Page 10 University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 19, 1962 California quarterback Craig Morton is on a strict diet of pigskin on this attempted pass play. KU tackle Marvin Clothier (71), and end Jav Roberts (89), move in to force-feed him the ball. Despite this big KU rush, Morton completed 10 of 19 passes for 170 yards and three touchdowns. Baughman Leads Hawks Past Bears' Air Assault Kansas' Armand Baughman should have the starting fullback assignment tucked away in his hip pocket considering the part he played Saturday when the Jayhawkers blasted California, 33-21. Baughman, who has alternated at fullback with Ken Coleman during the Hawkers' first eight games, carried the ball 32 times, a Kansas record, and netted 142 yards rushing against the Golden Bears. He was pressed into full-time duty when Coleman injured a knee against Nebraska the week before. What made Baughman's performance more outstanding was that he made the necessary yardage on important first down plays exactly a dozen times. NEARLY 32,000 cold, wet fans, including several thousand state high school band members, watched Baughman steal the rushing honors from KU's sophomore sensation, Gale Sayers. Sayers went over the 1,000-yard mark in his rookie season the fourth time he carried the ball, and became only the seventh player in Big Eight history to break the barrier. Overall, he picked up 81 yards in 12 carries to boost his league-leading rushing total to 1,053 in nine games. The Omaha speedster is now only 76 yards away from the Kansas all-time rushing mark set by halfback Wade Stinson in 1950. HAWKER quarterback Rodger McFarland added to the KU ground offensive picking up 87 yards in 23 carries. The machine, so formidable until it met the Nebraska line a week ago, supplied all of the Kansas offensive power against California, as it rumbled for 347 yards. Saturday, however, Sayers was used mainly as a decoy running wide, to open up the middle of the California defense for Baughman's thrusts into the line. *** As advertised, the Golden Bear came to town passing and their own sophomore sensation, quarterback Craig Morton, did most of the throwing. He completed 10 of 19 passed for 170 yards and three touchdowns matching Baughman's scoring output. JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W. 9th VI 3-4720 Kansas jumped off to an early 21-0 lead in the first two periods, but did not have the game iced until the final two and a half minutes when Sayers flashed around his own right end and rambled 24 yards to score the final Hawker touchdown. Sayers' sprint climaxed a 73-yard drive and came when it was most needed. AT THE TIME, KU was leading only 27-21, and the crowd was convinced that Cal could score again if Morton got his hands on the ball. During the second half, his tosses had been particularly effective in picking apart the stymied Jayhawk defensive secondary. Sayers' sprint climaxed a 70-yard drive that had been sparked by Baughman's rushing. He carried five times for 31 yards, including a 15-yard gain on a slick pitchout from McFarland. Just before the final Hawker drive, Morton had moved the Bears 75 yards in five plays to narrow the Kansas margin to 27-21. He completed a 10-yard pass to end Bill Turner, a 36-yard aerial to end Ron Mazik, a 12-yarder to Turner again and then a final 14-yard scoring strike to the same target. Tom Blanchfield's conversion came with eight minutes left in the game California had been within one touchdown of the Hawkers once before at 21-14 with slightly more than two minutes remaining in the third period. THE BEARS DROVE 80 yards in 11 plays and Morton threw another bullseye to Turner. Key yardage in this drive came on Alan Nelson's 31-yard jaunt to the KU 20. Morton then throw a 14-yard pass to Turner on the Kansas six which set up the Cal tally two plays later. Larry Balliette passed to Nelson for a two-point conversion, which made it 21-14 with 2:30 remaining in the third quarter. At that point, however, the Jayhawkers came marching back as they did all afternoon, driving 75 yards in 12 plays for what proved to be the clincher. Baughman ripped the tiring California line for a 14-yard gainer at midfield, and Tony Leilker galloped 17 yards to the Bear eight, on the only two long-yardage plays. Baughman scored two plays later from the four, but Gary Duff's conversion attempt was blocked by Cal center, Roger Stull. Nevertheless, this was the drive that actually climaxed the Jayhawkier victory, for the Bears could not surmount the two-touchdown deficit. IM Basketball Deadline Nears Intramural managers must have all teams registered for the 1962-63 intramural basketball season by 4 p.m., Nov. 28. A meeting for all intramural managers will be held in Room 202. Robinson Gymnasium, at 4 p.m., Nov. 29. The entry fee is $2 for each 10- man team entered. Each team must consist of at least 10 players. There will be three classes of competition for both fraternity and independent groups. The groups will be limited to one "A" and one "B" team, and as many "C" teams as they wish. Who Will It Be? NEW YORK—(UPI) One of the major sports arguments of the year is shaping up today with impending announcement that Arnold Palmer in golf and Willie Mays in baseball were the "Athletes of the Decade" from 1950 to 1960. GRANADA NOW SHOWINGI ONE SHOW ONLY! AT 7:15 Never try to equate two teams or paper. It simply can't be done, as Colorado and Texas Tech proved last weekend. By Ben Marshall CU went to Lubbock, Texas, with one win and seven losses—Tech's record was 0-8. The two teams' opponents had been relatively equal in strength, so I picked the Buffaloes by one touchdown. And what happened? Texas Tech won its first game of the season, 21-12. The moral of this story is: It's a good thing this is the last week of picking the Big Eight winners "Misses" like these are hard on the ego. The overall record of "hits and misses" now stands at 35 right, and nine wrong, for a .795 percentage. Last week's choices turned out four right and one wrong (CU-Texas Tech). OKLAHOMA STATE OVER KANSAS STATE: The Wildcats have picked up some offensive momentum in their past three games, with quarterbacks Larry Corrigan and Doug Dusenbury sparking an aerial attack, and Willis Crenshaw doing the groundwork. The Purple, however, have defensive problems. Opponents have scored 258 points against Kansas State, and Oklahoma State has the best passing game in the league with quarterback Mike Miller calling the shots. In addition, the Cowboy line is bigger and tougher. Oklahoma State by two touchdowns. AIR FORCE OVER COLORADO. What else can I say? CU has one of the best passing attacks in the league with Frank Cesarek at quarterback, and two of the Big Eight's top receivers in John McGuire and Ken Blair. The Falcons will win by two touchdowns. But Colorado can't beat anybody. The Buffaloes barely slipped by Kansas State, 6-0, when the Wildcats were at their weakest. IOWA STATE OVER OHIO: Ohio University has had some of the best small-college teams in the nation during the past few years. This year, however, coach Bill Hess' team is rebuilding, and Ohio U. is having problems. Iowa State, on the other hand, is once again on the move. The Cyclones handled K-State last weekend, 28-14, with sophomore fullback BLACK TIGHTS HELD OVER Shows At 7:00 & 9:05 p.m. MISSOURI OVER KANSAS: But anything can happen in this game, as one glance at the record books will show, but comparing the teams on paper . . . . oops, here we go again. Tommy Vaughn taking some of the load off of Dave Hopmann's shoulders. Iowa State should win by three touchdowns. Regardless of last week's games (Mizzou lost and KU won), both teams will be up for this one. But the stronger Tiger line will make the difference, if KU's game against Nebraska is any indication. Missouri will win by two touchdowns. OKLAHOMA OVER NEBRASKA: The Sooners are smelling orange blossoms for the first time in several years. The team now has the momentum to go all the way, and Nebraska, in spite of strong forward wall, will be no match for the Sooner spirit. OPEN 24 hrs. a day Oklahoma will win by two touchdowns. Stay bright. Fit drowsiness and be at your brilliant best with Verv® continuous action alertness capsules, Effective, safe, not habit-forming. 838 Mass. BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY JIM'S CAFE WHO IS THE POWER BEHIND THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE? Frank Sinatra Laurence Harvey Janet Leigh EUF Euro The Manchurian Candidate COMING SOON! PRC Bibl Box Aus with Wri HAR Driv in Mod wee