13, 194 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1948 PAGE FIVE n zoo with the leonto-Africa of the slides Norris—Pride Of Northeast Darell Norris, one of the Jay- hawkers leading pass catchers has had plenty of experience playing on cham- pionship athletic teams. He first broke into the championship bracket while playing football with Northeast high school in Darell Norris The 19-year-old journalism junior towers 6 feet 3 inches and weighs 190 pounds. He first played football as a high school freshman at Sedalia, Mo. In 1943 he moved to Kansas City where he played football, basketball and track for three years. Kansas City, Mo., in 1943. As a sophomore he received honorable mention as end on the All-City team of Kansas City. In his junior and senior years he was on the first string of the All-City team. He led his league in punting for three consecutive years and scored 56 points in his senior year as an end. Darell called the signals from his position at end in 1945 and was captain of the Northeast team in 1944 and 1945. Northeast won 21 games and lost three in the three years that Darell played football there. It was the city champion in 1943 and again in 1945 During his three years as a basketball player, he was named on the All-City quintet in his junior and senior years. Northeast won three consecutive city championships while Darell was on the team. He was a teammate of Ed Lee, who also attended Northeast. In track embellished three varsity teams as a pole vaulter, high jumper and hurdler. In all he won nine letters as a high school athlete. Darell came to K.U. in the fall of 1946. He was on the varsity team in 1946 and 1947 and was a member of the Jayhawker Orange Bowl squad. Last spring he was a pole vaulter on Coach Bill Easton's track team. He played baseball as a freshman, but was forced to quit when he hurt his arm in spring practice. Norris, has pitched for the Kansas City Milgrams in the Kansas City Ban Johnson league for three years. The Milgrams won the City title in 1946 and were the Missouri state Ban Johnson champions in 1948. Darell had to wear a nose guard in spring practice so the boys started calling him "Jayhawk." Coach J. V. Sikes refers to Darell as "Jayhawk" and Delvin, Darell's twin brother, as Norris. By ANNE MUKPHY Daily Kansan Sports Edito Kansas can beat Missouri Thanks- giving day if the Jayhawkers play heads-up football for 60-minutes. That is the opinion of Cooper Rollow, former Daily Kansan managing editor and sports editor, after watching the M.U.-S.M.U. game the past weekend. Here is how he explains his comment: (1) Missouri is weakest on pass defense. If the pitching arm of Dick Gilman holds true, the Jayhawkers should be able to score at least twice on passes. (2) Missouri still has not developed a versatile passing offense. This was evident in both the Ohio State and S.M.U. games. When the chips were down and pass completions a "must," the Tigers failed. Several Missouri aerials missed their mark by as much as 10 yards in the S.M.U. encounter. (3) The Jayhawkers must bolster hair end positions; if they don't they are lost. A large part of the effectiveness of the whirwind Faurot running attack comes from repeatedly hammering at the ends until something gives. The first Missouri touchdown against S.M.U.-the one which tied the score 7-7 is a good example: Bus 1105 MASS. Closed Tuesdays "Ah, Just Right!" is what you'll say, after eating at the COURT HOUSE CAFE Entsminger raced parallel to the line of scrimmage from his quarter-back position, faked a lateral to a teammate, and cut sharply between right tackle and end to bolt into paydirt. The tricky "T" attack fashioned by Don Faurot is something to watch. It explodes like a crack of thunder, and takes full advantage of the strong Missouri forward wall. But it is not unheatable. Stop the Tiger ground attack and you have stopped Missouri. Ohio proved that; SMU was unable to do so. Against the Tigers, Doak Walker looked every inch an All-American. Between plays he tapped around the field in a manner typical of the mild, easy-going ways of Southern gentlemen. But when the ball was snapped he shot into action like a jet. Always cool, always with an eye far downfield, the Doak ran, kicked, blocked, and tackled in a manner which reminded many Kansas fans of the years of Ray Evans. Practical household cooking by electricity began as far back as 1910 when the electric range was introduced. PATEE Randolph SCOTT NOW,4 Days Nancy KELLY "Frontier Marshal" ROY ROGERS Weaver Bros. & Elviry — and — "Arkansas Judge" More independent experts smoke Lucky Strike regularly than the next two leading brands combined! An impartial poll covering all the Southern tobacco markets reveals the smoking preference of the men who really know tobacco—auctioneers, buyers and warehousemen. 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