NOVEMBER 4,1946 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Irish-Army Game Tops Grid Card New York. (UP)—Notre Dame's two-year wait for vengeance on Army's mighty football team narrowed today into the final week as both approached the 33rd game of their classic series with perfect records. Powerful Army, triumphant in 25 consecutive games in the last three years, has been installed a one-half point favorite over Notre Dame in the early "trading" 'but it was expected to be an even-up contest by kickoff time at New York's Yankee stadium. With Pennsylvania and Harvard plunged from the ranks of the undefeated in the upsets of the week, only Army (7-0), Notre Dame (5-0), Georgia (6-0) and U.C.L.A. (6-0) remained in the perfect circle. Notre Dame has been waiting for this one above all others since Glenn Davis and Felix "Doc" Blanchard of Army first ran wild in piling up a 59 to 0 victory in 1944 and heaped on further humiliation last year, 48 to 0. Army hurdled its seventh victim of the season Saturday by downing stubborn West Virginia, 19 to 0, in a game which required the presence of Davis, Blanchard and quarterback Arnold Tucker through the first 43 minutes before victory was certain. Notre Dame, not quite the powerhouse eastern observers had expected but obviously looking forward to the Army game, brushed aside Navy, 28 to 0, in the most lop-sided game of their series. Davis and Blanchard are back but the Irish are bolstered by innumerable returned war-veterans, including stylish Johnny Lujack, whose passing contributed to Notre Dame's 26 to 0 victory over Army in 1943. Led by Charley Trippi, who tossed a touchdown pass and ran 46 yards for another score, Georgia asserted its superiority in the South by whipping Alabama with a first-half offensive, 14 to 0. U.C.L.A. easily held its place among the Big Four by routing St. Mary's Friday, 46 to 20. Pennsylvania, a whirlwind as usual at the outset, piled up 14 points in the first period against Princeton and promptly fell victim to a hard-charging Tiger line which refused to permit another point, and won 17 to 14. At Harvard, twice-beaten Rutgers bumped the previously unbeaten Crimson 13 to 0, setting up both scores with long runbacks of intercepted passes. Three other undefeated but onceed elevens—Oregon, Northwestern and North Carolina—absorbed their first trimmings. Southern California, most improved team on the West coast, routed Oregon, 43 to 0; Ohio State whipped Northwestern, 39 to 27, and Tennessee defeated North Carolina, 20 to 14. Nine Are Pledged To Quack Club Nine women were pledged into Quack club at a ceremony in Robinson gymnasium recently. Pledges are Dorothy O'Connor, Betty Boling, Jody Schutz, Corrine Carson, Alberta Schnitzler, Peggy Foster, Muralyn Spake, Abigale Bixby, and Anne Scott. These pledges will be initiated when they become "minor quacks," (pledges who have completed a specified diving test). The next swimming meeting of the Quack club will be at 7:45 p.m. Thursday, Olivia Garvey, president, announced. Women's Volleyball Near Division Finals Divisions championships are only ten games away in the women's intramural volleyball tournament. Four games tonight and six Wednesday will tell the story, and division winners will draw for pairings in the semi-finals. Games tonight are Watkins hall vs. Miller hall, and Alpha Omicron Pi vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma at 8; Gamma Phi Beta vs. Tem-Ruth, and Pi Beta Phi vs. Independents at 8:45. Evans Is Big Six 'Star Of The Week' (By United Press) Stars of the week in Big Six football were: Leonard Brown, back in the Missouri backfield, ran the "T" to beat Nebraska. Ray Evans, who played his best game of the year for Kansas, scoring both of the Jayhawker touchdowns. Dick Howard, Iowa State's whirlwind, back. Jack Mitchell, who scored twice for Oklahoma. The league standings: | | W | L | PP | OPP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Missouri | 3 | 0 | 80 | 33 | | Oklahoma | 2 | 0 | 91 | 7 | | Nebraska | 2 | 1 | 67 | 35 | | Kansas * | 1 | 1 | 38 | 24 | | Iowa State | 1 | 3 | 34 | 127 | | Kansas State | 0 | 4 | 14 | 98 | Those New Shoes Will Cost More Now Ceilings on shoes, leathers, hides and skins were removed Wednesday by John R. Steelman, Reconversion director Washington. (UP)—You will be paying 20 to 30 percent more for shoes now that the industry has been decontrolled, O.P.A. estimated today. The result, O.P.A. said, will be an increase of from $400 million to $600 million a year in the nation's annual shoe bill. Mr. Steelman said decontrol was necessary to increase the flow of skins and leathers to shoe manufacturers, whose supplies were cut off during the recent slump in livestock slaughtering. K.U. Language Professors Speak In Three Kansas Cities Three members of the department of romance languages spoke at modern language roundtables in three different meetings of the Kansas state teachers association Friday. Prof. J. M. Osma spoke at Salina on "Spanish for International Understanding and Cooperation in the Post-War World." At Topeka, Prof. L. L. Barrett discussed "Erico Verissimo, the Man and the Novelist". Prof. Mattie E. Crumrine talked on "The University of Kansas Language Laboratory Plan" at Coffeville. Sigma Gamma Epsilon, geology fraternity, will have a smoker at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union. Prof. L. R. Laudon of the geology department will speak on "Geology Along the Alcan Highway." Laudon To Speak PROTECT YOUR EYES Lawrence Optical Co. 1025 Mass. Now is the time to order crested jewelry from Balfour for Christmas presents. IT WILL SOON BE TOO LATE L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY 411 W. 14th Phone 307 'Breaks Came Our Way,' Small Says After Blocking Kick It was a great day for the Jayhawkers Saturday and especially for Marvin Small, sophomore end, who rushed in to block the Aggie point-after-touchdown kick to give K. U. its slim margin of victory. U. Small, 23-year-old 184-pounder from Gadsden, Ala., caught the kick in the pit of his stomach and knocked the ball off its course into the Cownokes' secondary. "It wasn't anything at all," he said after the game, "there just wasn't anyone there to block me out. We were all worried when they got a second chance to kick, but it was one of those days when we were playing heads-up football, and the breaks, were coming our way." Within an hour after the final gun, Marvin was on his way via the hitch-hike route to join his wife and two children in Kansas City. If the Kansas City fans knew one of the heroes of the game was holding up his thumb on the outskirts of Lawrence, he probably got a warm welcome and a fast ride home. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS For Party Rentals Used Juke Box Records For Sale JOHN H. EMICK 1014 Mass. Phone 343 Tex Beneke Tickets On Sale Here Hear Your Favorites WRIGHT'S 846 MASS. PHONE 725 The magic of recorded music brings your favorite bands and singers into your home whenever you wish. We have platters of all the popular tunes to give you the best in recorded entertainment. Hume Tells Of His Life In The 'Atom World' "My Life in the Atom World" was the story related to Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemical fraternity, by Dr. D. N. Hume, assistant professor of chemistry, at the smoker recently. About 100 members of the fraternity heard Dr. Hume's account of his experiences while he was with the Manhattan engineering project at Oak Ridge, Tenn. Instead of buying alarm clocks, residents of Stockholm, Sweden, can pay the telephone company a fee and be awakened each morning. $5,000 OR BUST Give to W. S. S. F. First With What Men Want the Most "An Arrow Shirt...or else!" Lay that Crossbow down! We realize it's still pretty difficult to walk into your Arrow dealer and find a stack of Arrow Gordon Oxfords or Arrow Doublers . . . but they will be back soon. Our Arrow dealers are doing their level best in a tough situation. So don't hunt them up with your crossbow or Luger. Keep dropping in on your favorite Arrow dealer and the first thing you know he will have just the shirt you want! ARROW SHIRTS and TIES UNDERWEAR • SPORTS SHIRTS • HANDKERCHIEFS ARROW Products at JAYHAWK-SOONER Sweater Dance DON REID and His 14-Piece Orchestra FRIDAY, Nov. 8 COMMUNITY BUILDING ADVANCE TICKETS On Sale at Ober's $1.25, tax included Stag or Drag and Brick's for 4 More Days ONLY 500 ADVANCE TICKETS WILL BE SOLD Price at Door $1.50 Currently Playing at Hotel Muehlebach Wear Campus Dress