PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAJLY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, SEPT. 28, 1951 Aerial Circus Promised KU Grid Fans Saturday Sprint Stars Are Hobbled With their respective running aces shackled by injuries, Kansas and Iowa State are scheduled to wage a second-story battle of forward passes here Saturday when they yank up the curtain on the 1951 Big Seven football season at 2 p.m. in Memorial stadium. A record-smashing KU-Iowa State series crowd of 24,000 is expected to sit in on the 30th meeting between the two elevens. The current record is 22,500, which watched the Cyclones score a 19-6 triumph here two years ago. It will be the lone conference engagement of the day. Colorado tackles Northwestern in Evanston, and Kansas State travels to Iowa City to engage Iowa. Missouri, Nebraska, and Oklahoma A & M, Texas Christian and William and Mary, respectively. Their spots will be filled by Dean Wells, nifty Great Bend senior, and Jim Robertson, 203-pound conference discus champion, respectively. Both are capable but Hoag and Schnell may be so sorely missed that the burden of attack is likely to be carried by the fusileers. Jayhawk Halfback Charlie Hoag and Maury Schnell, bulky Cyclone fullback, who ranked third and tenth respectively among Big Seven rushing leaders last year, will see little or no service. Wint Winters, K.U.'s regular offensive center, will also sit out the Saturday game. He received a concussion in the T.C.U. game, and Coach Sikes is giving him plenty of rest. Kansas will throw its new twinengine skyliner, Jerry Bogue and Jerry Robertson, against Dick Mann, the sharp-shooting Cyclone sophomore who has taken over the throwing mantle of nifty Bill Weeks. Robertson exploded unexpectedly against T.C.U. by pegging two touchdowns then ran over a third himself. Mann debuted impressively by firing three touchdown passes, completing nine of 11 attempts and gaining 94 yards overall. In addition to air threats, always likely to be fatal, both clubs face stern overall defensive tests. Even with Hoag sidelined the Hawkers boast capable runners like Konek, Bob Brandeberry, Wells, and Full-backs Galen Fiss and Bub Laughlin. State will counter with much the same overall array, having replaced its aerial circus of 1950 with a covey of hard smashing backs plus the effective bullets from Mann. The Towans crunched Wayne for 259 yards grounded with Stan Cozzi, 190-pound sophomore right half, leading the way. Kansas also will get the full impact of Frank Congiardo, a highly regarded junior who was crippled last season when the Jayhawks wrenched a 33-21 thriller in Ames. Glasses Survive Fall Dallas, Texas—(U.P.)R. T. Shiels leaned from a sixth-floor window here to watch some construction work in the street. His reading glasses slipped from his pocket, fell six flights, landed on the water tank of a moving truck and dropped into the water, undamaged. BILL SCHAAKE co-captain and veteran offensive end on the Jayhawker eleven that faces Iowa Saturday at 2 o'clock in Memorial Stadium, is being counted on heavily by J. V. Sikes, head coach. The 197-lb right end will have plenty of passes thrown his way, if pre-game strategists should happen to be right about the probable aerial burrage They're Picking KU To Win Over Cyclones Bv OSCAR FRALEY Iowa State Kansas 180 Mal Schmidt LE Orbon Tice 179 205 Jack Lessin LT Carl Sandefur 212 200 Stan Campbell LG George Kennard 201 220 Rollie Arns C Wint Winter 194 185 Ron Swanson RG George Helmstadter 215 265 Bob Metheson RT Oliver Spencer 218 185 Bob Voetberg RE Bill Schaake 197 168 Dick Mann QB Jerry Bogue 176 173 Frank Congiardo LH Dean Wells 168 190 Stan Cozzi RH John Konek 187 203 Jim Robertson FB Bud Laughlin 200 New York—(U.P.)—Frailey's Follies and the weekend football winners—along with other "facts" you may not have known 'til now. PROBABLE OFFENSIVE STARTERS Scrappy Phillies Licking Chops Philadelphia, —(U.P.) A scared, mad bunch of Brooklyn Dodgers came here today to finish the season against a team that is anxious to knock them out of the National League pennant. Of all the rivals that the staggering "Bums" could meet in the final three games of the year, none—except possibly those blazing Giants who now are only a half-game behind—could be tougher than the scrapy Phillies who meet them under the lights at Shibe Park tonight. For last year, you remember, it was the Phillies who blew a big lead and didn't win the pennant until the Dodgers forced them to 10 innings in the last game of the year. Nothing would please the Phils more than to return that "favor" now—with interest. To open the series, they had side-wheeling Karl Drews (1-0) ready to hurl tonight against the Dodgers' doughy little righthander. Carl Erskine (16-11). Washington— (U.P.) —Professional baseball apparently has failed to satisfy the Government in its house-cleaning efforts and may soon find itself hailed into court on anti-trust charges, it was learned today. And the Dodgers really were in a desperate mood when they arrived here. They know the Giants have a good chance to win their last two games, and that means the Dodgers would have to sweep the Phillies to clinch the flag or at least win two out of three to gain a tie. Baseball Practices Shady? Officials: Ron Gibbs (St. Thomas), referee; Bud Knox (Des Moines), umpire; Roy Brown (Warrensburg Teachers), head linesman; Don Combes (Warrensburg Teachers), field judge. Games of the Week. Michigan State over Michigan—Another case of a strong offense against a good defense, but the spectacular Spartans have defensive power, too. Their grinding attack sputtered last week but should be ready now. California over Pennsylvania—this promises to be a real ball game but the Golden Bears rate the edge on sheer manpower. The Midwest Washington over Minnesota—tackles named "Percy" usually have nicknames. Illinois over UCLA - centers should room with dental students. TCU over Nebraska-Most quarterbacks can count to 100. Notre Dame over Indiana--Good halfbacks make fine rhumba dancers. Ohio State over SMU- Ends "ups" play set like frustrate basketball Also: Texas over Purdue, Wisconsin over Marquette, Oklahoma over W. & M.; Northwestern over Colorado, Iowa over Kansas State, Kansas over Iowa State, Missouri over Oklahoma Aggies, Tulsa over Cincinnati, Miami over Bowling Green and Detroit over Houston. The West Oregon over Arizona—The 100- yard dash record is 9.4 seconds. Washington State over Santa Clara—Every coach moans he hasn't a back who can crawl that far. Stanford over San Jose State-Every college publicity man has one back who can do 9.5. Also: Oregon State over Utah, Southern California over Camp Pendleton and San Francisco over Idaho. Wyoming over Denver-And all football players automatically become All-Americans a year after graduation. Alabama over LSU—Coaches don't have, nightmares The South Georgia over North Carolina—the dream of alumni quarterbacks. Tennessee over Massachusetts The major state use慕斯股份 State the major state use慕斯股份 Florida over Georgia Tech—A straight razor would be too much of a temptation. Army over Villanova—The blue- plate special. The East Navy over Yale—Blondes cheer loudest at football games. Cornell over Syracuse—Brunettes usually know more football. Iowa-KU Frosh Clash Today In Prelim To Varsity Game Holy Cross over Harvard—Guys who played chess are the noisiest critics. "We'll be a little better organized against Iowa," Coach Hub Ulrich said last night, "but we're still kind of new to each other." Almost lost in the shuffle of preparations for the "big" game Saturday afternoon, "Bee" squads of Iowa and Kansas will clash this afternoon at 3 o'clock in Memorial Stadium. Fumbling hurt Junior Jayhawker chances last weekend against Missouri, in the opening contest for the KU. lads. "When you're experimenting with three or four centers, and at least that many quarter-backs," Ulrich explained, "fumbles are likely to accur." Arm chair generals who attended the fumble filled Missouri game had attributed "butterfingers" among the hilltoppers as caused by the bitter cold day. Boys to keep an eye on in today's game with the visitors Ulrich said, are: Don Feller, halfback; John Anderson, fullback; Dean Ragon, tackle; Dick Knowles, tackle; and Charley Lane, guard. Student Work Still Available For Men About 75 men students have been placed in jobs for this fall, according to Don Christian, student employment counselor. “Most of the jobs are part-time, but there are a few full-time jobs open from time to time,” he says. Types of work now open to men students include yard work, house work, service station attendant, waiters, dishwashers, cleaning and pressing jobs, work in a print shop, fountain help, glass cutting, concession stands at the football games, and many others. If a student is seeking part-time work he should call the dean of men's office and ask for the employment counselor from 9 a.m. to noon Monday through Saturday. FLY TO DENVER FOR THE Kansas - Colorado Game Boulder, October 6 Round Trip Air Fare From Kansas City ___ $76.48 $76.48 tax incl. Via CONTINENTAL AIRLINES Phone 3661 For Schedules and Reservations Prompt reservations and ticket delivery. Hotel and resort reservations. AIRLINE TICKETS FOR ALL AIRLINES PHONE 3661 MRS. JOSEPH J. ODAFFER, Manager Downs Travel Service 1015 Mass. COMPLETE LINI OF CAMPUS SPORTSWEAR. Wear For Campus Or General Zipper Jackets Both lined and unlined styles with lots of pocket room. $7.95 Priced from Corduroy In natural, grey or brown. Slacks The Palace 843 Massachusetts ---