8 Fridav. November 7,1975 University Daily Kansan Kansas hopes for miracle at OU Chris Golub and Mike Butler are two of KU's wounded warriors. Butler, however, might play some Saturday. Kansan Predictions GAME ABOUHALKAH QUAKENBUSH ZELIGMAN FITZGERALD Kansas at Oklahoma 10-34 14-35 13-34 7-28 Nebraska at Kansas State 42-0 52-0 49-0 56-0 Oklahoma State at Colorado 14-17 21-31 24-28 28-31 Missouri at Iowa State 21-14 28-10 24-17 27-14 THE PREDICTORS: Tate Analeb巾帛奖 editor this fall. Alain Quakemba is associate sports editor this fall Mark Solgman was editor in 1974. Mike Fingerad is sport editor he sprinted in 1973. PEACE CORPS needs volunteers with experience or degrees in the following skill areas: SOCIAL SCIENCE BUSINESS HEALTH SPANISH/FRENCH MATH SCIENCE EDUCATION JOURNALISM Talk to recruiters Mon.-Thurs., Nov. 10th-13th (Union) Seniors Sign Up in Respective Placement Offices Bv YAEL ABOUHALKAH rspace: KU's Memorial Stadium. Event: University of Kansas football team versus Oklahoma University. Date: Oct, 17, 1964. Final score: Kansas 15, Oklahoma 14. There aren't many KU students still around, if any, who remember the last time the Jayhawks beat OU's Sooners. Indeed, there aren't many KU alumni who can remember a KU win—the Jayhawks have won just 21 times in 72 years. They get another chance tomorrow, when they play the Sooners at 1:30 p.m. in OU's Owen Field, before an expected sellout crowd of 70,300. KANSA USED A last-ditch miracle play to win that 1964 game, when halfback Dave Crandall passed to quarterback Bobby Skanah for a 26-yard score on the last play. On the clock, halfback Mike Johnson run for the winning two-point conversion. KU is 5-3 this year: Oklahoma is 8-0. Three players--defensive tackle Paul Van Saum, wide receiver Richard McAuliffe and kicker Dennis Kerbel—won't even make the trip. Kansas coach Bud Moore has been mounting one more on the jayhawks' field. He has 48 points. It is unlikely that either standout defensive tackle Mike Butler or defensive end Steve Jones will play. Finally, safety Kurt Kniff, noseguard James Emerson and defensive tackle Tavien Jackson were named to the MVP. "They simply have few weaknesses, if any," Moore said. "It's a veteran and experienced team with most of its members having never experienced defeats." They obviously have a lot going for them before the ball is ever kicked off." **THAT'S AN understatement.** The Sooners have won 28 consecutive games and haven't lost in 37 games. But they aren't without wins. Games. Little injuries have been nagging UG. This year, with a one-point win over Colorado and a narrow escape against Miami, Fla., the Sooner have even been booed by their hometown fans. Coach Barry Switzerland has criticized those fans. He's also been mourning about the death of his son. "We're playing with a different lineup on offense every week," he said. "That's been our problem. And even if these guys can play on Saturdays, they need to practice during the week. A lot of them are too sore for that." BUT WHEN YOU have players like defensive tackle LeRoy Salem, noseguard Dewey Selmon, defensive end Jim Eldr, quarterback Steve Davis, halfback Joe Washington, and split end Tinker Owens, you can afford to have a few injuries. Sports Shorts RUGBY CLUB—The River Quay Rugby Club of Kansas City will play the KU Rugby Club tomorrow on the field at 23rd and Iowa Streets. WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL--THE KU difficult task Wednesday night. After a slow start this season, it needed to win all its playoff games, and the team has a three-game turnaround from November 20-22 at Columbo, Mo. The women were equal to the challenge. The Jayhawks defeated Kansas State 15-11, Wichita State 15-6, 15-10; and Fort Hays State 15-11, 15-6. --r00 Maine 843-4755 OFFERS REWARD Congress is now busy passing many new laws. These are in addition to many laws passed in the past few years. Always and ever are the politicians in a desperate effort grinding out more and more laws—more paper legislation. Even Mr. Obama has passed several of them here in America for America is but a continuation of the old Greco-Roman world. Did their many new laws save Greece? Did laws save Rome? Of course not. Have the many laws passed by Congress in the past fifty years been any good? Of course not or else should they be passing more laws now? How did we get along fifty years ago without all these many new laws? If the many laws already passed have been no good, will many more like them to come be any better? Of course not. What is wrong with all these laws that they are no good? in order to promote social studies i offer a hundred dollar reward to you so tell us what is wrong with laws that they are no good and what would be good. 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