PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 25.1946 By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Writer Idaho U, will meet Whitman College of Walla Walla in the second Vandal cage game of the year tomorrow. After that contest at Moscow, Idaho, the Vandals will embark on an eastern trip which will eventually bring them to Lawrence to open the Jawhawk home season Dec. 11. The first leg of the trip will take Idaho to Madison Square Garden in New York where the 1946 Pacific Coast league champs will take on New York City college. Sparking the Vandals again this year will be Fred "Wimpy" Quinn, one of 10 returning lettermen. From the "big town," the Vandals travel to Washington, D.C., for a game with Georgetown. Two days later, they travel north to Philadelphia to meet St. Joseph's. Quinn, 6 ft. 3 in., 195 pounds, was named all-conference last year, and was listed on the second team of the Helms foundation all-American squad. On Dec. 9, the Vandals start home, stopping for a game with Kentucky, one of the nation's top teams, and with Kansas, another. On Dec. 13 and 14, the Vandals halt for a doubleheader with Wyoming, and return home to warm up for the conference season. Idaho finished the season last year with a record of 22 wins and 9 losses, compared to Kansas' record of 19 and 2. The Vandals lost two of their non- conference games to the Salt Lake City, Simplot-Deserets, members of the same league as Phillips 66, Kansas City M & O, and Denver Ambrose. . . . --- Ticket sales for the Kansas-K.S.-T.C. game at Emporia, Dec. 7, topped the 3,000-mark Friday, Coach E. D. Fish reported. Most of the sales have been by mail, Fish said. He also reported that coaches of more than 20 high school teams have bought tickets for their players. We agree completely with the Kansas City Star's: In Memoriam—the Rose Bowl: Born—Jan. 1, 1916 Died—Nov. 20, 1946 With the new agreement between the Pacific Coast league and the Big Nine, the Rose Bowl has become just another intersectional match. Former days, in which the leading team in the country was invited to oppose the Pacific hosts are now gone. This year's Big Nine is one of the weakest conferences in the nation, but the winner will get the bid—over such powerhouses as Army, Notre Dame, George, Tennessee, Rice, Pennsylvania, and others superior to many Big Nine eleven. --- Army, snubbed by the Rose bowl, has voted down all post-season games, including a re-match with Notre Dame which would have been played at Los Angeles. Such a game would undoubtedly have drawn a much greater crowd than the bowl itself, but the Cadets saw fit to refuse it. They also rejected bids from the Sugar and Orange Bowls. Last-Quarter Score Gives Phi Gam's 1946 Intramural Football Title By WILLIAM CONBOY (Daily Kansas Sports Writer) A fourth-quarter touchdown pass gave Phi Gamma Delta a 6 to 0 victory over Sigma Chi in the finals of the intramural football championship played Friday afternoon in Memorial stadium. The scoring toss, from Halfback Kenny Johnson to End Curtis Hinshaw, climaxed a hard-fought contest in which a superior Phi Gam aeria attack offset a Sigma Chi running advantage to hand the losers their first defeat of the season. Lynn Leigh, Sigma Chi In regular divisional play, the Phi Gam's had previously suffered their only loss at the hands of the Sigma Chi's by a score of 1 to 0. The Phi Gam's kicked off to start the game. The ball was down on the Sigma Chi 15-yard line. Two running plays netted a first down, but the Phi Gam line dug in to force a Sigma Chi munt four plays later. Near the end of the quarter, Charley Wagstaff, Sigma Phi speed-merchant, intercepted a Johnson pass and returned it to the Phi Gam 15-yard line. On the first play of the second quarter, Johnson reciprocated by grabbing a Sigma Chi aerial if the end zone for an automatic touchback to end the threat. Three minutes before the half, Johnson uncoiled a southpaw pitch to Hinshaw for 21 yards. After he had passed for 15 more yards, Johnson hit Marshall Hulett with a 25-yard toss to place the pigskin on the Sigma Chi 8-ward line. After three plays lost 12 yards, Johnson's fourth-down pass was thrown out of the end zone and the Sigma Chi'i took over. In the third quarter, an exchange of quick kicks gave the Sigma Chi's the ball on their own 35-yard line. After a running play had lost five yards, Kenny White faded back and completed a 40-yard pass to bring the Sigma Chi's close to scoring territory. Another aerial was good for 14 yards and a first down. Johnson then leaped high into the air for the second time in the game to spear a Sigma Chi pass in the end zone and stifle the scoring chance. The Sigma Chi's penetrated into enemy territory at the start of the final quarter when Wagstaff returned a Johnson punt 40 yards to the Phi Gam 33-yard line. From that point, Lynn Leigh, Sigma Chi fullback, attempted a field goal four plays later, but it was no good. Near the end of the final period, Phi Gami Bill Palmer intercepted a Sigma Chi pass and returned it to the losers' 37-yard line. Johnson picked up five yards on an end run. On the next play, the Sigma Chi's were penalized to the 15-yard line for pushing the pass receiver. Johnson then rifted the ball into the end zone, where a Sigma Chi defender batted the ball away from one receiver only to see Shinshaw make a diving catch of the pigskin before it hit the turf. The play was worth six points and the ball game to the Phi Gam's. The strong line play of the losers held the Phi Gam's to a net loss of 11 yards by rushing, while Sigma Chi backs picked up 35 yards by the ground route. In the air, however, the winners rolled up 138 yards as compared with 68 for the Sigma Chi's. Each team intercepted five passes. Officials for the title game were Henry Shenk, Ray Kanehl, and Reginald Strait of the physical education department. The statistics: | | P.G. | S.C | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | First downs | 7 | 4 | | Net yards rushing | —11 | 35 | | Net yards passing | 138 | 68 | | Forward passes attempted | 31 | 17 | | Forward passes comp. | 10 | 4 | | Forward passes int. by | 5 | 5 | | Punting average | 33 | 31 | | Yards lost penalties | 10 | 20 | Lakeview, Ore. (UP)—Woodsman I. J. Pradmore was felling trees in the Mud Creek area when a 40-pound porcupine topped on his back. Attendants at a local hospital removed 120 quilts from Pradmore's hide. Women's Rifle Club Meeting Postponed Until Dec. 3 Has Prickly Feeling Members of the Women's Rifle club will meet at 7 p.m., Dec. 3 instead of tomorrow, as originally scheduled, Lt. Col. K. E. Rosebush, the club's commanding officer, announced today. Beginning Dec. 3, both classroom and firing sessions will be held only on Tuesdays, he said. Reason given for the change is that too many other activities conflict with the club's night firing sessions. Cleans Hop Crop Yakima, Wash. (UP) — William Gamasche, Yakima Valley hOp grower, has perfected a "jigger" which cleans hops and makes it possible for hop crops in the United States to go to market as clean or cleaner than those in European countries. Rains Delay Harvest; Livestock, Wheat Good Topcka. (UP)—Federal and state agricultural officials today told of a favorably progressing Kansas wheat crop, but reported delay in harvest operations and fall plowing because of rain and snow. The harvest of corn sorghums and soybeans was delayed over much of the state by rains and wet fields. Livestock was maintained in a generally good condition except in the extreme western counties where snow and wet fields hampered wheat pasturing and stock movement. Moscow, Ida. (UP)—The most loyal alumnus football fan has been found at the University of Idaho. He requested six tickets to "Idaho vs. Whoever else plays" in the Rose Bowl game at Pasadena, Cal., Jan. 1, 1947. For Those Slick, Snow Days in December CALL TODAY For An Appointment Our expert mechanics will service your car thoroughly. Morgan-Mack Motor Co. 609 MASS. 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