Page 5 Around the BIG8 Colorado beat the Jayhawkers with a concentrated passing attack in the final 13 minutes of play and Saturday Kansas faces what could be at least as devastating an aerial game when the Oklahoma State Cowboys come here. The OSU passers, quarterbacks Mike Miller and Bill Leming, have totaled 348 yards between them. This is all but nine of the 'Fokes team total yards gained in the air, which is second in the conference. BUT, WHAT IS MORE impressive about the throwing of Coach Cliff Speegle's squad is that it has more completions (37) out of more attempts (81) for the best percentage (457) in the league. In comparison to these impressive figures, the Jayhawker passing has netted only 247 yards for last place in the Big Eight. The Hawks, with John Hadl being the principle passer, have completed 19 of 48 for a .396 percentage. On an individual basis, Hadl leads both the Cowboy passers, being third in the league behind leader Gale Weidner of Colorado and Dave Hoppmann of Iowa State. Miller is three lengths back at sixth and Leming is only two yards behind him. ON THE RECEIVING END, Don Brewington ranks among the best in Benny Boydston the league for OSU. The 5-10, 175 pound junior halfback has snared seven throws for 104 yards to rank fourth behind Larry Montre of Iowa State, Ken Blair and Jerry Hillebrand of Colorado, and Andy Russell of Missouri. The top receiver for the Jayhawk-ers, according to yardage, is senior flankman Benny Boydston who has gathered in two Hadl passes for 92 yards which places him seventh. Although Kansas is the top rushing team in the league, it will not have a decisive advantage over the Pokes. KU has rolled to 1,199 yards overland while the Cowboys are a close third with 1,185. Nebraska, next week's opponent, is second with 1,192 yards. JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass. GOOD FOOD DAY and NIGHT Dave Hannah FOUR OF THE CONFERENCE'S top 10 runners will perform as the two teams clash for the 20th time with the Jays holding a 14-5 series margin. The top ball carrier will be OSU's Jim Dillard who has legged for 364 yards on 60 carries ranking third in the conference. The league leader is Hoppmann who has 446 yards while Nebraska's Bill Thornton is second with 398 yards. McClinton is fourth with 269 yards; Coleman is the leading sophomore runner with a seventh place 207 yard total and Hadi ranks ninth with 170 yards to his credit. KU WILL PROVIDE the other three outstanding rushers in Curtis McClinton, Ken Coleman, and Hadl. OU Has Injuries; O-State Healthy Oklahoma's Sooners, off to the worst start in Bud Wilkinson's career as head coach, are badly crippled for this week's game with undefeated and untied Colorado. By United Press International The Sooners, who have dropped their first four games this season and were held to a meager 98 yards rushing and passing last week by Kansas, have halfbacks Mel Sandersfield and Jimmy Carpenter on the sidelines, along with guards Jimmy Gilstrap and Claude Hammon and tackle Tom Cox. Oklahoma State Coach Cliff Speegle supervised a light workout as the Cowboys prepared yesterday for their game with Kansas. Heavy drills are on tap the rest of the week. Oklahoma State came out of last week's 14-6 win over Nebraska with only a few minor bruises and should be in its best physical condition of the year this weekend. Delts, Betas Post Victories The stage was set last night for the fraternity A, division I intramural football championship game Nov. 2 as Delta Tau Delta and Beta Theta Pi both posted easy victories. The Delts, who have been beaten once, eased past Phi Kappa Psi, 13-0 while the Betas, unbeaten in five seasons of intramural play, pounded Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 27-0. A WIN FOR THE DELTS next week will give them a tie for the division title while a loss could result in a three way deadlock for the second rung. Scoring for the Delts were Steve Lunsford and Dave Culp. THE TOUCHDOWNS for the powerful Betas were by Les Nesmith, who raced for two tallies, Rick Phillips, and Jack Spotts. In another fraternity A contest, Kappa Sigma rolled over last place Delta Chi, 31-0. In other intramural play, in the fraternity B division, the Beta team walloped Pi Kappa Alpha, 45-0, and Triangle beat Theta Chi, 18-6. Irwin Hildenhagen, Wichita inside left, scored all three goals to lead his team to a 3-0 win over the KU soccer team here Sunday. KU Soccer Team Loses GLASS AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service AUTO GLASS East End of 9th Street VI 3-4416 Tuesday, October 24, 1961 University Daily Kansan Folk Music on Records Joan Baez Joan Baez Vol.2 BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Mass. St. VI 3-2644 NCAA Wants Change In US Amateur Sports NEW YORK—(UPI)—The National College Athletic Association (NCAA) today boldly went ahead with its plan for re-organization of amateur sports in the United States despite opposition from the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU). The NCAA's policy - directing council yesterday approved and endorsed special and executive committee reports that call for a drastic change in the control of amateur sports by setting up associations from high schools, the NCAA, the AAU, Armed Forces, open competition and at-large groups. "THE AAU HAS BEEN arbitrary and autocratic in many instances," said Walter Byers, executive director of the NCAA, at the opening of the council's three-day meeting. "We feel there is an acute need for new controlling organizations which will be more truly representative and which will operate along more democratic lines," Byers added. He emphasized, however, that the NCAA's plan was in no way an effort "to take over or control" amateur sports in the United States. THE NCAA PLAN WOULD affect both national and international athletics. The AAU has long served as the United States' governing body on major Olympic sports and other amateur sports on international levels. The NCAA voted in April 1960, not to respect AAU eligibility rulings and other sanctions applying to college sports. Since then the NCAA and AAU have met four times without any "appreciable" progress. Byers said the plan "is a determined effort to gain equitable representation for a number of organizations deserving representation." IF THE NCAA's PLAN gains approval, the AAU conceivably could lose control of its power over most amateur sports, notably basketball. The NCAA already has endorsed the U.S. Basketball Federation to replace the AAU as the U.S. representative in the International Amateur Basketball Federation. In Columbus, Ohio, Nick Barackk, president of the AAU, denied that the AAU in any way wished to control any collegiate competition. "The NCAA is attempting to enter other than the college field," he said. "Whether or not they rightfully belong there is a question. We feel there are two spheres of influence — one belonging to the scholastic and one that does not." Misspending a man's time is kind of a self-homicide.—George Savile, Marquis of Halifax AIRLINE RESERVATIONS NOW With MAUPINTOUR For and pay later $ ^{*} $ THANKSGIVING And CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS TO BE SURE! MAUPINTOUR TRAVEL SERVICE Now at THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 West 23rd Street Phone VIking 3-1211 *Make your airline reservations now and pay for and pick up your tickets later, just before you go