THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMRER 20, 1955 Whips - -- Marquette; .Prepares for Rose Bowl Kowalczyk Leads State In 330 Win Morrall Passes NOTES IN THE MARGIN . . by alan eisenberg Daily Associate Sports Editor FJrorr First ncore EAST LANSING (P)-Michigan State whipped Marquette, 33-0, at Macklm Stadium yesterday and then erupted into a happy hys- teria of celebration over the word that Ohio State had downed Mi- chigan to send the MSU Spartans to the Rose Bowl. Obviously jittery over the out- come of the decisive Big Ten game at Ann Arbor, Mich., "65 miles southeast of here, the Spartans got off to a slow start. Michigan State only led 6-0 at the half but, apparently goaded by Coach Duffy Daugherty's "keep your minds on the game" dressing room spiel at the half, the Spar- tans came charging back for two touchdowns in the third and two more in the final period. News Brings Screams The crowd of 41,814 had portable radios spotted through the stands. At times the game on the field had to be stopped because of the noise of the crowd screaming over favor- able developments of the Ohio State-Michigan game. State went to the Rose Bowl in 1953 and is the first Big Ten team to make the Pasadena trip twice in three years. Backs Score Dave Kaiser made the first- period State touchdown on a 41- yard pass from quarterback Earl Morrall. Walt Kowalczyk's five- yard end-around and a one-yard line buck by Jerry Planutis ac- counted for the scoring in the third period surge. John Lewis, who had two touch- downs called back by penalties, ran 16 yards around end for one final period score and Dennis Men- dyk made the other from two .and tore down the goal posts- yards out. The happy crowd mobbed the team on the field at the finish and tore down the goal posts-before the game ended-in a mad cele- bration. Michigan State . . . 6 0 13 14-33 Marquette . . .. 0 0 0 0- 0 -Daily-Chuck Kelsey FRANK ELLWOOD, OSU quarterback, attempting a 4th down touchdown pass on Michigan's five-yard line. The pile-up in the line. was typical of the rough line play throughout the game. Ellwood was hit and the ball slipped from his hand to be recovered on the eight-yard line by Michigan end Tom Maentz, thwarting another Ohio drive. CINCH BOWL BIDS Olahoma, Maryland, TCU Blank Conference Foes l _ W By The Associated Press LINCOLN, Neb. - Oklahoma's mighty Sooners buried the title hopes of Nebraska's fired-up Porn- huskers under a relentless ava- 1.r.t hd t.T.aI..Anhr.,. .,nrcar~vdr vaunted speed and depth to make it a second-half runaway. For Coach Bud Wilkinson's na- tionally top-ranked Sooners, it ran the country's longest current win streak to 28 games. ,/'oiw as4SW7Ze U I iancne o f oucnaowns yester ay for a 41 to 0 triumph and the 10th* * Big Seven Conference football title Texas Christian 35, Rice 0 FORT WORTH, Tex. - Texas for Oklahoma in 10 campaigns. Christian toyed with Rice for a Although slowed at the outset 35-0 victory, and moved into the by fumbles and drive-checking Cotton.Bowl as host team Jan. 2. penalties, Oklahoma racked-up a Chuck Curtis' passing and the 13-0 halftime lead and drew on its running of Ray Taylor and Vernon I I tnen! 4Ytd 6 Timell ij 't 9oiu Ifra! A GENUINE FUR-FELT HAT with the purchase of a SUIT or TOPCOAT Hallbeck administered the worst defeat in 34 years of football com- petition with the Owls. As the game ended, the con- ference announced it had passed a rule that would give the Cotton Bowl spot to some team other than Texas A&M even if the latter wins the conference championship. A&M is ineligible for the Bowl game because it is on probation for violating the recruiting rules. Under the conference ruling, the second place team gets the Cotton Bowl place and TCU, in insuring itself of a tie for second, automati- cally advanced to the Bowl game because it beat the only team able to tie it for second-Texas. * 4I Maryland 19, Geo. Washington 0 COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Half- back Ed Vereb scored two first half touchdowns behind a second string line and Maryland fought off George Washington throughout the scoreless second half for a 19- 0 victory to head for the Orange Bowl with its third undefeated team in five years. Vereb thus hiked his season's touchdown total to 16 in 10 games. Lynn Beightol quarterbacked the first string in place of Frank KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR?? Try us for: " Personnel & Sanitation * Workmanship & Service * 11 Barbers-No Wciting The Dascola Barberi near Michigan Theater Tamburello, who operated the re- serves with a heavily bandaged neck. Coach Jim Tatum gave his sec- ond string-working with Vereb- the ball when it recovered a fumble on the GW 26 later in the period. Vereb, on four carries, covered 22 yards, plunging over the final yard. BEN Oosterbaan held court in his usual corner of the Michigan dressing room after yesterday's game. One could hardly'tell that he had suffered one of the bitterest defeats of his career. His hat was cocked at the usual angle, he wore an unperturable smile, his manner was calm, his voice gentle. He took the loss like a gentleman. The Michigan coach answered all the questions in a pleasant manner, never was he curt. "It's the nature of the game," he said. "You have joys and sor- rows. I have had my share of both-and I can expect the same in the future. Some have to win and some have to lose." The dressing room emptied quickly. The players. dressed and left as soon as they could. There was only the sound of water in the shower room. Tony Branoff tried to escape from a half-drunken well-wisher. The assistant coaches huddled together and talked in muffled tones. There was almost awe in Ooos- terbaan's voice when he talked about the Ohio State team. "They were a great team," he drawled. "They dominated play throughout -they were sharp on offense and defense. Their' line was always beating us to the punch." Oosterbaan had only the great- t est praise for Hopalong Cassady. The Buckeye halfback put on a brilliant show before the shivering crowd as he gained 146 yards in 28 carries and scored one touch- down. "Every adjective that has been used to describe Cassady applies," Michigan's coach noted wryly. A hint of a smile came over his face and he said: "And you can throw in a few more. Just a tremendous player." He spoke little about the Michi- gan team, itself. The Wolverine BEN OOSTERBAAN mentor observed that our "defense just wasn't good enough. There was nobody outstanding for us." Oosterbaan concluded with congratu- lations to Ohio State for winning the Big Ten championship. And about the Spartans: "Congratulations, too, to Michigan State. They will be a fine representative. There's not much else to say . .: It was a little different on the other side of the tunnel. The Ohio State dressing room was a cheering, yelling group of players, coaches, and friends. Woody Reigs Supreme... But it was Woody Hayes who ,reigned supreme. Seated half- dressed before an open locker, the heavy-set, curly haired coach was screaming almost hysterically. Over and over again he roared: "My boys were the greatest . . . my boys were the greatest." Suddenly, at the peak of hysteria, University president, Harlan Hatcher and his young son walked into the din. Hayes spoke to Hatcher for a moment, then leaped up, ran to the center of the room, and shouted for quiet. He yelled to Cassady who wa singing in the shower: "Hloppy, Hoppy, come here." "Boys," the Buckeye coach said, "this is Doctor Hatcher, Michigan president, who used to be head of our English department." Then Hayes turned to Hatcher and said, "Prexy, tell them the same thing you just told me." In a low and refined voice, President Hatcher praised the Ohio State team. He called them "the finest team to play in the Michigan Stadium this year." A voice in the background shouted, "How about for all time?" A roar of laughter shuttled through the room. Hatcher grinned broadly, ,shook hands with Hayes, turned and quietly left. Hysteria reigned again. Praise from Hayes... Above the noise Hayes talked about the game. The Buckeye leader praised his line quite highly. "I've never seen them play like that. I wouldn't have bet a thousand to one on this one coming out like it did. Did you ever see anything like it?" Hayes was correct; on very few occasions have teams put on a performance as Ohio State did. The Buckeyes met a good Michigan team and walked all over thei. The Ohio line was aggressive and hard hitting, their backs shifty and hard to tackle. The winners made 20 first downs-15 more than the Maize and Blue. The visitors rolled up all but four of their 337 yards on the ground. Michigan, on the other hand, could garner only a meagre 109 yards. Branoff was the Wolverines' "big" man with 37 yards in nine carries. There was still noise and confusion in the Buckeye dressing room when I walked out into the cold evening air. Almost, everything was summed up with the song the' Ohio State players were singing: "We don't give a damn for the whole-state of Michigan, for the whole state of Michigan... ." And that's just the way they played yesterday. Read and Use Daily Classifieds Michigan State to Meet UCLA In 1956 Rose Bowl Classic 4 1, By The Associated Press It's UCLA and Michigan State in the Rose Bowl. The powerful Uclans swept to a 17-7 victory over Southern Cali- fornia yesterday to wrap up the Pacific Coast Conference title and earn themselves the host spot in the Jan. 2 glamour game at Pasa- dena, Calif. Michigan State received its need- ed help from Ohio State. The Buckeyes walloped Michigan, 17-0, and thus slammed the door in the Wolverine faces. 'M' Loss Sends State State, which finished its Big Ten schedule last week, showed a 5=1 mark. The Wolverines, who would have gone to the Rose Bowl with a victory over Ohio State, finished with 5-2. The Spartans will become the first Big Ten team to make the Pasadena trip twice in three years and the second team to represent the conference without winning the title. The Spartans finished in a first Must a good appearance cost a fortune? Definitely not. Careful choice where you are sure of the level of quality counts more than money. We are proud of the fact that so many of the best- dressed men in town choose almost everything they wear from our selectionsl SUITS ............ TOPCOATS ....... SPORT COATS .... place tie with Illinois in 1953 and were elected as the conference representative for the Jan. 1, 1954, game. Michigan State beat UCLA, 28-20, with a stirring second half rally. The only other team to finish second and represent the Big Ten in the Rose Bowl was Northwest- ern. The Wildcats finished second to Michigan in 1948 and went on to beat California, 20-14. Michigan State finished the sea- son with an 8-1 record-best in the Big Ten-losing only to Michigan, 14-7. One Loss by Big Ten Since the Big Ten-Pacific Coast pact started Jan. 1, 1947, the Big Ten has won every game with the exception of Wisconsin's 7-0 loss to Southern Cal in 1953. Ohio State, which won the Big Ten title by whipping Michigan, is ineligible for the bowl because of the rule against repeaters. The Buckeyes whipped Southern Cal, 20-7, last New Year's Day. Texas Christian clinched the host spot in the Cotton Bowl by walloping Rice, 35-0. The other, Cotton Bowl team is not invited yet and officials probably will name it after next week's Army- Navy game. 4 . Lee Fur Felt Hats For Fall are Economically Best. r I LAY-AWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS lilil~ilBASKETS Conversation pieces. Beautifully covered steel I 1 I ........$40 to $65 .. ......$35 to $65 .......$25 to $35 I waste basket and match. ing desk basket. Have I SLACKS ...............$8.95 to $18.95 With the purchase of a Suit, Topcoat, you will receive as a gift from us-your choice of any $5 genuine fur felt hat in our large stock. i< witty ayingsifin" gold tooling. Simulated feather. Waste Basket $295 Matcing Desk Basket $]75 USE OUR EASY LAYAWAY PLAN Charge it or use our $1.00 weekly budget plan. 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