Monday. Oct. 13, 1952 University Daily Kansan Page 5 Four Shutouts Mark 2nd Round Of IM Football Sigma Chi, Alpha Phi Alpha, Beta Theta Pi, and Lambda Chi Alpha took shutout victories in the second round of Fraternity A intramural football Friday. Sigma Chi beat Delta Upsilon, 6-0 after the two teams had batted scoreless for three quarters. With only three minutes remaining in the fourth quarter, Sigma Chi blocked an attempted field goal and rambled to the DU 15-yard line. From this point Dane Lonborg, Sigma Chi back, hit Tom Johnston in the endzone for the game's only score. Alpha Phi Alpha edged oncebeaten Acacia, 7-0, when Wilbert Crockett, intercepted an Acacia pass early in the first quarter and scampered 35 yards for a touchdown. Crockett shot a short pass to Curtis Herron for the extra point. DU tried to fight back, but their drive was stopped on the Sigma Chi 5-yard line when the clock ran out. The win gave Sigma Chi an even won-lost record for the season. Beta Theta Pi romped over Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 18-0, thanks to a sharp aerial attack and a rugged defense. John Strawn threw three touchdown passes during the contest to spark the Beta's in their victory. The first came in the first quarter when he pitched to John Ressler. The second TD came in the second quarter when Strawn passed to Charles Dunner on a play covering 65 yards. The final tally came in the last quarter when Strawn passed to Ressler to put the game on ice. Lambda Chi Alpha tripped Kappa Alpha Psi, 12-0, as Phil Owen, Lambda Chi back, flipped two touchdown passes during the contest. The first touchdown came in the opening period, when he hit Roger Roark in the end zone. Roark held the ball although he was closely covered by two pass defenders. Owen passed again, in the third quarter. This time George Fraser took the aerial to complete the scoring. WDAF-TV to Televise Kansas-Sooner Tilt The Kansas-Oklahoma game Saturday will be televised direct from Memorial stadium for the local Kansas City area by station WDAF-TV. Permission for the telecast was granted Saturday by the National Collegiate Athletic association. 'One-Upmanship' ON SALE TODAY Activities and Teaching of The Lifemanship Correspondence College by Stephen Potter Author of "Gamemanship" The Art of Winning Games Without Actually Cheating. and "Lifemanship" The Art of Getting Away With It Without Being An Absolute Plonk. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 By UNITED PRESS Big Seven Title Rests on Kansas-Oklahoma Game It's Oklahoma versus Kansas in the Big Seven football championship race, and the rest of the teams in the league may as well not be playing, though all of them are. Spotlighting Oklahoma and Kansas, who clash at Lawrence Saturday, is not intended to slight either Colorado or Nebraska, each of which remains an important factor in the title chase. But the pressure on the Oklahoma-Kansas meeting has been building up since last fall when the Sooners whipped the Jayhawkers, 33-21, at Norman. Kansas said then; "Wait until next year." "This is that next year," say the Jayhawks who have a 4-0 record to date. It includes two Big Seven triumphs. Oklahoma is 2-0-1, the tie representing its only conference game so far. But the Oklahoma team that was tied 21-21 by Colorado appears to have been replaced by an awesome force, even for Coach Bud Wilkinson. While Kansas was beating Colorado 21-12, and Iowa State 43-0, Oklahoma was slaughtering Pittsburgh and Texas by identical 49-20 scores. Colorado's Buffs meet Iowa State at Ames in the week's only other conference game. Other contests will send Missouri to Stillwater to battle Oklahoma A and M; Kansas State meeting Tulsa at Tulsa; and put Nebraska on the road for a clash with strong Penn State at State College, Pa. Oklahoma's showing against Texas was stunning. Pre-game talk for the annual Texas State Fair clash at Dallas had fixed the teams at just about even. But the Sooners scored four times in the first period, and then breezed home. Kansas found Iowa State no problem. Charlie Hoag, for example, scored three touchdowns. The Oklahoma-Kansas game will be televised in the Kansas City area (WDAF-TV), since it's already a sellout. Jammed to the brim, Memorial stadium will hold about 40.000. Should Kansas win, the remainder of the Big Seven race should be a cinch for the Jayhawkers, except for a session with Nebraska, since Kansas already has trimmed Colorado. The conference standings are: Opp W L T Pts. Pts. Kansas 2 0 5 41 0 Nebraska 2 0 4 8 14 Missouri 2 0 0 26 0 Oklahoma 0 0 1 21 21 Colorado 0 1 1 33 42 Kansas State 0 2 0 14 53 Iowa State 0 2 0 0 59 This week's schedule: Kansas State at Tulsa. Missouri at Oklahoma A & M. Oklahoma at Kansas. Colorado at Iowa State. Nebraska at Penn State. NOSE, THROAT, and Accessory Organs not Adversely Affected by Smoking Chesterfields FIRST SUCH REPORT EVER PUBLISHED ABOUT ANY CIGARETTE A responsible consulting organization has reported the results of a continuing study by a competent medical specialist and his staff on the effects of smoking Chesterfield cigarettes. A group of people from various walks of life was organized to smoke only Chesterfields. For six months this group of men and women smoked their normal amount of Chesterfields-10 to 40 a day. 45% of the group have smoked Chesterfields continually from one to thirty years for an average of 10 years each. At the beginning and at the end of the sixmonths period each smoker was given a thorough examination, including X-ray pictures, by the medical specialist and his assistants. The examination covered the sinuses as well as the nose, ears and throat. The medical specialist, after a thorough examination of every member of the group, stated: "It is my opinion that the ears, nose, throat and accessory organs of all participating subjects examined by me were not adversely affected in the six-months period by smoking the cigarettes provided."