WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TR ixth-Raned Ites Sooners Still Top AP Poll, MSU Third By The Associated Press Michigan's sixth-ranked football team ran through semi-secret drills yesterday afternoon in pre- paration for Saturday's climax contest with Ohio State. The reserves tossed Buckeye plays at the varsity with "Hop- along" Cassady's favorites being featured. Despite the penetrating cold" and dampness, the team was in high spirits as it broke up Ohio pass patterns and sprung its backs loose after switching to the of- fense. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan quipped during practice that "the team was going through running and passing practices only, be- cause the alumni does the kick- ing." Oklahoma, Maryland and Mi- thigan State still are running one- two-three in the Associated Press' football poll and figure to stay up there after Saturday's play. There could be plenty of changes, how- ever, in the ratings below the top trio. T The Fighting Irish are rated 10 points over Iowa but the Hawk- eyes always spell aggravation to the men from South Bend. UCLA is a 10-point choice over Southern California in the big battle on the coast where the Bruins are aiming to seal a berth in the Rose Bowl. Michigan is given just a six- point edge over Ohio State at Ann Harkrader Out? Reports from Columbus and the Ohio State football camp revealed that the Buckeyes' star right halfback, Jerry Harkrad- er, was injured in last Satur- day's 20-10 win over Iowa. "He'll miss the Michigan game," said Coach Woody Hayes, but the validity of this statement will not be tested until Satur- day. t Arbor. The Big Ten crown as well as the Rose Bowl spot is at stake in this climactic contest. A victory by Ohio State would send Michigan State to Pasadena since. the Buckeyes are ineligible to repeat their 1955 journey to the ADVERSE WEATHER CONDITIONS PLAYED A KEY ROLE IN THE 1950 OHIO STATE-MICHI- GAN GAME AT COLUMBUS. PLAYING IN A BLIZZARD, MICHIGAN DEFEATED THE BUCK- EYES, 9-3, CLINCHING THE BIG TEN TITLE AND A TRIP TO THE ROSE BOWL. CLASH OF THE GIANTS: Ohio State Series Always Climactic By JOHN HILLYER (First of two articles) before the hapless Buckeyes even I Another sensational Big Ten cli- max between Michigan and Ohio State will make football history again this Saturday. Whoever conceived the idea of1 these two giants of college football banging skulls on the last day of every Western Conference season had a brainstorm. Since 1935, this bitter rivalry has been renewed as the culmination of another colorful campaign of the toughest conference in the nation. Such rancor do the Ohio- ans hold for the Wolverines that! the now-famous score by which Michigan crushed the Buckeyes in 1946-a humiliating 58-6-has be- come a part of their fight song. Look Into Past Since the Conference crown once again is up for grabs as the two powers collide this weekend, it might be interesting to look back to similar circumstances from the past. Last year the awesome Colum- bus eleven was the top team in the country, and Bennie Ooster- baan's raw, inexperienced young- sters knew it. With an omnipotent foursome in the backfield-Leg- gett, Cassady, Watkins and Bobo -and a forward wall of granite, averaging 215 pounds per man, OSU had steamrollered its every foe, and the haughty Hayesmen weren't about to let the Ann Ar- bor greenhorns tie them for the championship and ruin their un- spotted report card. The game was viewed by millions on television. Michigan stunned the football nation, taking the opening kick- off and rolling 68 yards to a score Rose Bowl. The top ten te place votes and w in parentheses: 1. Oklahoma ( 2. Maryland 3. Michigan St. 4. Notre Dame 5. UCLA 6. Michigan 7. Tex. Christian 8. Texas A&M 9. Ohio State 10. Georgia Tech eams with first won-lost records 103) (8-0) (46) (9-0) (37) (7-1) (2) (7-1) (6) (8-1) (1) (7-1) (2) (7-1) (7-1-1) (1) (6-2) (7-1-1) 1,844 1,677 1,669 1,193 1,164 867 705 557 484 272 touched the ball. Halfback Danny Cline was the hero of the march, accounting for several long gains. With fourth and one on the State seven, the Blue was expected, quite naturally, to come up with a power play. Every person watching the ac- tion was fooled, except the Michi- gan team. Fullback Freddie Baer, logically enough, grabbed the handoff, lowered his head, and started for the converging line. Suddenly, he handed off to Lou Baldacci, who in turn lateralled to Cline, who danced, unperturbed, into the end zone. Ron Kramer's conversion attempt was perfect. Soon after Kramer unsuccess- fully attempted a field goal,. Ohio- an Jack Gibbs intercepted a Jim Maddock pass and raced to the Michigan 10. Leggett immediate- ly fired a perfect pass to End I-M Football The I-M touch football cham- pionship games were rained out yesterday and will be played to- night at Ann Arbor High's Wines Field. The independents will play at 6:30, the residence halls at 7:30, and the social fraterni- ties at 8:30. The professional fraternity final will be re- scheduled later this week. Fred Kriss, who took it all alone in the end zone. Score at the half: Michigan 7, Ohio State 7. In the third quarter, the Bucks still had a hard time penetrating Wolverine territory, and when Kramer hurried Bobo's punt, he caused it to go straight upward. It was fielded by Tom Maentz and the big end lugged it to the Buck- eye 14. Four plays later it4 was first and goal for Michigan on the four. Then it happened. Fullback Dick Hill got one. Cline got none. Hill plunged for two. Fourth and one yard to go for six points. The tension could be felt all over the country. Could the Wolverines do it? Did He Make It? The answer to this question was to be discovered on the next play, one of the most controversial of the year. Dave Hill took the ball and dove into the center of the line. The referee declared that Hill was stopped on the one-foot Only Three More Days Michigan's Gymnasts to Begin; Ninth Year With Coach Loken; By JIM BAAD Football swings into its final climactic week; meanwhile winter sports, among them gymnastics, begin to increase tempo in practice sessions. Michigan's gym squad is enter- ing its ninth season under Coach Newt Loken, and Loken rates his teams prospects for the coming campaign as "improved over last year." Loken lost trampoline artist Bill Winkler, along with Frank Adams' skill on the high bar, tumbling mat, and trampoline when the two veterans graduated, but these losses have been more than bal- anced by the gain of one sopho- more sensation. Gagnier an Answer Edward Gagnier, Canada's "out- standing athlete of 1954," seems an answer to any gymnastic coach's dreams. According to Loken, Gagnier could compete in any of the gymnastic events - high bar, parallel bar, flying rings, trampoline, side horse, tumbling, anything, and give an outstanding Big Ten performance. Along with talented Gagnier, there is a lot more to gloat about down at gymnastic headquarters in the I-M building. Eight letter- men have returned: Captain Tony San Antonio, Nick Wiese, Bob Arm- strong, Norm Niedermeier, and Wayne Warren-the young nu- cleus of last year's team are back and experienced. San Antonio will perform his specialties on the high bar, paral- lel bars., and side horse. He placed many times in these events last year. L,1 Nick Wiese will be back at his top events, the flying rings, high and parallel bars, and will also be converted to the trampoline to help fill the vacancy left by Wink- ler. I a Backing tonio, and all-around side horse, allel bars; formers." up Gagnier, San An- Wiese are Warren, an performer, Armstrong, and Neidermeier, par- all "good steady per- Loken seems especially enthus- iastic about what lies in the future for his team, and is basing it mostly on Gagnier, as yet untried in the Big Ten, but a true cham- pion everywhere that he's com- peted, and the returning letter- men who took a fifth place in the Conference last year. 47CM SKATES LADIES' FIGURE a $199,w tol $3 39 MEN'S HOCKEY $j495 to$3 FREE with each pair purchased: five sharpenings (value $2.50) I Tk~ cn^Y I