MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVB By GEORGE BROWN, JR. Notes On The Game Dick Gilman turned in one of the better ball handling jobs of his varsity career in the first quarter of Saturday's game with the George Washington Colonials. Gilman's hand offs and fakes were pretty to watch. The placing of Gilman at fullback with Jerry Bogue at quarter definitely strengthened the Jayhawkers passing attack. The maneuver gives Gilman more time to pick his receiver and get off his pass. The Jayhawkers also have two passers in the lineup then. One good sign was the fact that only one Jayhawker pass was intercepted. Bogue also showed the fans he can run with the ball. In the second quarter Jerry romped 41 yards on the bootleg play only to have the play nullified by a penalty. Cliff McDonald again turned in a great defensive job. McDonald, as he did in the Iowa State game, intercepted a pass in the end zone to stop a Colonial scoring threat. It was also in on many tackles in backing up the line. Dick Tomlinson turned in his usual fine performance. He was a fifth man in the George Washington backfield all afternoon. The center of the Jayhawker defensive line was strengthened considerably by the shifting of Big Mike McCormack from tackle to guard. The defensive wall then consisted of McCormack and Tomlinson, guards; Wally Rouse and S.P. Garnett, tackles; and Roland Ellerts at center. Carl Ellis turned in a good job at defensive guard. Wade Stinson played a whale of a game in the Jayhawker backfield on both the offense and defense. Stinson started the Jayhawkers rolling to their second touchdown by intercepting a pass on the Kansas 25 yard line. Two plays later he picked a 20 yard Bogue pass out of the air and raced 40 yards to the George Washington 1 yard line. Willie Modrinc got away for several good gains in the game. He was the leading rusher with 55 yards on 12 attempts. The Jayhawker pass defense looked improved over that of the game with Iowa State, but the Colts still completed too frequently when it counted. Thrutchley Heads Amateur Radio Club Robert G. Thrutchley, engineering senior, was elected president of the Amateur Radio club Wednesday. James S. Heaton, engineering junior, is the new vice-president, and Oliver B. Hammers, engineering junior, is secretary-treasurer. William J. Miller, engineering senior, will direct special activities of the club throughout the year. Members decided Wednesday to broadcast three nights a week. These will be code communications and are intended to increase sending and receiving speeds of members. No regular broadcast schedule has been decided upon. Two radio operators were present at the meeting. They were Michael Hashiko, operator of amateur station VE2AAS in Montreal, Canada and Albert Martin, operator of amateur station WIORN in Whitefield, N.M. Meetings will be on first and third Wednesdays each month at 7:30 p.m. in the electrical engineering laboratory, members decided Wednesday. Students interested in joining the club should call James S. Heaton at 6J. Production of maple sugar in 1948 was the lowest on record, according to the Britannica Book of the Year. KU-GW Statistics Rushing Kansas: Back Att. Yds. Modrcin 12 55 French 5 34 Griffith 7 27 Gilman 6 26 Kansas: Back George Washington: DuGoff 24 55 Jones 7 29 Davis -8 21 Passing Passer Att. Comp. Yds Bogue 7 4 100 Gilman 7 4 72 G. Wash: Davis ... 20 8 173 Trivan ... 2 1 12 Receiving Kansas: Catches Catches Yds Stinson 2 84 Schaake 2 27 Griffith 1 25 Linville 1 7 Norris 1 13 G. Wash: Butler 3 Close 3 Kline 1 KU-NU Frosh Meet Friday With the opening freshman cross country dual meet of the season just a week away, Coach Bill Easton believes his squad is as far advanced in conditioning as the squad of a year ago. The freshmen have a championship to defend. Their predecessors captured the fall and spring Big Seven conference telegraphic titles in 1948. The undefeated squad also won eight telegraphic dual meets. Kansas will open its season Friday in a mile and a half telegraphic meet with Nebraska. Other meets on the schedule will be over a two-mile course. Present opponents for the freshmen are Drake and Iowa State, Saturday, Oct. 22; Oklahoma and Colorado, Saturday, Oct. 29; Missouri and Texas A. and M., Saturday, Nov. 5. The conference meet will be Nov. 12. Other meets probably will be scheduled. The most promising squad members are Louis Clum, Jr., Derby; Bill Farney, Hutchinson; Jim Hershberger, Wichita; Neil McNeill, Topeka and Keith Palmquist, Minneapolis, Minn. These have practiced every day and have been working hard to get into shape, Coach Easton said. The first time trial over a mile and a half course will be run Friday afternoon. Palmquist set the best pace in a recent mile time trial with a time of 4 minutes 53.5 seconds. Clum covered the distance in 4:59 and Farney in 4:59.2. Men with high school experience who want to run can still make the squad, Easton again emphasized. Begin With A Tin Of HEINE'S BLEND ... Pleasing Hundreds Daily! PH.D.* DEGREE The Smoking Tobacco With A Beta Theta Pi "A" and "B." Alpha Epsilon Pi, Jim Beam, and the No Goodniks winn intramural football games Friday afternoon. Beta Theta Pi "A" rolled over Delta Chi 27 to 7. Bill Swanzle lead the way, passing for three of the Beta touchdowns and running the other across. On the receiving end of the scoring aerials were Bill Halverhort, Joe Mendenhall, and $ \textcircled{1} $ Clair Gillen No Goodniks, Jim Beam, Beta's Win Al Lowrie made three conversions. Delta Chi scored on a pass from Bob Bransfield to Merle Steele and converted on Carl Brown's flip o bob McLeroy. All the scoring came in the last half as No Goodniks throttled Sigma Pi 13 to 2. Sigma Pi took the lead when Glenn Bethany trapped a No Goodnik back in the end zone, but the funny-paper characters roared back on Randall Dunn's touchdown passes to Martin Rogers and Wayne Pine and hit Rix Shanline for an extra point. Beta Theta Pi scored in every quarter to down Oread hall 28 to 0 in a fraternity "B" game. Bob Dunne tossed touchdown passes to Ed Stollenwerek, Bogue Harrison, and A. C. Cooke. Keith Wolfenbarger scored the other touchdown on a return of a partially blocked Oread punt. Dunne place kicked one extra point and passed to Dick McEvers for another. The Betas also trapped an Oread ball carrier in the end zone for a safety. Featuring a strong ground attack. Alpha Epsilon Pi “A” team defeated Phi Kappa Tau “B” team 13 to 6. See KIRKPATRICK'S for Guns and Ammunition Kirkpatrick Sport Shop 715 Mass. Ph. 1018 Continuous from 2 p. m. ENDS THURSDAY NOW! —and Color Cartoon — News FRD MacMURRAY • MAUREEN O'HARA Continuous from 2 p.m. NOW — Ends Wed. —2nd Big Hit— Fullback Lou Kaplan scored on end sweeps of 20 and 5 yards to give the victors an early first quarter lead. Phi Kappa Tau fought back in the final quarter to push across their lone touchdown on a 25-yard pass from Fred Cox to Jim Weimer. Kaplan carried across the winner's only extra point. Latest World News Jim Beam's Dream Team maintained their perfect record by defeating Phi Delta Theta 15 to 0. The victors scored their first tally on the last play of the first half as Bob Mosser raced across the goal line after taking a 35-yard pass from halfback Bill Beeson. In the fourth quarter, Beeson again hit Mosser with a 5-yard button-hook pass in the end zone. End Jim Rhine tagged a Phi Delt TUE - WED "WUTHERING HEIGHTS" Merle Oberon Laureence Olivier David Niven —plus— back behind the goal line for a safety to finish the scoring. The Phi Delts never seriously threatened as they were kept deep in their own territory throughout most of the game by a stout Dream Team defense. DISNEY CARTOON New Show Time, 7:00—9:10 Open Every Nite 6:30 p.m. New Babies Create Need For 250,000 Schoolrooms Chicago -- (U.P.) The post-war boom in babies will make it necessary to provide school facilities for at least eight million more children within the next years, a survey shows. Camera Shop 846 Mass. Ph. 1707 Hank Brown's A study by the Council of State Governments on school systems across the nation shows that at least 250,000 new schoolrooms will be needed to accommodate these children. "YES --- I GOT YOUR LOVELY PHOTOGRAPH. --- YES, ITS HANGING RIGHT HERE ON MY WALL!" Franz Joseph Haydn composed more than 400 major compositions during his lifetime. LUST FOR GOLD ACTUALLY HAPPENED! IT'S BASED ON THE HISTORICAL RECORDS OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA. 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