4 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1949 Kansas Has Easy Time In Last Game Of Season The Kansas Jayhawkers walked over the Arizona Wildcats 40 to 0 Saturday to finish with a .500 season of five wins and five losses. The Jayhawkers have now averaged better than 34 points a game in their last seven starts. The Jayhawkers scored 21 points against George Washington, 26 against Oklahoma, 55 against Oklahoma A and M., 38 against Kansas State, 27 with Nebraska and 28 against Missouri. The Jayhawkers had very little trouble with the Wildcats as they ran up a 34 to 0 lead at the half. They then went on in the third period to ring up the final total of 46 points. THE STATISTICS THE STATISTICS First downs 44 11 Net Yards rushing ... 327 160 Net Yards forwards ... 177 5 Forwards Attempted ... 17 15 Forwards completed ... 7 7 Forwards recovered ... 3 2 Punts, number ... 3 Punts, average ... 39.7 35.7 Fumbles ... 2 4 Own fumbles recov. ... 2 4 Palettes ... 6 6 Yds, lost penalties ... 40 50 SCORE BY QUARTERS SCORER OUAGRATE Score 14 20 12 0-46 Kansas 14 20 12 0-46 Arizona 14 20 12 0-46 Kansas scoring: - touchdowns: Griffith 2, French 2, Smith, Bogue, Modrcin. Point after touchdown: Rinehart 4 (placements). The Jayhawker regulars saw very little action after the first half. Coach Jules Sikes used all the players making the trip to Tuscon. At one time he had a lineup in the game that consisted of men who would return next season. The Jayhawker running attack was devastating in running up a total of 326 yards. The passing attack for once was second to the rushing yardage but it was still no slouch as 177 yards were made through the air lanes. Kansas's defense was spotty at mid field but very restricting near its own goal. Kansas scored their first touchdown mid way in the first period. Griffith went over from the one yard line to climax a 67 yard drive that took seven plays. Bill Rinehart kicked his first of four extra points. Bud French scored the next T.D. to cap a 59 drive yard that also took seven plays. Rinehart added the extra point. The Jayhawkers scored three times in the second quarter. Carl Ellis started the drive for the first of these with an interception at the close of the first period. Taking over on the Arizona 34 Kansas went over in five plays—wanton, non-touchback Jerry Bogue to end Lyn Smith both sophomores. Rinehart's kick was wide. A few minutes later French romped 39 yards through the center of the Arizona line to score. Rinehart's kick gave K.U. a 27 to 10 lead. Bill Mace intercepted a Wildcat aerial and returned it to the Arizona 23 yard line to start the ball rolling for the next counter. Bogue had two attempts pass play. Rinehart's placement gave Kansas a 34 to 0 half time margin. With a minute and a half gone in he second period, Griffith plunged SHUTTERBUGS The last score came on a 34 yard pass play from quarterback Ken Morrow to halfback Willie Modrin. French's two touchdowns gave him a total of 66 points for the season and a new school record. The old record of 54 points was set by Griffith in 1947. French picked up 117 vards rushing in 13 attempts. YOU'LL MAKE HIM 30 HAPPY IF YOU'LL CALL HIM CEC BF over from the two yard line for the next Kansas, score. The Arizona team was inside the Kansas 40 yard line only three times all evening. In the third quarter they moved down to the Jayhawker eight yard line but were held there. Individual Statistics Rushing Kansas Players att yds French 13 117 Mallon 10 59 Griffith 12 49 Arizona Carillo 11 61 Wols 13 44 HANK BROWN'S Camera Shop Passing Kansas Player att. com. yds. Clinton 4 2 43 Bogue 4 2 38 Morrow 8 3 8 Arizona Russell 8 2 5 Kansas cate. yds. Smith 2 65 Linville 3 29 Arizona Woodburn 1 8 Glazier 1 -3 Pass Receiving Punting Huntsville kicks av. Simons ... 2 40 Mace ... 1 39 Arizona Hall ... 4 34.9 Grouch ... 3 36 Sixteen Kansans finished their university football careers in the scoring parade. French, Griffith and Gilman turned in their usual good performances in the backfield. In the line Dick Tomlinson, Ellis, Wally Rouse, Bob Drumm and Roland Eilerts were the standouts. Others playing their last game for K.U. were Howard Fischer, center; Ed Lee, tackle; Dale Mallon, fine running fullback; Ken Morrow, quarterback; Darrell and Delvin Norris, ends;.. and.. Floyd. Temple, fullback. Cliff McDonald, right halfback, has also finished his university career. Cliff received a fractured wrist in the Oklahoma game and was kayed for the rest of the season. Memphis, Tenn.—(U.P.)—Fred Suzore, theater owner and game conservationist, is a busy man in defense of wildlife. He prosecutes between 75 and 100 persons a year for illegal hunting and trespassing. Does He Keep Busy? While the 1949 Jayhawk football season is put to bed amid murmurs of "Wait 'til next year," one select group of Kansas gridmen can step back and take a wide sweeping bow. Included are the lads who first saw action with the K.U. Varsity this season, the sophomores and transfers. By RICHARD DILSAVER Where would the Jayhawkers have gone without Bill Mace's punting, Dean Wells' deadly tackling, Jerry Bogue's passing, Willie Modrein's running? Of equal import were the pass catching antics of Bill Schaake and Aubrey Linville, as well as the defensive line play of Bob Talkington, Carl Sandefur, Kent Thomas, and Ron White. It just wouldn't have been the season it was without their efforts. Gus Football Fan, looking back on nearly three hectic months of the grid sport, is taking a second glance at the University of Missouri Tigers while the Columbians undergo inspection as a Gator bowl prospect. Vacationing in the western sector of the state, we heard more than one word of praise for Dean Wells, the Great Bend product who has done such a stellar job recently in filling in for the injured Cliff McDonald in the defensive secondary. The westerners contend Wells is equally talented offensively and will strut plenty with the pigskin next season. No one will say the Tigers are no a good team, but seldom does one so capable also prove so spadomic. Boasting a 7-3 record, the Missourians actually won only two games this season by comfortable margins and but one was lost decisively. The remainder, whether against some of the best teams in the nation or what looked like pushovers, could have gone either way. Two Tiger losses and one win were by margins of a single point. Four other victories came with only a touchdown difference, usually after Missouri came from behind to win. The luckiest guy in town is he who bet on Arizona plus 50 points and then-listened to the Jayhawkers taper off for more than a quarter of the game after piling up a 46-point lead. The Rose bowl is coming back into its own. After taking a back seat to Cotton, Sugar, and Orange bowl contests for some years as far as thrillers were concerned, California and Northwestern put up a real scrap the past Jan. 1. The California-Ohio State tussle in the Tournament of Roses rates as the best of the 1950 bowl schedule. When filled with hot water, a thick glass will crack more quickly than a thin one. Detroit, Mich. "A packed house fell into a hush as a single man walked on to the middle of the big stage and thereafter the capacity audience of 3,800 people surged with CHARLES LAUGHTON from tears to laughter as the greatest of the great held in the cup of his hand an electrified audience for two hours in one of the most outstanding evenings ever brought to the citizens of Detroit." COMING TO K.U. SUNDAY SUNDAY DECEMBER 11th 8:30 p.m. HOCH AUDITORIUM Presented by: Student Union Activities Tickets $1.22-$1.83-$2.44 including tax Student Union Activities ALL SEATS RESERVED On Sale Now Round Corner Drug Store Strong Hall Bus. Office Get Tickets Early! Jayhawker Track Team Attends NCAA Meet Today The Jayhawker two-mile team will run in the N.C.A.C. four-mile cross country championship at East Lansing today. The K.U. cliff—captains Bob Karnes, Cliff Abels, Herb Semper, Pat Bowers and Dave Breidenthal—will be moving into the four mile distance for the first time this season. Army is the favorite to cop the team championship with defending champion Michigan State, Syracuse, Wisconsin and Miami of Ohio all rating consideration. Kansas Coach Bill Easton, who carried off three straight crowns with his Drake teams, has no title aspirations. But he hopes to better last year's seventh place finish—highest in K.U. history. The nation's top thinclads will meet for this the third annual carnival. Captain Karnes, three-time winner of the Big Seven Fall Two-Mile title, will be taking his third and final shot at the N.C.A.A. individual title. Karnes has run into some hard luck the last two years. In 1947 he was leading 220 yards from the finish, but took a wrong turn and wound up fifth. Last year he broke the national record of the four-mile route with a 20:07.5 performance, but it was good enough only for fourth. Rhode Island State's Bob Black finished first in 19:52.3 with Don Gehrmann, Wisconsin Olympic miler, second and Browning Ross of Villanova third. All three of these will be back this year along with two good newcomers—Dick Shea of Army and Don McEwen of Michigan. 80th Year, Modern-to-the-minute courses keynote training, training program, Training Nv Service, Higher Accounting and Au- dministration, University College B244, Lawrence Business College Once Is More Than Enouah Shea, West Point sophomore, goes Black last week in the I.C. 4A. meet in New York. McEwen, also a sophomore, defeated Gehrmann by 200 yeards to set a new Big Ten record of 19:44.5 Stamp collecting puts a premium on poor printing since a blot, blur or misprint increases the value of a stamp to collectors. Detroit, Mich.—(U.P.)—Mrs. Bertha Phillips said she lost all interest in learning to drive an automobile after she rammed a police car during her first driving lesson. Pep up your pipe with HEINE'S BLEND ... The smoking tobacco with A D.M.S.* degree! *Definitely Milder Smoking --- SUTLIFF TOBACCO CO., 45 Fremont, S. 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