1234567890 fback pertcsr for the assess Ameri favor witze werin- for K AP de th aldeaturd tackle thu luggage ushing total Wildea es his setdown e past uni r boy ey are et up, they' st K they' gam le," h spectete leave 30 a.m. arth thd. Th c. minor th ar th, th e frow hot, hot rail By BOB LONGSTAFF Kansan Sports Editor Charlie Hoag, Kansas' outstanding left halfback, received a truly great honor yesterday when he was named back-of-the-week by the Associated Press sportswriters. CHARLIE HOAG Hoag's amazing one-man offensive show against Southern Methodist university last week won him the nod over many strong all-American candidates. Jack Scarbath of Maryland, Tom Yewcie of Michigan State, Dale Samuels of Purdue and Worth Lutz of Duke were all in the running. Other backs being considered for the honor which Hoag received were Jimmy Sears of Southern California, Bill Stits of UCLA, Carroll Hardy of Colorado and Buck McPhail of Oklahoma. Scarbath and Weeic unfurled three touchdown passes against Penn State and Louisiana State. Samuels pegged four touchdown passes against Illinois. Lutz ran for one score against Virginia and passed for another. This back-of-the-week acclaim may be the forerunner of all-American honors for Hoag if he continues to show as much improvement during the remainder of the season as he has the first part. One of the reasons for Hoag's running improvement is the more developed blocking in the KU forward wall. And he is the first to give the credit to his teammates. The 20-year-old senior from Oak Park, Ill., is a great leader on the field as well as an outstanding runner, blocker, pass receiver and passer. After his impressive show at SMU, Hoag brought his rushing yards to 1.847. He needs only 153 more yards to enter the select circle of the 2,000-yard ground gainer. Like Kansas all-American Clyde Lovellette who pushed the basketball scoring records out of sight. Hoag is piling up the yardage to make the running record mighty hard to equal or better. He should break into the elite circle against Nebraska before a near capacity homecoming crowd. — Beat Kansas State — WRECK SILO TECH will be the theme of about 500 Kansas rooters on board the football special to Manhattan Saturday. Fun and frolic will be the sidelights on the trip as the 90-mile journey will be one big rally from start to finish. will be one big tiny from state to Specials are always great fun. And the Union Pacific railroad is offering a special rate to allow more Jayhawker fans to attend the Kansas-Kansas State game in a group. The more fans that turn out the better will be the Jayhawkers' chances of scoring a really impressive victory. The downtown parade led by the University band which also will be on the train is another highlight of the trip. All students driving to Manhattan should take the effort to meet the special at 11 a.m. Saturday and join in the downtown parade and rally. Wildcats Drink Milk BUT Jayhawkers Drink GOLDEN CREST Milk Page 5 And you'll see that there is a difference when they bring back a victory this Saturday. Golden Crest Dairy Phone 3162 Thursday, Oct. 30, 1952 2016 Learnard Phi Psi, Lambda Chi, ATO Win in IM Tilts By RON PHILLIPS Kansas Sports Writer Fraternity A victors in yesterday afternoon's competition were Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Kappa Psi and Lambda Chi Alpha. After trailing Pi Kappa Alpha all through the first quarter, Alpha Tau Omega collected three tallies in the second period which enabled them to win 19-6. Walt Hicks was responsible for the lone Pi KA tally by passing to Jim Sharpack on a punt return. The Pi KA offensive machine ran down after their first bid for victory. Fighting back in the second quarter, John Wynkoop, ATO tailback, evaded a host of defensive linemen and passed to John Trombold for the touchdown. An alert defensive linebacker, Bob Wumsch, intercepted a Pi K A aerial and sprinted 20 yards for a tally. Wynkoop passed to Bob Toalson for the final ATO score. A tired Sigma Nu outfit fell under the fresh Lambda Chi Alpha squad, 25 to 0. Having played the preceding night, most of the spark was gone from the Sigma Nu offense. Lambda Chi opened the encounter with Gene Johnston intercepting a Sigma Nu pass. Johnson lateraled to Bob Hollingsworth as he was about to be tagged and Hollingsworth raced over for the touchdown. The victors scored twice in the third quarter and once in the KU to Meet Tigers In Cross-Country Tilt Shooting for its 21st straight victory, the Kansas cross-country track team journeys to Columbia, Mo, tomorrow to take on the Missouri Tigers. The KU harriers have rolled to two straight victories this season, defeating Oklahoma A&M and Drake. Coach Bill Easton will run the same five boys against Missouri that ran in the first two meets. Running the 3-mile course at 3:30 tomorrow will be Wes Santee, Art Dalzell, Keith Palmquist, Lloyd Koby, and Dick Wilson. The Jayhawkers are still without the services of their captain, Norman Bitner, who is hampered by an injured leg. fourth when George Frasier caught a pass from Anderson. Phi Kappa Psi took another step towards compiling one of the greatest records in intramural football history by blanking Delta Chi, 14-0. Patronize Kansan Advertisers. The victory was the fourth straight for the winners and their fourth shutout of the season. Dwight Engelland scored the first tally for the Phi Psi team in the first quarter by trapping the Delta Chi runner in the end zone for a safety. The winners boosted the score to 8-0 on John Fotopoules's long pass to Ralph Wallace. Fotopoulos threw the pass after taking a Delta Chi punt. In the third quarter, Dave Wilson threw a 50 yard pass to Bill Taylor for the final score. Marvin Rengel, Ray Pierson, and Managers Named For IM All-Star Tilt Player-managers for the class intramural football all-star teams were announced yesterday by Walter Mikols, director of men's intramurals. It will be the duty of managers to pick the best material in their classes to play in a class championship tournament. Intramural supervisors Tom Ritter and Bill Todd will work in conjunction with the managers. The dates for the all-star competition will be announced at a later date, but they are tentatively set for the middle of November. The managers are Ron Phillips, freshman; Kenny Tripp, sophomore; Max Murray, junior, an Jerry Brownlee, senior. If any group has an outstanding member in its squad who hasn't been contacted by the managers, it is urged to get in touch with its class manager through the intramural office. Tom Pratt stood out in line play to hold the losers scoreless. Delta Chi never got beyond the 20 yard line. Tomorrow's games: Independent A Jim Beam vs. Pearson Stephenson vs. NROTC Mill's Brothers singing "THE GLOW-WORM" on 78's and 45's Bell's 925 Mass. 1953 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER CLUB COUPE Smart new lines mark the 1953 Chrysler New Yorker club coupe. New Yorker models are offered in a choice of 6-passenger sedan, club coupe, special Newport club coupe, Town and Country wagon and 8-passenger sedan on a wheelbase of $125\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Powered by the Chrysler 180-horsepower FirePower V-8 engine, they feature power brakes and Oriflow shock absorbers as standard equipment. They are available with full-time power steering as optional equipment. 827 Vermont Phone 607