unt ill Arnold ge out other ost as k, who the best in the has U ball Wes- opping Kansas 83-70 night. cause S ce 3342 Thursday, Jan. 7, 1954 ne 05 University Daily Kansan —Kansan photo by Clarke Keys SOPHOMORE SENSATIONS—These two sophomores, Dallas Dobbs (left) and Bill Brainard, have been the bright spots in the Kansas basketball picture so far this year. Dobbs, from Bartlesville, Okla., has started all of seven games while Brainard has been used to relieve center B. H. Born, coming through with 22 crucial points in the finals of the Big Seven Pre-Season tournament. Both are expected to see a lot of action against Missouri Saturday night in Hoch auditorium. Sig Eps, Betas Win In Frat 'A' Action Sig Ep edged by Triangle yesterday, 36-35, in Fraternity "A" play in one of the tightest games played all season. In the second game, Beta moved past Phi Gam, 48-35, to take a firm grip on first place of Division II of the Fraternity "A" league. These two games were the only two on the slate yesterday for the "A" teams, but today the league moves back into full swing, with four games Sig Ep 36, Triangle 35 Neither team could build up a commanding margin, as the score seesawed back and forth in the game, which found Triangle leading 14-13 at halftime. Terry McIntosh led the well balanced Sig Ep attack with 12 points. Wilson led Triangle with 14, followed closely by Robinson, who scored 11 points, all in the second half. Beta 48. Phi Gam 35 Beta 16.5 by the 17-point production of center Jerry Brownle, jumped to an early lead and was never threatened. Jones led the well-balanced Fifi attack with 9, followed by McFarland and Rosenland with 8 each. The big difference in the game was the more aggressive rebounding of Beta, keeping control of both backboards. Other scores: Independent "B" Mox 50, Liathona 24. 69ers 21, Stephenson 10. McCook 27, Nu Sig 25. Bushmen 33, Pearson 27. TODAY'S IM SLATE Fraternity "A" (Robinson Annex) 4:00 p.m.: Acacia vs. Phi Kai [Fully Accredited] Chicago College of OPTOMETRY Doctor of Optometry degrees in three years for students entering with sixty or more semester credits in specified Liberal Arts courses. REGISTRATION FEB. 8 Students are granted professional recognition by the U.S. Department of Defense and Selective Service. An outstanding college serving a splendid profession. Excellent clinical facilities Athletic and recreational activities Dormitories on the campus. CHICAGO COLLEGE OF OPTOMETRY 1851-C Larabee Street Chicago 14, Illinois 5:00 p.m.: TKE vs. Delts. 6:00 p.m.: Kappa Sig vs. PiKA. 7:00 p.m.: Sigma Nu vs. Phi K. SIG 8:00 p.m.: Phi Kappa Tau vs. SAE. Independent "C" (Robinson Gym) E 8:30 p.m.: Vets vs. Don Henry. W 8:30 p.m.: Pearson vs. 1222 Miss E 9:15 p.m.: AFROTC vs. Leaning Lodge New York—U.P.)—Record-smashing scoring performances boosted the all-America stock today of LaSalle's slick Tom Gola, Navy's hook-shooting Done Lange, and the fabulous Clarence (Bevo) Francis of Rio Grande college. Three Break Scoring Marks Gola and Lange set new scoring records for their schools. Gola with 41 points in a 97-62 victory last might over Loyola of Baltimore and Lange with 43 points in a 94-50 victory over Johns Hopkins in a day game. The six-foot, nine-inch Francis wiped out the record for the Butler university field house as he poured in 48 points in an 81-68 triumph over Butler. Six-foot, six-inch Gola, only member of last year's United Press all-America first team still playing college ball, sank 16 field goals and nine free throws to erase the La-Salle record of 39 points set five years ago by big Larry Foust, now a professional star. Lange clicked torr 16 field goals and 11 free throws as he smashed the Navy record of 39 points which he himself set last year. For Navy, ranked 18th nationally and recent runner-up in the Dixie classic tournament, it was the seventh victory in nine games. Francis, a second team all-America selection last season, sank 17 field goals and 14 free throws to eclipse the Butler field house record of 34 points set earlier this Hantla To Start In Senior Bowl Lodge. Bob Hantla, standout Kansas lineman for the past three years, was named yesterday as a defensive starter for the North team in the annual Senior Bowl game Saturday in Mobile, Ala. in Mobile, A.I. The North-South battle, the last football bowl game until next fall, is the only one in which the players are paid for playing. With the cream of the college football crop supposedly in action, the game is a maceca for professional scouts. a meclet of all the mark the second bowl game in two weeks for Hantla, who last week played in the East-West Shrine game in San Francisco, along with Morris Kay, senior end. Hantla and Kay were the co-captains of the Jayhawker football team last fall. Kansan Classifieds Bring Results. Are You A DOODLER? Watch For A Doodle Each Week And Send Your Own Doodles to Fritz Co. See Answer At Bottom of Ad When We Lubricate Your Car, HANG AROUND And See the THOROUGH JOB We Do. year by Paul Ebert, star center of Ohio State. Rio Grande won easily after leading, 43-27 at halftime. Strap Hanger for a Midget Besides La Salle and Navy, two other highly-ranked teams scored easy victories last night. Unbeaten Holy Cross, winner of the Sugar Bowl tournament and ranked sixth nationally, had no trouble gaining its ninth victory, 91-62, over American International and seems certain to gain win No. 10 on Saturday when it meets little St. Anselm's. Duke, Dixie Classic tourney champion ranked 13th nationally, tuned up for an important Atlantic Coast conference battle with North Carolina State on Saturday by trouncing Virginia Tech. 82-45. In other leading games last night: Ohio State led all the way to rout Pittsburgh, 74-55, as Robin Freeman scored 22 points_ and Ebert 21; Three straight field goals by Joe Bertrand in the fourth period broke open a close game as Notre Dame drowned Louisville, 72-53, for the Irish' sixth win in eight games; High-scoring Bob Schafer of Villanova, the nation's fifth highest scorer, racked up 35 points to lead a 77-62 victory over Milwaukee, Pa., State; Temple led all the way to trounce Penn Military, 79-43; St. Joseph's (Pa.) rallied in the last minutes to beat Delaware, 55-49; Jesse Arnelle's 21 points led Penn State to 77-63 win over Syracuse; Williams upset Army, 64-59; Providence downed Boston College, 63-58; Maryland won an Atlantic Coast conference game from Clemson, 74-59; Yale edged Dartmouth in an Ivy League clash, 60-59; Georgia shaded Tennessee, 71-69, in the Southeastern conference; and St. Francis (N.Y.) upset Fordham, 53-49. Only a very slim schedule is on tap tonight. Wichita plays host to Houston in a Missouri Valley conference game, while other leading games include: MIT-Boston U., Creighton-South Dakota, George Washington - Georgetown (D.C.), Miami (Fla.)-Havana U., and Virginia-Richmond. Crystal Cate Try Our Homemade CHILI 609 Vermont Crystal Cafe FACTORY SALE! World Famous... Ride with the BEST! HYER BOOTS The opportunity you have been waiting for . . . now you can own and enjoy a pair of famous HYER Western Boots-"The Brand of Top Quality." Values from $27⁵⁰ to $75⁰⁰ ONLY$19.61 SALE PERIOD-January 2, through January 30,1954. At The Factory Sales Room In Olathe, Kansas HYER Boots are made in the oldest cowboy boot shop in America—located since 1875 in Olathe, Kansas just 25 miles west of Kansas City or 35 miles east of Lawrence on highway 50. SALES ROOM OPEN DURING SALE From 8 a.m. To 6 p.m. Mondays thru Saturdays. C. H.HYER & SONS, Inc. Between Santa Fe and Park Streets on Chestnut OLATHE -:- KANSAS