31, 1949 MONDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE OCO By GEORGE BROWN. JR. Nothing Lacking In 38-0 Romp By 'New' Jayhawkers I once heard a man remark that the 1949 Jayhawkers were "lacking in spirit and roughness." He should have seen Saturday's 38 to 0 romp over Kansas State. The "new" Jayhawkers were lacking in nothing as Kansas fans—and Kansas fans well satisfied—and Kansas State said "just wait until next year." The Jayhawkers now have a conference record of one win and three losses. THE STATISTICE The 33,500 Dad's day attendance set a record for the Kansas State Aggies series. The previous mark of 20,033 was set in 1947. K.U. K.S First Downs 21 10 Rushing 15 10 Passing 5 0 Penalties 1 0 Net Yards Rushing 287 168 Forwards attmpt. 25 10 Forwards compld. 12 12 Net yards frwrds. 199 0 Intercepted by 4 2 Yds. intercep. rtn. 44 0 Punts, number 3 6 Returned by 15 0 Punts, average 25 35 Kickoffs, number 7 113 Returned by 18 113 Fumbles 4 6 Own fumbles re- covered. 3 1 Penalties 9 6 Yds. Lost penalties 60 36 SCORE BY PERIODS Kansas ... 6 6 14 12-38 Kansas State 0 0 0 0-0 Kansas Scoring: Touchdowns— French 2, Amberg, Lamping, Mallon, Smith. Points after touchdowns—Rinehart 2 (placements). Kansas hit pay dirt quick on a 69 yard sustained drive which took 11 plays. Quarterback Jerry Bogue passed seven yards to end Lynn Smith to cap the drive. Forrest Griffith returned the opening kickoff 18 yards to the 51 yard line. Four nice runs by Bud French and two Dick Gilman to Smith aerials brought the ball to the seventh. Griffith scored to the seven. Bogue and Smith then took over. Bill Rinehart's try for the extra point was wide. In the opening minutes of the second quarter, the Aggies made their deepest penetration of the afternoon into Kansas territory. Hi Faubion and Elmer Creviston teamed together to carry the ball to the Jayhawker 16. Lyle Koontz, however, funneled in by Chuck O'Neal recovered for Kansas on the Jayhawker 29 yard line. The Jayhawkers then went 71 yards in five plays to mark up their second score. French sliced through the line from the one yard line for the touchdown Rinehart's kick was wide. A 52 yard pass from Gilman to Bill Schaake started the march. French went eight yards to the 12 yard line. A delaying the game penalty set the Jayhawkers back to the 17 yard line. On the next play Gilman hit Griffith and he moved down to the five. French then smashed to the one before going over. wont the kickoff the Aggies fum- walkoutKansas recovered and went discussionsof mark where Kansas leading steer on downs. The Jay- Carr Spellers scored twice in writer. South connected with French on a 40 pass for the first touch-down. Griffith raced 22 yards in this drive on one of his best runs from scrimmage this season. Bill Rinehart added the extra point. Johnny Amberg raced 31 yards for the next counter. He broke through the left side of the Aggie line, cut back to the middle and went all the way. Rinchart again kicked the extra point. Kansas scored twice in the fourth quarter using only three passes out of a total of 26 plays from scrimmage. Willie Modrein highlighted the Jayhawker running attacks in this quarter. The first score of the quarter came on a three yard plunge by Henry GILMAN BOGUE The Jayhawker's twin passers accounted for 153 yards in Saturday's game by completing seven passes out of sixteen attempts. Lamping, Rinehart's kick was no good making the score 32 to 0. Dean Wells started the fireworks as he intercepted Jon O'Connor's pass on the Jayhawker 30 yard line and ran it back 39 yards to the Wildcat 31. Wells was out in the clear but slipped and fell. The last score came on a 15 yard pass from Ken Morrow to Dale Mallon. Morrow handled the ball very smoothly on pitch outs during the drive. Rinehart's kick was blocked as the pass from center was low. How much Kansas controlled the ball during the game is revealed in a video of the Jayhawks ran a total of 91 plays and camouflage to 38 plays for Kansas State. The Wildcats made a game of it during the first half, however, they made several costly mistakes. They fumbled five times and only recovered one. They attempted 3 passes, completed none, and had one intercepted. The Aggies didn't complete one pass during the game. Creviston and Faubion amassed a total of 146 yards rushing to keep Kansas State in the game. K. U.'s double barrelled passing attack of Gilman and Bogue accounted for 153 yards on seven completions out of 16 attempts. Schaake gathered in two passes for a total of 64 yards to lead the pass receiving department for the game. Kansas State played without the services of their star fullback Gerald Hackney and halfback Ted Maupin. Robot Starter Gun Used At Track Meets Lee Anderson, former University of Illinois athlete, said he got the idea for the device while watching a track meet. Danville, Ill.—(U.P.)—A sporting goods firm executive has designed a robot starter which gets track runners off to an even start, guarding against jumping the gun. The device has a tube containing a blank cartridge chamber extending seven feet above it. An electric eye focuses directly in front of the starting line and a foul horn sounds if a runner jumps the gun. Read the Daily Kansan daily. BY RICHARD DILSAVER Further proof to the great inconsistencies of present-day athletics was displayed in the Jayhawks' 38 to 0 rout of Kansas State. That comes from one who, back in September, watched a lackadaisical K U. aggregation be pushed around by the Chicago Bears and also viewed Kansas State, looking like the Chicago Bears, smother a not-somedicre Fort Hays State. About then we were wondering just how far away from Mt. Oread we could get when the Aggies came to town. But now we'll hail the power of Jules V. Sikes, and hope that Nebraska had its big day against Mizzou. Saturday's fray presented a signal-calling duel that was strictly between sophomores—Jerry Bogue and Hi Faubion. Although he's a halfback, Faubion took over the Wildcat strategy this week to ease the pressure on Jon O'Connor. Wildcat Elmer Creviston had his troubles getting acquainted to the fullback spot usually occupied by the injured Gerald Hackney. On the first and third occasions he carried the ball, he fumbled—and the Jayhawks recovered each time. There was considerable press-box criticism of coach Ralph Graham of Kansas State using a T formation when the Cats weren't able to employ an adequate passing attack. Not one of the 10 attempted K-State acerials was completed. And speaking of press boxes, one of the more sage remarks that drifted about the enclosure above Memorial stadium was attributed to Emil Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, who was busy keeping statistics. Upon announcement of the 40 to 8 out of George Sauer's Navy team by both coaches, he looked up from his work long enough to say, 'Why don't they just split Notre Dame into four teams and send one to each major bowl game.' Wildcat center Harold Robinson, first Negro to participate in modern conference football, was very much in the ball game before being injured near the close of the third quarter. In fact, Robinson played every minute until he was assisted from the field. The injury to the Aggies' star linebacker came is the result of an attempt to block Forrest Griffith just after the husky K. U. fullback had been sent off. The team sailed over the K-State goal line. Hitting a powerhouse like Fiery Forrest, especially when he's well underway, just isn't healthy. The Jayhawk's terrific ground attack, especially in the second half, took everyone by surprise. In the last 30 minutes of the game, Kansas rolled over 211 yards of Memorial stadium terra firma. However, the Wildcats outgained Sikes' crew on the ground during the first half, 76 yards for K. U. to 95 for K-State. Loose lines: While on defense, K U. doesn't regularly employ a center DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE 1015 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. St., Lawrence, Kans. Student bicycle tours, Europe 1950. Register NOW. Conducted and independent travel. No charge for our service. AS YOU LIKE IT Smooth, creamy ice cream from Any flavor ice cream you want with bananas and topping. FRITZEL JAYHAWK Phone 182 Dean Wells, defensive right halfback (23), is shown after intercepting Jon O'Connor's (60) pass in the fourth quarter. He ran it back 39 yards. He was in the clear but slipped and fell on the Aggie 31 yard line. Kansas players left to right are Bill Mace (partially hidden), Chuck O'Neal (84) and Bud French (40). 834 Vt. Eleventh Track Win As Colorado Falls This was the eleventh consecutive victory for a Bill Easton coached team. The Jayhawker two-mile track team defeated Colorado 10 to 29 at Boulder Saturday. Captain Bob Karnes, Cliff Abel and Herb Semper tied for first place in 9 minutes, 52 seconds. K.U.'s Pat Bowers finished fourth. George Fitzmaurice, first Buffalo to finish, came in fifth. Dave Breidental, Kansas, finished sixth followed by three Colorado runners. Colorado's fifth runner was forced out before the end of the race. Guard Carl Ellis takes the line-backer's post usually filled by a pivot man... The deepest penetration into Jayhawk territory by the Wildcats was the surge to the K. U. 16 in the second quarter. That threat ended when Lyle Koontz lost control of Don Stehley's pitchout and end Chuck O'Neal retrieved for Kansas. at Personalized Fall Changeover Shields Standard Service 9th and Vt. Ph. 2021 . Passers for both teams took quite a pounding after getting their tosses away, despite the fact that no penalties for roughing the passer were called. Bogue, Gilman, and O'Connor took their turns in wobbling from the field after one bump too many. Read the Want Ads Daily. Charlton INSURANCE Phone 689 (across from Post Office) GOING TO LINCOLN SATURDAY? If you are, then check you closet! Bet some of the clothes you plan to wear need to be cleaned or laundered! 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