1949 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVB MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1949 Sigma Chi Tops Beta 1 To O, Kap Sig, Phi Delt Also Win Friday was a cold day for those fighting Beta's. The Beta's, who have won almost more intramural trophies than they can count, dropped two games Friday. Sigma Chi "B" stopped Beta "B" 1 to 0 in an overtime contest. Jim Beam, however was not so gentle. The Independent "B" team rolled up a 19 to 0 victory. Kappa Sigma, Sigma Nu, and Phi Delt "B", Phi Delt "A", Oread hall and Dix club won other games. Jim Stout's touchdown pass to Bob Talbert in the final three minutes of play enabled Kappa Sigma to defeat Sigma Phi Epsilon "B" by an unusual 11 to 7 score. Stout passed to Bob Pickerell for the extra scoring on a third quarter safety then fell behind as Stony Ward flipped a neat touchdown pass to Ernie Shank. The placement attempt was good. The hustling Kappa SIG's scored another safety as the game ended. Walt Quiring paced Phil Delta Theta to a 12 to 0 win over Pi Kappa Alpha. Quiring intercepted a pass and raced for one touchdown and passed to Ray Irwin for the second. A first quarter safety gave Sigma Nu a 2 to 0 victory over Phi Kappa in a fraternity "B" game . Phi Delta Theta scored on a short pass in the final quarter to edge Alpha Epsilon Pi 6 to 2 in a fraternity "B" contest. A Phi Kappa back dropped a center snap in the end zone for the automatic safety. The losers pulled two sucker plays only to have its driver drop the pass in behind the Sigma Nu defense. The losers trapped a Phi Delt ball carrier in the end zone for a second quarter safety. The two-point margin stood until Vic Eddy passed to Bob Mehl for the winning touchdown. The extra point attempt was blocked. Oread hall had to go overtime to whip Phi Kappa Tau, 7 to 6. Phi Tau scored on the opening play of the game, then was stopped cold the rest of the game. Oraed tied up the game with a third-quarter score, then outgained Phi Tau in the overtime period to win. Sigma Chi "B" and Beta Theta Pi "B" battled four scoreless quarters and two overtime periods before Sigma Chi scored. The Sigma Chi “T” formation swung in high gear in the second overtime period as quarterback Rossides Maupin lateraled to George Holden who flipped a 25-yard pass to halfback Dudley Benton for the necessary yardage. In the first overtime period, both Beta and Sigma Chi passed into the end zone for the same amount of yardage. scored by the passing of John Ferguson, Dix club scored in every quarter to defeat Sigma Pi 31 to 0. Ferguson took the kick-off on his own 20-yard line and passed 15 yards to Bob Van Horn who ran 55 yards for the initial marker. In the second period, end Punteney climaxed a 60-yard scoring drive when he grabbed a 5-yard pass from Ferguson. The next touchdown was made early in the second half when Ferguson completed a 40-yard aerial to Puntenge in the end-zone. Two 20-yard passes by Ferguson were good for two more scores in the last quarter. Carl Engwall placekicked the only extra point. Edward Everett, famous orator, delivered an address two hours long at the Gettysburg dedication. REUSCH WATCH REPAIR —Complete Line of Jewelry— Watch and Jewelry Repair —Expert Engraving— We Solder Glass Frames While You Wait IM Schedule Independent "A" games Field 1—Last Chance vs. Don Henry Today's IM Games Field 2—Wesley sv B.roncos Field 3—Battenfeld hall vs. Y.M.-C.A. 108 1/2 Mass. Phone 903 Field 4—Nogoodniks vs. Oread Field 5—Dix club vs. A.I.E.E. Field 6—Sterling hall vs. Air Screws Fraternity "B" game Field 7—Pi K. A. "B" vs. Phi Psi "B" Yuma. Ariz. Oct. 3—(U.P.)—Endurance flyers Wizy, Wood Jongwend and Bob Woodhouse passed the 935-hour marl. in the air today and reported they might stay aloft until their plane "breaks up." Endurance Flyers Pass 935-Hour Mark But their immediate goal is the world's record of 1,008 hours set earlier this year by Bill Barris and Dick Riedel, Fullerton, Cal. The pair reported to ground crewmen yesterday that they were in first class shape and felt they could stay in the air indefinitely so long as their little "City of Yuma" held together. Bookies Pick Yanks In 10-Cent Series New York, Oct. 3—(U.P.)—The big town was all excited about its first-10-cent World Series today, but to the New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers it all seemed a little anti-climactic. They still were too battered, bruising pennant race triumphs t little time—two days in fact—will* have cured all that when the umpires call play ball in Yankee stadium at 1 p.m. E.S.T. Wednesday for the first game of the Series. The strain of the history-making pennant fights will be forgotten by then and they will go out for some more of baseball's glory and gold. And the first New York overnight betting lines established the Yankees as a 6 to 5 favorite. Neither manager Casey Stengel of the American league champion Yankees nor Burt Shotton, who led the dust-raising hooligans of Brooklyn to the National league flag, had time to think about the Series. They still were patting their players on the back for coming through Sunday on the final day of the season to win out—the Yankees with a stirring 5 to 3 victory over the Red Sox, and the Dodgers with a 10th inning 9 to 7 triumph over the Bats. Neither cared to discuss series pitching plans although Stengel said he would announce his starting pitcher after the Yankees workout at the stadium this morning. He will have three of his big four ready—Ed Lopat (15-10); Allie Reynolds (17-6) and Tommy Byrne (15-7) with the dope indicating that he probably would go with Lopat, a stocky southpaw. Only Vic Raschi (21-10) who hurled the Yankees to their thrilling victory Sunday did not figure in Stengel's plans for Wednesday's starters. As he did in 1947 when his Dodgers dropped the World Series to the Yankees four games to three, Shotton indicated that he would not announce his starting pitchers until just before game time each day. But the baseball experts were betting that he would send Preacher Roe, the skinny Left hander who won 15 games, most of them key ones, out to the mound in an effort to get the Dodgers off on the right foot. That would leave the big Negro ace, Don Newcombe, who couldn't hold a five-run lead against the Phillies Sunday, for the second game at the stadium. Newcombe, who probably will be selected as the rookie of the year, won 17 games in the Brooklyn drive to the pennant. 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