SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1942 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Six Undefeated Teams Remain In Intramurals By Tom Cadden Only six teams out of 32 remain undefeated as the divisional contests are drawing nearer to the finish. Four of these are in the eleven man divisions and two in the six man divisions. In Division I. eleven man competition, Beta Theta Pi is well in the lead with four wins and no losses. In Division III, the Medic Whiz Kids are leading with three wins and one tie. Friday, Sigma Chi defeated the A.T.O.'s, 29-0, and Phi Gamma Delta won over the Phi Delt's, 19-0, thus moving Sigma Chi and Phi Gamma Delta into a tie for second place with three wins and one loss each. Phi Kappa Psi and Theta Tau are deadlocked for first position in Division II. each having four wins and no defeats. Tuesday's game between the Phi Psi's and Theta Tau will probably decide the winner of that division. In six-man competition. Delta Chi leads Division I with four wins and one loss. Yesterday they maintained their perfect record by defeating the Hopkins Hall eleven 46 to 6 despite the brilliant work of the Hopper's star, "Scooper" Dynan. Dynan completed 37 out of 51 passes In Division II, Kappa Eta Kappa and Battenfeld Hall are tied for first place with four victories and no defeats. Following are the standings as released by the intramural office: Eleven Man | Division I | W | L | T | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Beta Theta Pi | 4 | 0 | 0 | | Tau Kappa Epsilon | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Sigma Alpha Epsilon | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Sigma Nu | 2 | 2 | 0 | | Delta Tau Delta | 1 | 3 | 0 | | Delta Upsilon | 0 | 4 | 0 | Division II W L T Phi Kappa Psi 4 0 0 Theta Tau 4 0 0 Templin Hall 1 2 0 Sigma Phi Epsilon 1 2 0 Kappa Sigma 1 3 0 Division III W L T Medic Whiz Kids 3 0 1 Sigma Chi 3 1 0 Phi Gamma Delta 3 1 0 Alpha Tau Omega 0 2 2 Phi Delta Theta 1 3 0 Pi Kappa Alpha 0 3 1 Six Man Division I W L T Delta Chi 4 1 0 Blanks 3 1 0 John Moore Co-op 3 2 0 Rock Chalk Co-op 3 2 0 Hopkins Hall 2 2 0 Triangle 1 3 0 Jolliffe Hall 0 5 0 Division II W L T Kappa Eta Kappa 4 0 0 Battenfeld Hall 4 0 0 Ramblers 2 2 0 Jayhawk Co-op 1 2 0 Alpha Chi Sigma 0 2 0 Bulldogs 0 2 0 Tennessee Club 0 3 0 'Sermon on the Mount' A continuation of the discussion on the "Sermon on the Mount" will be held at 7:30 this evening at Forum in Westminster hall. The discussions are led by Robert McNair Davis, professor of law, who is leading a weekly series. Kansas Trounces Washington Bears (continued from page one) the running burden, plunging over for one Kansas tally. Tevis Looks Good The outclassed Washington team relied upon their sophomore ace—Lee Tevis—and the rookie turned in an outstanding game as he carried the Bear running, passing and punting load. Tevis looked equally as good as did Marquette's sophomore, John Stryzkalski on that star's performance here earlier this fall. The Kansas squad scored its first tally suddenly in the opening quarter after having been outplayed for the first ten minutes of the game. An Evans-to-Hardman pass moved the ball deep into Washington territory, and from there Linquist suddenly broke through the Bear line and cavorted 33 vards for the score. The second Jayhawk tally came when Evans chucked a short pass to Baker, and the quarterback ran brilliantly through the startled Bear secondary for the touchdown. The rumming of Evans and Linquist set up the third Kansas touchdown, with Evans plunging over from the two-yard line. The Bears tallied in the final period on a Tevis to O'Rourke pass. Penalty Stops Bears The Kansas squad received the kickoff, but could not gain and was forced to punt. Tevis and Winkler began to move, but a penalty halted the Bear attack, and Tevis punted out of bounds deep in Jayhawk territory. The punting duel continued until late in the period when Penny intercepted a Tevis aerial. It was then that Evans hit Hardman with a perfect pass and, after the Bears had taken time out, Linquis broke loose on his scoring jault. Musick converted for the extra point. After receiving the kickoff the Bears reeled off a first down, but were then forced to punt. Baker retaliated with a brilliant quick kick as the period ended. Linguist Saves One Linquist Saves One Baker and Linquist made it a first down on the Kansas 43-yard line. Evans completed another pass to Hardman for a second first down. On second down, Evans passed to Baker almost on the line of scrimmage, and the speedy sophomore Winkler opened the second quarter by almost getting away for a touchdown as he raced 29 yards before Linquist brought him down from behind. A penalty then set the visitors back, and another Bear pass was intercepted by alert Penny on the Kansas 20-yard line. Baker again quick kicked beautifully to take the Jayhawks out of danger. Tevis kicked back immediately. raced to his left, shook off several Bear tacklers, and dove over the goal for the second Kansas touchdown. Musick failed to convert. During the remainder of the first half neither team was able to gain consistently, although Washington's Tevis did break loose for one first down. Fumble Is Costly In the second half the Jayhawks received the kickoff, and on fourth down Baker punted to Tevis, who fumbled. The ball was recovered by Evans on the Washington 33-yard line. Evans raced around right end for a first down, and then on two straight plunges Linquist lugged the ball to the Bear one-yard line, almost going over for a touchdown on the second try. Evans then cracked center for the tally. Musick again failed to kick the extra point. Washington took the kickoff, and immediately began to move as Henry started sending in his reserves. A Tevis to Seith pass took the ball into Statistics for the game follow. KU WU First downs 6 9 Rushing 4 6 Passing 2 3 Net yards rushing 134 182 Yards lost 20 20 Net yards forwards 83 50 Forwards attempted 6 19 Forwards completed 5 8 Intercepted by 4 0 Punts number 11 7 Returned by 24 33 Funts average 40 32 Kickoffs number 3 3 Returned by 45 35 Kickoffs average 28 51 Fumbles 1 3 Ball lost 0 1 Penalties 2 4 Yards penalized 10 50 Score by periods: Kansas 7 6 6 0—19 Washington 0 0 0 7—7 Washington could not gain, and the two teams exchanged punts. As the third period ended Sheridan intercepted a Washington pass on the Washington 25. The Washington line, however, threw Kansas back to take On fourth down the Washington squad failed to make a first down, and it was the Jayhawk's ball on their own 35-yard line. From there Baker punted into Washington territory as the Jayhawks played it safe. Kansas territory. The Kansas line finally held, and Tevis punted out nicely on the Kansas 8-yard line. Baker punted out from behind his own goal line, and it was again Washington's ball at near midfield. Bear Line Holds the ball on downs on their 27-yard line. As a Result of Labor Conditions We Are Not Operating on MONDAYS STUDENTS! The Remainder of the Week--- Business As Usual. Thank You! Against the Kansas substitutes the Bears began to move as Tevis broke loose for 25 yards, Seith added 11 more, and Tevis passed to McGovern on the Jayhawk 10. Three Bear plays failed to gain appreciably, and then Tevis ran to his right, suddenly stopped and pitched a perfect peg to O'Rourke waiting in the end zone near the left sideline. The versatile Tevis kicked the extra point. DINE-A-MITE INN tail. Two running plays ended the game. Kansas took the kickoff, and again played it safe by punting on third down. Washington could not gain, and was forced to punt. Tevis again punted, and again Kansas returned the kick. With seconds remaining, Evans intercepted a Tevis pass for his eighth pass interception of the Roy Borgen, Mgr Roberts Is Saved Evans passing performance gave him 75 completed passes out of 154 attempts. The star back was not in action during a large part of the second half, as Henry preferred to save him for the Iowa State game. Gene Roberts, sophomore speedster, was kept on the bench throughout the game, but will be ready to go against the Cyclones. Kansas reserves failed to hold the Washington backs while they were in the game, but some of the substitutes showed promise. "Frosty" Wilson, in particular, looked good on the defense. Grier Zimmerman and Grant Hunter also turned in commendable games while they were in the game. The All-American Favorite, Tweed by Griffon. In a Variety of Colors. $35 Others $20 and up A Covert Topcoat. The Coat for Any and All Occasions Style for College Men. $28.50 Others $25 and up Dobbs New "Jolly Rounder." The Hat With the Casual Air. 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