TUESDAY, SEPT. 30, 1941. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE In Touch Football Play---- Schedule Four Intramural Clashes Friday Schedule Fou Betas, Fijis Appear On Opening Card The 1941 intramural football season will get under way this coming Friday afternoon, Oct. 3. According to Dr. Elbel, supervisor of the University intramural program, four games will be played Friday with Pfitsch's Pflugerville Pflashes clasing with Sigma Phi Epsilon, Rock Chalk Co-op opposing Battenfeld Hall, Beta Theta Pi tangling with Delta Upsilon, and the defending champion Phi Gams meeting Delta Tau Delta. There are 18 eleven-man teams, divided into two divisions. Each team will play six games, thus keeping three teams from other Division I$ ^{*} $ There are 18 eleven-man te Each team will play six games, meeting each other. Division I is made up of Phi Gamma Delta, Newman Club, Sigma Chi i, Sigma Nu, Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Kappa Psi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Kappa Sigma, and Delta Tau Delta. Favorite to win the Division II title will be Beta Pi, with Sigma Alpha Epsilon, last year's runner-up, furnishing the most competition. Phi Delta Theta, Delta Upsilon, Delta Chi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Carruth Hall, Theta Tau, and the Pfugerville Pflashes. Division III and IV are two sixman team leagues. Each team in these two divisions will play five games. Division III contains Rock Chalk Co-op, John Moore Co-op, The Blanks, Jayhawk Co-op, Union Fountainees, and Battenfeld Hall. Pi Kappa Alpha, Alpha Chi Sigma, Triangle, Acacia, Alpha Kappa Psi (Collinson's pride), and Kappa Eta Kappa will make up Division IV. Due to the limited number of playing fields this year, the two "B" divisions schedules were cut down, each six-man "B" team playing only four games. In Division V are Phi Psi "B," Delta Upsilon "B" Sig Ep "B," Sigma Chi "B," Beta "B," and Newman Club "B." Division VI is made up of Phi Delt "B," Sig Alph "B," Phi Gam "B," Sigma Nu "B," Kappa Sig "B," and Phi Psi "C." TWO MILERS--- (continued from page four) on the team. Two other members of last year's squad who are training for a berth this year are Russell Mount and Clarence Miller. Orlando Epp and Fred Eberhardt, both who have lettered in track at running the quarter mile, are out to give the longer distance a try. Other men who are trying out for the two mile team for the first time are Oliver Hess, Arthur Peters, Walter Cross, and Abbott Goddard. The Jayhawker two milers will open their season ain't Iowa State here Oct. 25, Hargiss announced. Other meets tentatively scheduled are with Nebraska or Oklahoma Nov. 1, and with Kansas State Nov. 8. The Big Six two mile team meet will be held at Columbia, Mo., Nov. 15. TWO WIN---loose, sending a chill and a thrill up and down everyone's back . . . Every man on the squad moved beyond words at the magnificent rally. . . Gwinn Henry overwhelmed . . . (continued from page four) Hays State College Tigers at Manhattan, Saturday. Poor ball handling held the Wildcats scoreless against the inspired Hays eleven. The Wildcats had plenty of power until they reached the 10-yard line but couldn't produce touchdown plays. This Saturday the Kansas State squad will journey to Evanston, Ill., to battle Northwestern in Northwestern's season opener. 0. A 49-yard pass by Jack Jacobs to Dud Lamb in the opening period started the Sooners' scoring. However, the tight Aggie defense halted further scoring until the fourth period, when Orville Matthews—Big Six 100-yard champ—wheeled off a 66-yard run for a touchdown. Following this score Huel Hamm passed to Joe Golding for the third touchdown. Jack Haberlein missed two conversions. Last year he connected on thirteen out of fourteen attempts. The Sooners have an open date Saturday, meeting Texas at Dallas, October 11. The remaining game in Saturday's Big Six contests is here at Lawrence with the Jayhawkers meeting the Washington U. eleven from the Missouri Valley conference. Allen To Speak In Topeka, Ottawa During the Week Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen will give a talk to the Cooperative Club of Topeka this evening at a dinner-dance on the roof garden of the Kansan hotel. His subject will be "The stone that the builders rejected; the same has become the head of the corner." This refers to Physical Education, which has become of ever-increasing importance in the school curriculum. Dr. Allen will also speak Friday before a regional convention of the Parent-Teachers' Association, to be held at Ottawa. His subject there will be "The place of recreation in national defense." Dr. Allen is recreational chairman of the Kansas congress of Parent-Teachers. Tryouts For Tau Sigma Tonight Tryouts for Tau Sigma, national women's honorary dancing fraternity, will be held tonight at 7:30 in Robinson gym under the direction of Miss Schilling. Anyone who wishes to learn or has any talent is invited to the tryouts. Tonight is the first elimination. A business meeting of all active members of Tau Sigma will take place before the tryouts at 7:00. SPORTS SLANTS---- (continued from page four) (Edwards' opinion of the Kansas team)—"Its the best Kansas team I've seen in my four years on the Hill and after Saturday's game with Washington, everyone will agree with me. The thirty-five fellas I traveled with, were swell, and real gentlemen..." Dramatic Club Takes 34 Will Hold Play Tryouts Thirty-four new pledges of the University Dramatic Club, selected after tryouts last week, will step directly into an extensive dramatic program. Joe Nelson, production chairman, is already promoting two plays, one of which will be an all-student production. The club is planning an expanded program this year, James Barton, sponsor and speech instructor, said today. One-act plays will be presented once a month. $ \textcircled{4} $ A brief meeting will be held this afternoon to instruct the new pledges and to outline tentative plans. Immediately after the meeting tryouts for the first Dramatic Club play of the season, "Mary of Scotland," will be held. All apprentices that do not tryout are expected to withdraw from the club. Any members who prove to be uninterested will be withdrawn from the club and replaced later by interested students who are not as yet members of the club, David Watermulder, president, said. Those students who successfully passed the tryouts for membership are Betty Dunlap, David Evans, Gloria Goff, Mary Morrison, Joe Payne, Ruth Kelly, Betty Rowton, Robert Haywood, Wanda Doughty, Jane Peake, Virginia Davis, Barbara Batchelor, Lura Smith, Max Webster, Jim Berkson, Nancy Clark, Rosemary Branine, Virginia Stranathan, Harold Smith, Jim Kennedy, Edith Fleming, Katherine Bonewitz, Jeanne Moyer, Lois Elaine Willcutts, Joan Fronkier, Jill Peck, Harriet Rouse, Jane Nixon, Leo Goertz, Mary Kirby, Lela Belle Marks, Leta Nell Marks, Georgia Utterback, Lois Lehman, and Virginia Stevenson. THETA TAU . . . . . . . weekend guest was Clarence Hammond. . . guests Monday for dinner were Gernard Dean and Vernlee Asel.