Minnesota ing clashes with Washington victory over Wisconsin, would Navy next Saturday. scramble matters considerably. Penn State, which tied Sou Oregon meets Oregon State at Methodist in the Cotton Bow Corvallis, while California and Jan. 1, meets the tough Pitt Stanford clash at Berkley in two thers at Pittsburgh in anoth ancient West Coast rivalries. Ore- the day's important stru gon and Cal should win, leaving it Penn State's only blemish is up to the conference to vote which with Michigan State, which gets the Pasadena plum. Washington State at East Lar While Southern Methodist can't Yale goes to Cambridge to actually clinch the Southwest Harvard in their annual crown, the Mustangs can come draped Ivy ritual, and Dartn~ mighty close if they can get by is at Princeton in two of the the Baylor Bears at Dallas. A Bear main attractions. The Ivy L verdict would toss the conference crown, however, won't be de into a three-way deadlock among until Cornell and Penn S.M.UJ., Baylor and Texas. Thanksgiving at PhiladelphiE nt hom tit th but .e de unt nex San enc e an e b pop i Duk e- tie ran- nfer Fur nex lan Ai in aca pal .wai n an the 1 la Pan her ggl a t pla ,nsinj pla mos mou East eag ecid m is la le e if e- til xt today are (from left to right) Quarterback Pete Elliott, end Dick Rifenburg, center Dan Dworsky, halfback Gene Derricotte, tackle Ralph Kohl, end Ed McNeill, and guards Capt. Dom Tomasi and Stu Wilkins. Four other men completing their college football careers are guards Quent Sickels andHal Raymond, end Donn Hershberger, and tackle Joe Soboleski. In contrast to last year when the Wolverines lost their complete backfield, this yearns 12 man loss includes 10 linemen. 'Michimites' Tie for Big 9'Title - p - BRLE snE0c Michigan 14-Point Favorite As Buckeyes Pray for Upset IFr HORFRC AND HIS MU TONIGHT HILL RUT E HEIDT SICAL KNIGHTS at 8:30 P.M. DTORUM -- NOW OPEN .80 $1.50 d (continued from Page 1) California, and Pitt, two better e, .than average intersectional clubs, id Coach Wes Fesler has installed a and have measured Indiana, Illi- ig line that has shown great poten- nois and Wisconsin in the Big is tialities. Led by big Dave Temple- Nine. They've lost only to Iowa, in keton, the Buckeye captain, the for- a heartbreaker, and to a very ward wall has opened holes against strong Northwesterndteam. some of the strongest teams in the Against this Michigan places natia n a 22 game winning streak and an attack that can move in any THE BUCKEYE record shows direction and in any way. - this. They've defeated Missouri, a They have Chuck Ortmann, power in the Big Seven; Southern sensational sophomore passer, e e_ _ _who has a very good chance of s B kbreaking Bob Chappuis' all- stime offensive record. He needs a good day against the Buck- it , F u l] f *. p * e, uh ieBhp u ck-ad t- O last season to break the All- ad American's mark. Before Game Around Ortmann, Coach Oos- rn terbaan will have Pete Elliott at l quarterback, Tom Peterson at full- n- Everybody wants to win! back and the other great sopho- of The methods used to achieve this more Leo Koceski on the wing. s. end, however, are not always on Defensively the line reads ie the up and up. from end to end: McNeill, Al ys It's not objectional that at the Wistert, Sickels, Lloyd Heneveld, ig. end of every story printed the past Al Wahl and Ozzie Clark, with ay week in the Columbus paper the Dan Dworsky and Dick Kemp- 's- words, "Yay team, beat Michigan," thorn a yard or two behind at th have appeared. their linebacking posts. ue It's things like watering the field All in all, it shapes up as quite e day and night for a week when a ball game and the townspeople et there hasn't been a sign of rain in as well as the students here in the air, and then putting mud Columbus are making no bones cleats on the football shoes. The about it. They want Ohio State to opposing team tends to flounder a win and justify that article re- bit, you might say. cently, appearing Life. If the This is not likely to happen to Buckeyes lose, you'll be able to the Wolverines today-the weath- hear a pin drop along High Street erman has made conditions equal in this football-crazy town. for both teams.- Nor is there going to be a repeat perf ormance of an e pisode which took place a few years ago when Michigan met the Buckeyes at Columbus. The Wolverines stayedT e in a local hotel Friday night and were serenaded-and incidentally kept awake-by a mischievous American Legion band. At Ohio State l Michigan's Jayvees hung up their white jerseys Thursday and got out the Maize and Blue for this morning's final game of the I'f FATFP season at Columbus. With three straight wins behind them, the Wolverines are planning 3HRIAINto stretch the streak over into next year when they tangle with the Buckeye juniors. One clue to the probability of a Michigan victory is found in the discovery that Michigan State-twice beaten by the Wol- verines-was able to whip the Bucks decisively down in Co- - lumbus earlier this season. With his team at top physical - . k strength for the game, Coach Don Robinson will start essentially the ** same lineup that has up-ended the, opposition on three previous occa- ,:sions. At the ends it will be George Sutherland and Rostum Tandour- jian. In the tackle slots will be John Hess and John Eizonas, with Dave Gomberg slated for consid- erable duty. Al Fitch and John Maturo will be at the guards and By Lasky will start at center. 7.b In the backfield will be Irv Small at quarter, Bill Jennings p s at left half, John Obee at right half, and Norm Jackson at full- back. Irv Small was injured slightly COMPANY in the Indiana affair but will be OF 40 TOP ready to go today. Norm Jackson FLIGHT was one of four fullbacks who sTARS crashed through the Indiana line for touchdowns last week. By MERLE LEVIN (Special to The Daily) COLUMBUS, Ohio -Michigan's muddy midgets took. to the Ohio mud like the proverbial duck to watertyesterday to grab a tie for the little Big Nine championship.l Playing on a field so deep in mud that a second grade sandlot team would have passed it by, the, little Wolverines marched for three fir~st half touchdowns to down a hapless Ohio State eleven 20-0. The win gave Michigan a final record of three wins against one loss and climaxed a season-long uphill battle to tie Wisconsin for the Conference crown. It was a dismal beginning to this Ohio homecoming weekend. The Buckeye midgets were up for this one and despite their record of no wins and three losses they had high hopes of springing an upset. It didn't take them long to find out this wasn't their day after all. The first time Michigan got their hands on the ball they marched 83 yards to paydirt. 11t took the Wolverines exactly ten plays to score their first first half touchdown of the season. Jerry Burns, who was easily the outstanding man on the field all day, faded back from the Ohio 33 and flipped a 10-yard pass to end Johnny Picard who went the rest of the way to put the Wolverines ahead. Wilcox kicked wide. Three plays later Burns inter- cepted a pass by Ohio halfback Bob Scott on the Ohio 45 and raced to the 25 before being knocked out of bounds. Wildcats Stake Bowl Bid On Victory Over Illinois Wilcox hit the center for one yard and Ryan picked up one more to bring the ball to the 23 and set the stage for Mr. Burns once again. Handling the wet ball beauti- fully, Burns faded back and tossed a bulls-eye into the waiting arms of end Jim Costa in the end zone. Wilcox's kick was good and Mich- igan led, 13-0. Michigan drove to the four- -yard line as the first quarter ended but here the Buckeyes put on a brilliant goal line stand and took over on downs on their one-foot line. An exchange of punts gave Ohio the ball on their own 20. Bob Hun- ter picked up five yards for the Bucks and after a penalty set them back to the 20 again. Hunter threw a long pass which Burns intercepted on the Michigan 48. On the first play from scrim- mage halfback Pien Ryan raced around right end, eluded half of the Buckeye team with a tight rope act along the sidelines, and went all the way for a touchdown. Wilcox converted and Michigan led 20-0 at half time. Ohio came out fighting as the second half got under way. The Bucks hopped on a Michigan fumble on the Wolverine 25 and drove down to the five. But then they fumbled and Burns (re- member him?) recovered for Michigan on the two. After that the game turned into a comedy of errors. Players on both teams were unrecognizable as the mud became deeper and deep- er. F, State"at StreettLiberty Here's a model ° yo U'1gofor! .£. (77 :." Regular Button-Down with Comfort Contour" collar Van Heusen builds extra good looks into this campus favorite. Low-setting for that casual look, for a wonderful feeling around your. neck. In smooth white oxford, lab-tested, Sanforized -a new shirt free if your Van Heusen shrinks out of size. Ask for Van Heusen DeLuxe Oxfordian, $3.95. Other Van Heusen shirts $3.50, $3.95,$4.95. You'll find college men's collar fuaorites in Vail Heusoii $ , the world's smartest a shirts PHILLIPS.ONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N. Y. "VAN HEUSEN" IS A TRADE MARK REGISTERED IN THE U. S. PATENT OFFICE VYV"yyfy/ VyVIY \ vv BOX OFFICE $2.40 $1 Art Cinema League Presents EVANSTON,Ill. - (A) - North- western's football Wildcats, beaten only by Michigan and Notre Dame, will strive to nail down a Rose Bowl bid against Illinois in a sea- son finale tomorrow. It will be the 42nd renewal of the traditional intra-state rivalry. The Wildcats, with triumphs over Purdue, Minnesota, Wiscon- sin and Ohio State and a 28-0 spanking by Michigan in Big Nine play, can clinch a bowl trip by hurdling the Illini in Dyche Sta- dium. That would give Northwestern a final 5-1 league record, almost au- tomatically slamming the bowl door on two other hopefuls-Min- nesota and Ohio State. Ohio State (3-2) winds up against undefeated Michigan (5-0) which is ineligible for a bowl league, and Minnesota (4-2) closes against wallowing Wiscon- sin (1-4). SPORTS ROG GOELZ, Night Editor The Wildcats emerged from their 12-7 setback by Notre Dame last Saturday in fine mental fettle, al- though somewhat banged up phys- ically. Two regulars, tackle Steve Sawle and end Chuck Hagmann, will ride the bench with injuries sustained against the Irish. Northwestern was well pleased in giving Notre Dame its hardest battle of the season, so much so that Illinois hopes the Wildcats will be lulled into over-confidence tomorrow. 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