Page 5 Freshmen Swamp Cats In High Scoring Game By STAN HAMILTON Daily Kansan Sports Editor The art of defense was almost totally absent at Haskell stadium Friday night as the Kansas freshman football team swamped the Kansas State freshmen 67-32, before about 2,000 fans. The little Jayhawks, in their first of two games, rolled to an early 20-0 margin at the end of the first quarter and upped the count to 40-0 before the Wildcats got their first TD with 3:45 to go in the half. At the mid-way point in the game KU led 40-19. Ten different Jayhawks entered the scoring column with a 6-pointer each, and three of them kicked conversions. Scorers were Tom Slaymaker, Tow Kwapich, Bill Bell, Don Crane, John Schleicher, Jack Ogden, Patterson, and Blaine Hollinger. Otho Sweazy, Tom Webb, Keith Sweazy booted four extra points, Schleicher two, and Orden one. The big scoring gun for the Wildcat frosh was quarterback Larry Elliott, who scored 18 points. Ken Habig and Len Legault added single touchdowns, and Keith West and Tony Addeo counted a conversion aniece. Quarterback Slaymaker netted the first KU score on a 12-yard keep play around left end with 2:20 gone. The play was set up when halfback Ted Rohde intercepted a K-State aerial and ran it 11 yards to the State 28. The second tally came when Rohde gathered in a punt on his own 15, and handed to Tom Kwapich on a well executed reverse. Kwapich went 85 yards to score. Sweazy kicked the point to put KU in front 13-0. Slaymaker heaved a 10-yard forward to Bell for the final score in the initial period, but Crane came right back to add another in the third minute of the second period, going through the center for the fourth yards. After Wilde fumble on their 23, KU marched in five plays to paydirt, this time on a 1-yard scoring play by Schleicher, not quoted the conversion to make it 83-3. Ogden made the next seven points on a single yard plunge after the Hawks took over on the Cat 24 following a poor punt. A 23-yard gallop by Harry Solter accounted for the big gain in this drive. Trailing 0-40 at that point Elliott took over and sneaked over for K-State from the 14, with West adding the conversion. Five plays later, after Elliott intercepted a Slaymaker pass and Habig powered over from the two. Then with one second remainin, in the first half Legault, an end gathered in an Elliott heave for 12 vards and six more points. After the opening kickoff in the last half was fumbled away by the Cats, who lost eight in the entire contest, Sweazy scored from 22 yards after three plays. His conversion made it 47-19. Elliott brought the score to 54-40. Boohto booted from the five. A run by Addeo gave K-State freshman coach Clyde Van Sickle's boys another single. The ball changed hands several times and with 3:50 to go in that quarter KU's Webb darted through a hole in the center of the line to score from the one. Sweazy's kick brought it to 54-26. A Slaymaker pass to Patterson, brother of varsity end Harold Patterson, covered 53 yards and made it 60-26. K-State's Elliott picked up his third TD five minutes later, taking a 4-yard throw from halfback Keith West. Kansas closed the scoring with a 46-yard pass from Slaymaker to Hollinger, and Schleicher got the final point. Several last-minute K-State pass tries were incomplete. The whole affair was one of ineffectual defenses by both outfits, and more no resemblance to the 1952 scoreless thriller. The Wildcats looked very poor on tackles and their line was virtually nonexistant when KU was running the ball. Outstanding for Coach Wayne Replogle's. Jayhawks was Slayer, maker. Hard-running halfback Bill Carrington was the best gainer for K-State. The chunky Negro got 88 yards on 12 tries. Habig was second with 53 on eight. Elliott threw 10 passes, and hit on five for 93 yards. Kansas City, Mo., Central High star last year. He tried 10 passes, and completed six for 158 yards. Leading ground gainer for KU was Crane, who netted 68 yards in four carries. Sweazy got 54 yards on 10 tries; Webb 4 on three; Slaymaker 32 on four. and Kwianch 29 on six. THE STATISTICS | | KU | KS | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | First downs | 15 | 20 | | Yards rushing | 265 | 198 | | Yards passing | 158 | 160 | | Passes attempted | 11 | 21 | | Passes completed | 6 | 11 | | Passes intercepted by | 2 | 1 | | Punts | 4 | 3 | | Punting average | 32 | 27 | | Fumbles lost | 3 | 8 | | Penalties | 11 | 6 | | Yards, penalties | 110 | 34 | Top Prep 11's Lose Friday The state's two top teams were dumped from their unbeaten perches Friday night as high school football ended its fourth week of action. Topeka, rated first last week, had its one point wins backfire when Wichita East edged the Trojans 14-13. The Capital city eleven had beaten Lawrence and Wichita North point margins in two previous games. Otherwise, the state's major prep outfits won as expected. In a minor surprise, Shawne Mission the fc's cavalry Northeast Kansas league game. Wichita West, the state's newest school, went down to defeat for the first time this year when Arkansas City flattened the Pioneers, 13-7. Looping the major Kansas leagues, Wyandotte rolled over St. Joe Benton, 39-7 while Ottawa crushed Atchison, 31-12. Junction City beat Manhattan, 26-6; Chapman defeated Clay Center, 20-6, and Salina jarred Ablene, 35-6 in Central Kansas action. In other Ark Valley action, Wichita North beat Winfield, 52-0 and Wellington defeated Hutchinson, 21-12. University Daily Kansan In the southeast, Pittsburg trumped Iola, 19-0; Chanute beat Columbus, 31-6; Coffeyville dropped Ft. Scott, 39-6, and Independence defeated Parsons, 25-8. Other unbeaten schools continuing to win over the weekend were Ellinwood, who dropped Ellsworth, 50-21; Haskell, winning its fourth by defeating Wamoge, 38-19; St. Joe. Ramsay and Garden City, 19-0; and Ward of Kansas City, easing by Hayden of Topeka, 13-0. Zurich, Switzerland — (UP) — Samuel Reshevsky, a lone American, held a one-point lead today in a field of nine Russians and representatives of five other countries in a world chess tournament. American Has Lead In Chess Tournev The Detroit Lions and the Cleveland Browns took over the No. 1 spots in the Western and Eastern divisions of the National Football league with weekend victories. The Lions conquered he San Francisco Forty-niners yesterday 24-21 in 23-yard first quarter field goal by the Ravens providing the margin of victory. Reshevsky could not do better than adjourn his game against Russia's grand master, Alexandre Kosov. But Reshevsky's slim lead was protected because his toughest opponent, Vassili Smyslov of Russia, did not play last year. Pro Lead Taken By Browns, Lions The Washington Redskins upped their season record to 2-0 with a 13-9 triumph over the New York Giants at Washington. Pittsburgh's Steelers went into the final 15 minutes of play against the Chicago Cardinals trailing 14-28, and won four quarter points to win 31-28. The Baltimore Colts' narrow 16-14 victory was due largely to quarterback Fred Enke, who completed it for 236 yards and two touchdowns. The Cleveland Browns stayed in the No.1 spot in the Eastern bracket with a 37-13 trouncing of the Philadelphia Eagles Saturday night. At Milwaukee, the Los Angeles Rams scored almost at will, downing the Packers 38-20. Walter J. Mikols, director of men's intramural, has requested that no cars be parked on the field immediately south of the present intramural football fields. The campus police, in cooperation with Mr. Mikols, said they would assist in taking preventative measures. IM Fields Not for Parking Georgia Tech won its 30th straight game Saturday by defeating Tulane university 27-13. Monday, Oct. 12, 1953 3 Close Tilts Mark IM Play It was a day of close games last Friday as three of the four Fraternity "A" games were decided by one-touchdown margins. AKL, DU, and Phi Delt eked out victories in the nip-and-tuck contests, and Sigma Chi tapped SAE, 18 to 0. DU 13. Kappa Sigma 7 DU scored in the last 30 seconds of the game on a pitch-out from Kaak to Graves to take a 13-7 thriller from Kappa Sigma. The winning tally was set up by a 60 yard pass from Kaak to Alpers, and Graves went over on the next series of plays. The game had been knotted at 7-7 since the first period when Kank passed to Polk for the first DU score and D. Smith retaliated by passing to Stewart for the lone Kappa Sigma touchdown. AKL 6, Phi Kappa Tau 0 AKL scored a third-quarter touchdown on a pass from Berg to Davis, and then clung tenaciously to the six-point margin as they squeaked by Phi Tau 6 to 0. Strong defensive play was shown by both teams, with very few scoring threats. Sigma Chi 18, SAE 0 Sigma Chi mixed a potent passing attack with a tough defense as they moved past SAE. Fritzell passed for all three Sigma Chi touchdowns as he connected with Johnston in the second and fourth quarters and with Ball in the second period. Phi Delt 14, Phi Psi 6 Max Merrill scored two touchdowns to pace Phi Delt to a 14-6 victory over Phi Psi in a bitterly fought game. In the second quarter Phi Delt took the lead when Merrill made a shoestring catch of an 11-yard pass from Dean Graves, Graves to Kenny for the extra point. Early in the third period Phi Psi scored on a 12-yard pass from Tom Davidson to Dave Wilson. The try for extra point, which would have tied the game, was blocked. Late in the third quarter, Phi Delt added an insurance touchdown on a 30-yard pass from Mike Chalfant to Merrill. Today's games Independent "A": Pearson vs. Battenfield; Sterling-Oliver vs. Stephenson; Don Henry vs. Twin Pines, and ISA-A vs. NROTC. K D GU Schedule MONDAY, OCT. 12 4:00—Allan Jones 4:30—New Sounds 4:50—New Vision 5:00—Pachworker 5:30—Facts on the Record 6:00-University Theatre, Fantasy in Strings 6:50-In the Mood 6:55-News Roundup 7:00-Bookstore Hour The largest glacier in Colorado, the mile-square Arapaho ice sheet, is the water reservoir for the city of Boulder, which owns exclusive rights to the ice. FILMS KODAKS, CAMERAS 721 Mass. Sweaters Beautiful! Just Like New That's why all the wise girls on the hill send their sweaters to us. WE TAKE PRIDE IN OUR EXPERT SWEATER CARE! LAWRENCE LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS CALL 383