PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1948 Kansas Strikes Through Air To DownStubborn GW12-0 SPECIAL TO THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN A hard charging, sure tackling George Washington team forced the Kansas Jayhawkers to take to the air to win a 12 to 0 intersectional game in Washington's Griffith stadium Friday night. Around 13,800 persons watched the Jayhawkers annex their second victory out of five games in the series with the Colonials which began in 1933. It was the Kansan's fourth $ ^{\textcircled{2}} $ consecutive win following the onepoint loss to Texas Christian in the season's opener. The Colonials now own a two won, three lost record. The Kansans, 20-point favorites the day before the game, went into the fray rated only 7 points better than their eastern opponents. The last minute change in odds was based on the strong showing Bo Rowland's boys made the week before in pulling one of the biggest upsets of the season by downing the Virginia Cavaliers, and on the hunch that the Jayhawks might be taking the Colonials too lightly. The Washington odds makers figured "Handy" Andy Davis and his teammates might still have that winning fever. They weren't far from wrong. The Colonials were definitely in the upset mood. It took a better-manned Kansas team four quarters to convince the experts they were the better team, but the Colonials never did seem to be convinced. Davis and Dick Koester, Colonial backfield stars were the equal of anything the Jayhawkers had, but Sikes' boys had them far outnumbered. The Kansas backs kept banging away at the constantly varying defense, thrown up by the Colonials. They were able to grind out short gains consistently in midfield but they could never break away from the sharp tackling Colonial secondary. Davis, besides playing a superb game on offense, again and again brought down a Kansas back as he shot through into the open. When the Jayhawkers got within the opposing 20-yard line, their ground game bogged down. They gained 259 net yards rushing but had to call on the passing arms of Dick Gilman and Frank Pattee to cross onto paydirt. The Kansas passing attack was not up to the standard set in the last three games. The Jayhawkers completed only 4 out of 17 passes. The Colonial line, the hardest charging forward wall the Kansans had met this season, rushed the passers so they had to hurry their throws if they were going to get them off at all. Gilman was thrown four times for over 40 yards total loss. A warning note for future Jay-hawker opponents was sounded. The dominance of the pass offense by Gilman was ended as Pattee, Amberg, MacDonald, and Wilson all took a turn on the throwing end. The result reminded one of the Missouri backfield in which any player is apt to pass or run with the ball. Gilman, in return, carried the ball more than in the past. He gained several yards at important points on quarterback sneaks, delayed bucks, and bootleg plays around end. The Colonials with Koester doing the ball carrying gained 50 of their 130 net yards rushing around the Kansas ends. With a flock of blockers in front of the runner, it took a lot of bruising football to bring him down. The easteners stuck to a single wing offense with the exception of a couple of passes thrown from a punt formation. With Davis handling the ball on nearly every play, the deception and multiple ball handling in the backfield were almost as baffling as from a "T." Davis found frequent holes as he completed a full spinner and darted through the center of the Kansas line. Kansas played without the services of Bud French who was out with a bruised leg. Ed Lee and Hugh Johnson played only a few minutes. Patte put on a spot kicking show which won the Washington scribes' praise. In 6 tries, he kicked on the 11, twice on the 7, and on the 6-yard lines. The uncanny accuracy of his punting kept the never-saydie Colonials in a hole most of the game. Twice Davis, following such a pun, gambled and completed passes while standing in his own end zone. The Colonials made only two real threats. Late in the second quarter they marched from their 32-yard line to the Kansas 10 before Bertuzzi intercepted a Davis pass in the end zone for a touchback. Having prevented one Colonial touchdown, Bertuzzi gave them another scoring opportunity when he fumbled on the first play from scrimmage in the second half. The Colonials managed to get only from the 30 to the 9 before being held on fourth down by a matter of inches. Kansas dominated play throughout the game and probably would have scored several more touchdowns if they had been able to cash in on a few of their early scoring opportunities. The way it turned out, they could never get up enough of a lead to break the spirit of the Colonials. The first time Kansas got the ball, they rolled up four consecutive first downs from their own 35 to the George Washington 19 before Bertuzzi and Forrest Griffith were stopped for no gain and a couple of Gilman's passes went awry. A pass interception cut short the second offensive. The next time the Jayhawkers got to the Colonial 32 before the charging line trapped Gilman for a loss. Moffett was wide open but the Kansas quarterback did not have a chance to get the toss off. On the fourth try, Gilman was again rushed and he missed Mac-Donald. In all, Kansas got within the George Washington 20-yard line six times. Their first scoring drive came midway in the second quarter. They began on their own 32-yard line, Gilman, Bertuzzi, Griffith, MacDonald, and Pattee, ran the ball to the George Washington 28. With the count third and 10. Gilman ran to his right, spotted Griffith open diagonally to his left, hit him on the 10-yard line, and the Lee's Summit boy carried the ball over for PATEE — NOW — Ends Wed. We bring you this great show at our regular prices — Adults 39c; Children 12c the first six points. Sperry's kick was wide to the left. A determined ball club, George Washington, played all the harder when the Jayhawkers failed to convert after the first half touchdown. It was still a tie ball game to them for a touchdown and extra point would have won it. The other successful Kansas drive came late in the third quarter. It featured a 20-yard pass, Amberg to Bryan Sperry, runs by MacDonald and Pattee, a sure touchdown pass Gilman to Moffett which the left half dropped in the end zone, and finally a 30-yard pass from Patte to MacDonald for the score. MacDonald had eluded the George Washington defense and was all alone on the 5-yard line. Sperry's kick again was wide. Another drive, sparked chiefly by the line busting of John Amberg, fizzled when a 15-yard clipping penalty set the Jayhawkers back from the George Washington 11 to the 26. May Use Shale For Fertilizer Mr. Runnels said that he will gather samples for testing here, when he returns from Tulsa the latter part of this week. He is attending the Oklahoma Mineral Industries conference sponsored by the Oklahoma Geological Survey, state Chamber of Commerce, and other state organizations. The possibility of using the shale that is found abundantly in eastern Kansas for fertilizer is being studied by Russell Runnels, chemist for the state Geological Survey. Kansas City, Mo., Oct. 18 - (UP)—A second straight major intersectionsal victory today had moved the Missouri Tigers into the upper circle of the nation's football teams and definitely stamped Don Faurot's squad as the one to beat for the Big Seven conference title. Missouri Is Team To Beat The Tigers put it squarely up to Oklahoma, to Kansas and to any other teams with designs on the crown that their intentions definitely re along the championship line. This triumph not only catapulted Missouri into the select group of the nation's grid leaders; it also brought revenge to Coach Faurot, whose Tiger teams twice had been defeated by Sauer-coached squads when Sauer was skipper at K.U. in 1946 and 1947. But there was no Ray Evans to help Sauer's cause at Baltimore. Instead there were Braznell, Glorioso, Brinkman, Entsinger, Ghnouly, and a tremendous powerful line—all wearing the Missouri colors. The spotlight belongs to Missouri as the teams swing into the final half of the campaign. Saturday it will be Iowa State against the Tigers at Columbia while Nebraska meets Kansas at Lawrence, and Kansas State and Colorado play at Boulder. Oklahoma gets a chance for added national distinction when the Sooners oppose Texas Christian at Fort Worth Saturday night. Within the conference, chief interest will center on the Kansas-Nebraska meeting. Iowa State isn't conceded a chance against Missouri, and lowly K-State and Colorado will be playing strictly for a "booby" prize. Wisconsin, with its thousands of dairy farms and cheese factories, produces one out of every two pounds of cheese sold in the United States. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed - - 75 Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed - 7' CASH AND CARRY ONLY Kansas State vs Colorado Boulder. Iowa State vs Missouri at Columbia. Big 7 Games This Week Saturday: Oklahoma vs Texas Christian at Fort Worth. (Night). 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