PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 18, 1946 Kansas is in the running for a bowl bid. The chances are remote, because of the 0-56 shellacking the Jayhawkers absorbed at Tulsa, but a share in the Big Six championship would put Kansas in line for the Cotton Bowl or possibly the Oil Bowl. By BOB DELLINGER Dailv Kansan Sports Writer It has been the usual practice for the Cotton Bowl to invite the Big Six champs to fight it out with the Southwest conference winners, and it will probably be that way this year. Kansas must now beat Missouri to win a share in the title. After the victory over Kansas State, the Hawkers are again on the inside road leading to the top. A victory over the Tigers would leave Kansas with a Big Six record of four wins and one loss, and a share in its first title since 1930. The bowl which is stirring up the most comments is the famous Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Cal. The committee for selections is facing a real problem this year. Army, 1944 and 1945 national champions, has indicated a willingness to accept a bowl bid, and the Rose Bowl seems the most likely for the still-powerful Cadets. But the Big Nine, after years of refusal of Rose Bowl offers, has come out with a 7 to 2 approval of a contract between the winners of that conference and the Pacific Coast conference. If the Big Nine winner were ignored by the committee, the long-sought contract might be lost for good. The West Coast fans would like to see Army in action, especially because the Cadets with their "touch-down twins" have never been out that way. Davis and Blanchard would be a welcome sight west of the Mississippi, and would draw well wherever they should go, even to the 100,000 seat Rose Bowl. Other bowls in the country aren't having as much trouble lining up candidates. The Cotton Bowl has an automatic host in the Southwest champs. Out in western Texas, at the Sun Bowl, unbeaten Hardin-Simmons is running a close race with Texas Tech for the job of host to Denver or Missouri Valley. Miami probably will repeat as Orange Bowl hosts, facing Boston College, Vanderbilt, or Delaware. The Owl society, honorary organization for junior men, may be reorganized, after being inactive for three years. In the running for Sugar Bowl competition are Tula, Wake Forest, Tennessee, Georgia, Georgia Tech, and Louisiana State. Men elected in 1942 and 1943 will meet tomorrow to discuss plans for electing new members from the junior class. If new members are elected, they will take over the organization immediately, Allen Cromley, former president, said. Those elected in 1942 were Cromley, Dean Ostrum, Ray Evans, William Michener, and James Waugh. Rice is the probable host for the Oil Bowl if the Owls aren't holding forth in the Cotton Bowl on New Year's Day. The other spot is wide open, and Kansas may be the one. Elected in 1943 were Laird Campbell, Robert Hutchinson, Herbert Kauffman, Harold McSpadden, Arthur Partridge, Richard Royer, Tylon Schuerman, John Triplett, George Worrall, John Margrave, Edward Colburn, and W. C. Hartley. Time To Retire Quincy, Mass. (UP)—The meat business has too many headaches these days for Frank Langley. Now edging 90, he's just retired as a butcher. Former Members Plan Owl Society Revival K.U. Runners Fifth In Big Six Two-Mile The K.U. two-mile team took fifth place in the Big Six distance run at Norman, Okla. Saturday. Earl Jones, Kansas speedster who has taken over the distance chores for Ray Kanehl's thinclads, came in second behind Bobby Ginn of Nebraska. Hal Moore who has won seven consecutive Big Six races pulled a leg muscle two weeks ago but was able to finish in 17th place. Other K.U. men finished in 27th, 28th, and 30th place. In winning first place the Oklahoma Sooners took third, eighth, 10th, 11th, and 12th places to total 44 points. Kansas State followed with 63; Missouri, 65; Nebraska, 76; Kansas 104; and Iowa State, 113. I-M Football Playoff Begins Tomorrow Managers of the eight top intramural football teams met Friday to draw for positions in the single elimination championship play-off, and the first round will begin tomorrow with all eight teams competing. The four winners will then advance into semi-final contests Thursday, and the championship game will be plaved Saturday. The first round pairings, with won-and-lost records in parentheses follows: Beta Theta Pi (7-0) vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon (5-1) Phi Delt Theta (5-1) vs. Phi Gamma Delta (5-1) Sigma Chi (6-0) vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon (5-1) Tau Kappa Epsilon (5-1) vs. Phi Kappa Psi (6-1) She Threw Knives At Him, But 'Didn't Mean Anything' Minneapolis, Minn. (AP)—Nick Montos, 70, today filed suit for divorce from his 60-year-old bride, charging that she threw knives and hammers t him "as if they were toys." "Apparently she didn't mean anything by it." Montos said in his brief, "but she kept me in constant fear and suspense." Thrills Home Town Washington, Pa. (UP) — John Sparky Jarosik, war veteran, parachuted over the town of Meadowlands to fulfill a vow taken just before he hit Normandy on D-Day with the first wave of paratroopers. Jarosik had promised himself to jump over his home town if he ever returned. Anderson Wins IM Tennis Tournament Joan Anderson, Alpha Delta Pi, won the women's intramural tennis championship Friday, her second individual title in less than a week. Her finals opponent was Donna Mueller, Delta Gamma, who succumbed. 6-3. 6-4. The 1946 tennis crown brings "Jo" Anderson's string to individual championships in badminton and tennis. Under her guidance, the a- pha Delt's won the women's volle ball tournament last week. DE LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You Are Welcome 711 Mass. No other cigarette can make this statement! 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