mm" WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21,1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1958 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEY "W"o Revengeful 'M' To Seek End of Ohio State Reign Oklahoma " rEi 1 0' '4"' ~Ie ... GENE SNIDER Again I ops In AP Pollj By The Associated Press The Oklahoma Sooners appar- ently won't stand for second best -in the national football ratings as well as on the playing field. Coach Bud Wilkinson's red shirts have regained the top spot in the Associated Press poll after spending an unhappy week as runnerup to Tennessee. EVEr By CARL RISEMAN enough to make the All-City see- The career of an individual is and team. shaped by many unexpected fac- During his junior and senior tors. year, Snider did a commendablel With Gene Snider it was weightjob anchoring the center of the Snider, the junior center on th. line of a great Hamtramck team, eda squad that was averaging better Michigan football squad, had than 48 points a game or a point- never played football before he a-minute in high school play. entered Hamtramck High School. However, as Gene said. "I wasi Gene's favorite sport is baseball. pressured into playing football be- He has played the game from the cause of my size. At first I didn't time he was a little boy. He was a even like the game." catcher on the Hamtramck nine and did well enough to attract Lucky Break in High School the attention of major league His sophomore year was spent scouts. mostly on the bench, but in 1947, Gene came to Michigan in Feb- his junior year, Gene had a lucky ruary, 1951, deciding that he need- break. Jimmy Neimchack, Ham- ed a higher education. tramck's All-City center was in- The Korean War threat cut jured. Snider took over for the short his budding college career, final five games and played well and he dropped out after one term anticipating the draft. He was drafted in April, 1952, and after a few months training in the states was shipped to Camp Verdun in France. He played football on the camp team and made the All- Communication team in Europe, while his Verdun squad Won the championship of France. Re-enrolled at Michigan Snider re-enrolled at Michigan in September, 1954. As a second- semester freshman he won a foot- ball letter, (freshman could play varsity ball at that time) and was installed as first-string catcher on the baseball team. Snider's line play and defensive signal-calling, while not being spectacular, has been rated con- sistently good this year. I ROUGH 'AND TUMBLE-Michigan's Tom Maentz (85) tackles OSU's Howard "Hopalong" Cassady as rival Frank Ellwood (24) blocks Ron Kramer (87) in one of the rougher moments of last year's bitterly fought game. The intense rivalry will be resumed between the two teams this Saturday at Columbus, 0. Buckeye Ground Attack To -Threaten Wolverines -Daily-Dick Gaskill BARR ON MOVE - OSU's Jim Parker (62) chases Terry Barr (41) in last year's game. SPORT SHORTS: Ennis Traded to Cards (Continued from Page 1) repeating this year as everyone's All-American on the basis of his stellar play on both offense and defense. Buckeyes Move on Ground Ohio State's backfield has con- tinued to rely almost exclusively on a fast ground attack from the T-formation this year, just as it did in 1954 and 1955. Halfbacks Don Clark and Jim Roseboro and quarterback Frank Ellwood have scored 18 of the Buckeyes' 24 touchdowns to date and all have averaged good yard- age on their runs. Although OSU's passing attack has been meager so far this year- averaging about six aerials thrown and two received per game-Coach Bennie Oosterbaan sent his Wol- verine squad through extensive pass defense drills yesterday after- noon in the*rain on Ferry Field. To Intensify Drills Michigan's preparations for the season finale will become more in- tense today and t o m o r r o w, weather permitting, before the Wolverines leave by plane for Ohio State Friday afternoon. The whole squad is in good physical shape except tackle Jerry Marciniak who is out for the sea- son with a chest injury. Eleven senior lettermen will bej in the contingent hoping to settle the score with the Buckeyes for the humiliation suffered at their hands the past two years. Captain Tom Maentz and All- American Ron Kramer at the ends, Mike Rotunno at center, Dick Hill at guard, Al Sigman at tackle and Terry Barr at right halfback are all seniors who will be starting their last games for the Wolver- ines. Other seniors who will be on hand to battle the Buckeyes are quarterback Jim Maddock, ends Charlie Brooks and Dave Rentsch- PHILADELPHIA (A)-Outfielderv Del Ennis, the backbon'e of the Philadelphia Phillies attack ever since he joined the club 11 years ago, yesterday was traded to the St. Louis Cardinals for outfielder Rip Repulski and utility infielder Bobby Morgan. ' Ennis, 31, batted .260 last year, driving in 95 runs, hitting 26 home runs and collecting 164 hits. Re- pulski, 28, hit .277, batted home 55 runs, smacked 11 homers and totaled 104 hits. General Manager Roy HameyI made the deal on the premise he was getting a younger, faster and better defensive outfielder for the homebred Ennis, greatest home run hitter in the history of the club. Ennis hit 259 homers during his career with the Phillies. Hamey said the decisive factor in the trade was the difference ofI ler, halfback Ed Shannon, guard Clem Corona. and tl nearly four years in the age the two players. * * * of BIG TEN STANDINGS W L T Pct. GL Iowa .... 5 1 0 .833 0 OSU .... 4 1 0 .800 1 Minnesota 4 1 1 .800 1 MICH. ... 4 2 0 .666 1 MSU .... 4 2 0 .666 0 N'western 2 3 1 .400 1 Illinois . . .1 3 2 .250 1 Indiana . .1 .4 0 .200 1 Purdue . . .0 4 2 .000 1 Wisconsin 0 4 2 .000 1 Olympic Tensions? MELBOURNE ()-A bitter Rus- sian-American controversy built up on the minor front of weight lifting yesterday as the Melbourne Olympic games approached Thurs- day's gala opening with most of the political tensions dying out. Fear of some major explosion diminished when Hungarian offi- cials announced their athletes held no personal animosity toward the Russians and would create no untoward incidents. "We regard them as athletes and our men will compete with them as such," promised Dr. Jo- sef Sir, Hungarian track and fieldj director. Bob Hofman of York, Pa., blus-. tery, barrel-chested coach of the United States weight lifters, prom- ised no such charity when the big showdown comes today in a meet- ing of the International Weight Lifting Federation. * * * McHan Pleads for Chance CHICAGO (RP)-Quarterback La- Mar McHan yesterday pleaded for another chance with the Chicago Cardinals after the club indefinite- ly suspended him for "insubordi- nation" and fined him $3,000- largest assessment in National Football League history. The Cardinals said they plaster- ed the former University of Ar- kansas star with the fine after he told his teammates that he "didn't feel like playing today" at the outset of the game with the Steel- ers in Pittsburgh Sunday. Indian Wins in Cricket Here The Indian eleven defeated the Pakistan eleven, 86-37, in a cricket match played in Ferry Field area last Sunday. India's Siddharth Banker and Navin Kothary were chiefly re- sponsible for their team's 86-run score, each of them accounting for 31 and 27 runs respectively. The fast and accurate bowling of Banker and teammate Bagi Phalkiwala played havoc among the Pakistani batsmen. Pakistan's Anwar Choudkry saved his team from a total defeat by adding 10 runs to his team's score. The cricket match was spon-1 sored by the International Stu-j dent's Association. Devastating Return Last week marked the second time this season O k 1 a h o m a dropped a notch in the balloting of sports writers and broadcast- ers and the effect on the ensuing Sooner opponent was devastating. A better-than-average Missouri team suffered to the 10-touchdown tune of 67-14 after the Sooners lost the top rung by two votes to Tennessee. So convincing was the perform- ance by the defending national champions, who have 38 consecu- tive victories, that Oklahoma rode back into first place by a 132 point bulge over the Vols. Iowa to Third Iowa jumped from seventh to third by grinding out a 6-0 Rose Bowl special over Ohio State to hand the Buckeyes their first Big 10 loss in 18 games. The top 20 teams with first place, votes and won-lost records in parentheses: 1. Oklahoma (111) (8-0) 1794 2. Tennessee (69) (8-0) 1662 3. Iowa (6) (7-1) 1287 4. Texas A&M (8-0-1) 1271 5. Ga. Tech. (1) (7-1) 1223 6. Miami (Fla.) (5) (6-0-1) 748 7. Minnesota (6-1-1) 573 8. 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