SUNDA, NOVEMBER 21, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ___ PAGE T UCLA, Cal Win on est Coast LOST AND FOUND IFIEar c The Morning After .. by HANLEY GURWIN MICHIGAN students have a lot to be proud of this morning. They may not be able to claim the Big Ten football title, but they can claim a Big Ten champion. The Wolverines were champions yes- terday afternoon from the opening whistle to the final gun, and al- though the 21-7 deficit on the scoreboard might seem to indicate otherwise, even the most ardent Ohio State supporter will praise the play of the Michigan team. Bennie Oosterbaan's young charges threw the scare of the year into the powerful Buckeyes as they started the game with a rush and refused to fold until late in the fourth quarter. Columbus was as keyed up as a city could be Friday night and yesterday morning, with only conversation concerning the going rate ofscalper's tickets interrupting plans for the trip to Pasadena. The fans were praising their Buckeyes to the skies, not understanding or conceiving how this year's Michigan team or any other team could possibly stop them. "Our backfield is sensational, our line is fabulous, and our spirit is unsurmountable" raved the Ohio State supporters who ranked their 1954 squad as the greatest team ever to play for the Scarlet and Grey. A Fear of Michigan... HEY REALIZED that the word "Michigan" written on an oppo- nent's jersey was something special, a word that was associated with gloom more oft' than not, but this year there was little visible fear. They had a great team and they knew it. It didn't take long for that old fear to re-enter the picture though, once the game was under way. From the onset it was evident that if Ohio State won, it would have to lick the most determined team it had faced all .season. As coach Oosterbaan said a few minutes after the game, "We went after them strongly and confidently. We were playing to win and the boys knew they could win it." BuCke yes Refuse To Yield.. .. TMIGHT BE SAID that Ohio State beat Michigan at its own game. The Buckeyes just wouldn't fold under the constant pressure and' by taking advantage of every Michigan miscue they succeeded in breaking the hearts of the Wolverines. It appeared as if Michigan would leave the field at halftime with a lead, perhaps not as great a lead as it could have had, but never- theless one that would have represented the first half advantage that the Wolverines enjoyed. However, with only a little more than two minutes remaining in the half, an interception of a Wolverine aerial by Buckeye Jack Gibbs electrified what had seemed up to then like a crowd attending a funeral, and nullified all the Michigan effort up to that time. But there were two championship teams in the contest and the Wolverines had no intention of letting this setback sidetrack their determination. When the second half started Michigan picked up the attack once more and continued to apply the pressure. M' Ball Carriers Romp ... WITH REMARKABLE success the Michigan ball carriers, supported by a hard charging forward wall, picked up valuable yardage. ven when penalties would set them back, the Wolverines would come through with a long gain to pick up the first down.j Like all fiction stories though, there had to be a climax and yes- terday it came in the closing minute of the third quarter. Michigan hd marched up the field in a sustained drive from its own 14-yard line to the Buckeye 21 where a costly fumble gave the ball to the home team. The Michigan spirit was not dimmed and on fourth down, punt- er's nightmare Ron Kramer forced Buckeye Hubert Bobo to kick the ball straight up in the air. With a first down on the Ohio State 14, the Wolverines continued to march downfield. A minute later it was first and goal to go on the four. Then it was second and three. Then third and three, and then fourth and one foot. A Michigan touchdown might have meant vie- tory to the Wolverines, but it was not to be. Ohio State held with a great goal line stand and began to march. " Before they relinquished the ball they had marched 99%2 yards to their second touchdown. Michigan still would not give up. But the damage had been done. Ohio State was not to be denied a perfect season and a Rose Bowl trip Bruins Blast Usc, 34=0;o Retain Title LOS ANGELES (AP) -The un- beaten Bruins of UCLA blasted Southern California 34-0 before 102,548 fans yesterday to win the Pacific Coast Conference cham- pionship for the second straight year. Rounding out a perfect nine- game season before the largest football turnout in the nation this year, the Bruins fired a touchdown shot through the air that actually won the game in the first seven minutes. It was a pass play for 48 yards from little halfback Pri- mo Villanueva to end Bob Hey- feldt. USC Bowl Bound Despite the loss, Southern Cal- ifornia is due for the official select- ifornia is due for the official se- lection to represent the PCC in the Rose Bowl against Ohio State, con- querors in the Big Ten conference. The Trojans finished second in the PCC with a 6-1 conference record. UCLA is ineligible for the coming bowl game, having played there last Jan. 1. Held scoreless the second and third quarters, UCLA buried the Trojans under a barrage of four touchdowns in the fourth to keep alive the Bruin bid for the myth- ical national collegiate champion- ship. Hermann Intercepts Early in the fourth.quarter UCLA back Johnny Hermann step- ped in to field a pass by Jim Con- tratto of USC and race it back 44 yards. Moments later, Bob Dav- enport crashed one yard for the second touchdown. Villanueva then fired a pass for 12 yards and six points to his blocking back, 181-pound Terry Debay. UCLA Reserves Score The reserves took over in the final stages. End Rommie Loudd scored on a six-yard throw from Doug Bradley for the No. 4 TD Bears Stave Off Second Half Effort BERKELEY, (R) -- California's favored Bears rolled up a tremen- dous lead going into the third pe riod but had to fight with every- thing they had to stave off an in- spired Stanford team yesterday to win their 57th annual "big game" 28-20. A capacity crowd of 81,490 saw the Bears hold a commanding lead of 28-0 just after the third period opened. Stanford, fighting for every inch, scored two touchdowns in that quarter and another in the final period. Stanford Threatens Again The Indians were knocking for another touchdown later in the quarter, but a fourth-down pass was batted down in the end zone, and they lost the ball on Califor- nia's 17. California went into the game fa- vored by 14 or more points. Paul Larson, California's great quarterback, scored one touchdown and passed for another, but he was bottled up and thrown for losses in the latter stages of the game by the rushing Stanford play- ers. DAN CLINE finishes "work- horse" grid career. of the game, and No. 5 game on a throw from fourth string half back Sam Brown to another sub- stitute, Bruce Ballard. UCLA intercepted five Trojan passes and returned them 167 yard a new conference record. And the Bruin defenses held USC to only five yards net on the ground. USC ......... ... 0 0 0 0- 0 UCLA ........... 7 0 0 27-34 UCLA scoring: Touchdowns, Hey U C L A scoring: Touchdowns, Heydenfeldt, Danveport, Debay, Loudd Ballard. Conversions. Her- mann 4. LOST: Woman's dark brown leather gloves, fitted, fur-trimmed and wool lined. Call 1059 Stockwell. )43A LOST: Brown cloth briefcase on cam- pus. Call NO 2-6428. )42A FOR SALE ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox, 39c; shorts 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store,,122 E. Washington. )26B 1947 PLYMOUTH four door sedan, radio and heater. The big lot across from the downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales. 222 W. Washington. NO 2-4588. )104B THREE CHOICES-1951 Chevrolets. Ra- dios, heaters, power glide. All four doors. The big car lot scross from downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales. 222 W. Washington. NO 2-4588. )135B 1953 ANDERSON HOUSE TRAILER, 32 feet, all modern, like new. Lot 23 in Coachville Gardens Trailer Court. 3423 Carpenter Road, Ypsilanti. Phone NO 5-2403. )147B" FOR SALE-78 RPM Record Collection, Popular and Jazz, also Walnut Esty parlor organ, excellent condition $60. Call NO 2-8262 after 6 p.m. )146B GIRL'S BALLOON TIRE BIKE. $15. Ph. NO 3-3132, After five. )145B 1950 CHEVROLET two door, radio and heater. Low mileage, one owner, very nice. The big lot across from the downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington. NO 2-4588. )151B TRANSPORTATION' TWO MEDICAL students would enjoy sharing expenses and driving to N.Y.C. for Thanksgiving. J. Gleich and F. Norman. Call NO 2-3169 after 7:00 P.M. )12G RIDE WANTED from New York City to Ann Arbor, Sunday, November 28. Also riders wanted from Ann Arbor to New York City, leaving Tuesday, November 23. Call Sylvia, NO 8-7933. ) 140 WANTED: Ride to New York City and return, for Thanksgiving. Call Les, NO3-2653 at noon. Will share ex- penses. )13G RIDERS WANTED to Easton, Pa., Tues. noon. Call Bill Cassebaum, NO 2-6671. )15G TRAVEL EUROPE $399--30-day 4,500 mile auto tour, 7 countries. Free insurance and NTC membership. As leader you may qualify for transportation free tour. TEMPLEMAN TOURS, 337 W. Mason, Jackson, Michigan. )6G BUSINESS SERVICES WASHING-Finished work and hand ironing. Rough dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone NO 2-9020 Wool soxs washed also. )81 BUSINESS SERVICES R. A. MADDY-VIOLIN MAKER. Fine instruments, Accessories, Repairs. 310 S. State, upstairs. Phone NO 2-5962. )101 RADIO-PHONO-TV Service and Sales FreerPick-Up and Delivers Fast Service - Reasonable Rates "Student Service" ANN ARBOR RADIO AND TV' 1217 S. University. Phone NO 8-7942 1 1, blocks east of East Eng. )48I REAL ESTATE CALL WARD REALITY NO 2-7787 for 2x3 bedroom homes--priced for students. Evenings can: Mr. Hadcock NO 2-5863 Mr. Rice 3YP 2740-M Mr. Garner NO 3-2761 Mr. Martin NO 8-8608 Mr. Schoot NO 3-2763 )20 MISCELLANEOUS IMPORTED Swiss, Dutch, Belgian, and English Candies. Washington Fish Market. 208 E. Washington. Tel NO 2-2589. )17L VISIT THE Curio Shop, 609 E. Wash- ington, two blocks from campus- books, curios and antiques. Open 1-5 P.M. )18L _ Collegiate Grid Scores 1950 MERCURY CLUB COUPE, radio heater and overdrive. Dark green finish, beautiful condition. The big lot across from the downtown car- port. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W Washington. NO 2-4588. ) 150B MIDWEST Michigan State 40, Marquette 10 Ohio State 21, Michigan 7 Northwestern 20, Illinois 7 Wisconsin 27, Minnesota 0 Notre Dame 34, Iowa 18 Purdue 13, Indiana 7 Colorado 38, Kansas State 14 Bradley 20, Washington (St. Louis) 19 Wyoming 28, Tulsa 27 Missouri 41, Kansas 18 Oklahoma 55, Nebraska 7 Western Illinois 19, Southern Il- linois 17 SOUTHWEST: LSU Stuns Bowl Bound Arkansas in 7-6 Upset . EAST Princeton 49, Dartmouth 7 Syracuse 20. Fordhamn 7 Rutgers 45, Columbia 12 Penn State 13, Pitt 0 Boston University 19, Temple 7 Harvard 13, Yale 9 Holy Cross 46, Connecticut 26 Lafayette 46, Lehigh 0 Delaware 20, Bucknell 0 SOUTH William & Mary 13, Wake For- est 9 West Virginia 28, North Carolina State 3 North Carolina 26, Virginia 14 Kentucky 14, Tennessee 13 Maryland 48, George Washing- ton 6 Duke 26, South Carolina 7 LSU 7, Arkansas 6 Auburn 27, Clemson 6 Vanderbilt 34, Vilanova 19 SOUTHWEST Rice 6, TCU 0 Baylor 33, SMU 21 Trinity 13, North Texas State 0 New Mexico 39, New Mexico A&M 27 FAR WEST Idaho 7, Brigham Young 0 Oregon 33, Oregon State 14 California 28, Stanford 20 Washington State 26, Washing- ton 7 UCLA 34, USC 0 Deluxe Bachelor Apartment Will hold two. Building in rear, Pri- vate entrance. Electric stove, refriger- ator. Simmons bed. US 23 off Wash- tenaw Road, between Ypsilanti and Ann Arbor. Everything new and clean. $67.50 a month. Available Nov. 19. Phone NO 2-9020. )18D COUPLE WANTS to sub-rent apart- ment, December 18 to January 2. Write Box 92, Cousins. )5K ROOMS FOR RENT OVERNIGHT GUESTS-Large pleasant sleeping room-twin beds, next to tile bath. Call after 4:00 p.m. Mrs. Harold Andrus, NO 8-7493. Clip and save for future use. )20D PERSONAL Dear Bob, Did you see the Thanksgiving menu for THE GOLDEN APPLES ROOM, Tower Hotel? Janet )37F HELP WANTED SALESMEN WANTED for home-im- provement department B uilding Specialties & Equipment Co., 4571 Washtenaw Rd., Ypsi. Call for ap- pointment, Phone NO 2-3120. )20H For the Sharpest Cards in Town Buy at FOLLETTS State Street at North Universityr i 1952 NASH RAMBLER station wagon. Radio and heater, low mileage and very sharp. The big lot across from the downtown carport. Huron Motor Sales. 222 W. Washington. NO 2-4588. )149B FOR RENT 3 ROOM APT., Modern building. Will share with grad. woman. Box 2. )14C BULLETIN! Follett's Christmas Cards Panda, Oz, Manville & Christan Elliott etc. from 5c and up A' Be sure to stop in this week while the selection is complete. PERSONAL CARD ALBUMS ALSO ON DISPLAY -4 p Read and Use Daily Classifieds o 6} IM DALS SiL,. HAND ENGRAVEDY script or block letters LONG CHAINS TO MATCH JEWELERS 717 North University near Hill Auditorium I< >r. o-ocosocoscccec <-6 d ft, 3 l c i By The Associated Press SHREVEPORT - With handy- man Al Doggett playing everyI backfield position, injury-riddled, Louisiana State University rocked Arkansas with a 7-6 upset yester- day before 33,000 fans. But the defeat didn't stop Ar- kansas from winning a spot as the Southwest Conference represent-, ative in the Cotton Bowl. Baylor, victorious over Southern Metho- dist, can still tie for the confer- ence title but a defeat by Arkansas earlier in the season gives the Ra- zorbacks the bowl bid. Lightly regarded and heading nowhere, LSU sent the Razor- backs down to their second straight defeat by beating them at their own games-possession ball. The largest public gathering in Shreveport history saw Doggett start the game at halfback, re- turn to quarterback to spark a second quarter scoring drive and then move to fullback when there were kicking chores to be done. It was Doggett's extra point, after the ball holder juggled the pass from center, that made the difference. Doggett kicked true anyway. NORMAN - Through the air, and on the ground, by intercepted pass and by recovered fumble, Ok- lahoma ground down a determined but undermanned Nebraska foot- ball team 55-7 yesterday to easily wrap up its seventh straight big seven conference title and its 18th consecutive victory. Although Nebraska lost its final conference game by a whopping 48 points, the cornhuskers still came out runnerup in the cam- paign with a 4-2 record and ap- pear headed for the Orange Bowl at Miami, Fla. The conference rule doesn't permit OU, the nation's No. 3 team, to return for a suc- cessive appearance in the bowl$ against the Atlantic Coast cham-$ pion. Nebraska played Oklahoma to a 7-7 standstill in the first quarter before 56,000 homecoming spec- tators. But as in the Sooner's oth- er games this year, they quickly wore down their opponent and were comfortably ahead 21-7 at the half. * * * DALLAS - Del Shofner, a loose- joined sophomore with larceny in his heart, and senior Billy Hoop- er, the faker, feinter and passer of Baylor's thunderous split-T at- tack, combined to lash Southern Methodist 33-21 yesterday knock- ing the Methodists out of the Southwest Conference football race and putting Arkansas into the Cotton Bowl. Shofner intercepted two passes, running one back 87 yards for a touchdown and using the, other to set up another touchdown, anti also chipped in a 35-yard run tha led to still a third. Hooper's pass- ing and running accounted for the other two scores. A crowd of 47,000 saw SMU take a 14-0 lead in the first nine min- utes, then crumble before the vic- ious comeback of the versatile Golden Bears. * * * HOUSTON -- Jerry Hall, taking over just before game time when the regular fullback was disciplin- ed, teamed with dependable Dickey Moegle yesterday to give Rice a 6-0 Southwest Conference victory over Texas Christian, After driving 57-yards in the first quarter for the game's lone touchdown, Rice had to call on its best defense efforts to stop three serious TCU threats inside the 10 yard line, 5 MORE (Shopping) DAYS 30 of the best albums to select from, including NORCROSS - HALLMARK CALIFORNIA ARTISTS at Chester Roberts Gifts 312 South. State and comfort Make the smart choice for style .Arrow "Par" $3.95 Men's and Boys' Wear Downtown Ann Arbor Monday 8:30 AM to 8:30 P.M.-Tuesday thru Saturday 8:30 to 5:30 J. ANDRESS H. SAGER Restaurant and Pizzeria PIZZA IS OUR SPECIALTY, 1204 South University A Few Reprints of the Fall I I LAURENTIAN MOUNTAINS STUDENT 10:30 A.M. to 1 1 P.M. Closed Saturdays BERMUDA EUROPE 1955 Pre-ChristmaSA Come in and see our SETS I * SKIING IN THE LAURENTIANS Mid-Semester Vacation Jan. 27-Feb. 2, 5Days (allincl.)...................$87.00 DIRECTOR COEDS: it's Haircuts at a moment's notice!! i 6 stylists to please you, ot your convenience * COLLEGE WEEK IN BERMUDA Easter'acation' April 3 - April 9, 7 days (all inc.) .............. are available at $259.00 I'' * WALVERINE TOUR OF EUROPE 58 days in Europe (all incl.) 9 Countries by private car. June 15 - Aug. 26... .$1,298.00 The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre Student Publications Building i I ..j I 11 r:nn v winter