SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1941 23, 1941 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ny PAGE FIVE mer will termined to town empt to twenty- streak. for 7:30 with a re-instant five race, spoil the intenders, e respect mark of The first we lease our nere said. when they r do we ne court defeat- we did this year ssas State when the cool off unlured 23 yay both one. Only starting pounds. 3 foot 1 stretch e of the only 165 ng lim- 6 foot 1 ward, is g with a drdt, the hitting A.C. Sigma's Upset Delta Chi's; Four Now Tied For Top Alpha Chi Sigma produced its second upset of the week, defeating Delta Chi, leading team of Division I, 24 to 23, in Friday night's most important intramural contest. Earlier in the week, A. C. Sigma knocked off Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 30 to 23. Delta Chi, Phi Kappa Psi, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon are now deadlocked in a four-way tie in first place in Division I. Each one of these four title contenders has won six games and lost two. The Delta Chi's moved in front in the first half with a 12 to 8 lead but with Bryan, A. C. Sigma, scoring eight points the final period, the Delta Chi's suffered their second consecutive loss. Battenfeld Hall came through with a surprising 36 to 33 win over Kappa Eta Kappa with Warren Lowen leading the attack with six field goals. McKale, high scorer for K.E.K., tied Lowen in high point honors with 12 points, four goals and four free tosses. The loss of Warren Isreal, one of the finest guards in intramurals, was too much for the Sigma Nu's as they lost to Carruth Hall 29 to 14. Rohler, Carruth, was the game standout. Halftime found Carruth ahead 13 to 6. Sigma Chi "B" assured themselves at least a tie in the "B" team championship of Division V with two victories, one on Friday night over Battenfeld "B" 53 to 7 and the other on Saturday morning over Delta Tau Delta "B" 36 to 28. Their season record is seven wins and one loss. Beta "B" continued to trod the unbeaten path, achieving their sixth straight win of the season, downing Delta Chi "B" 46 to 10. The clash between the Beta "B" Phi Psi "B" March 1, should be the season's best. Eddie Vandaveer continued his sizzling scoring pace, piling up 26 points as Newman I defeated Dunakin I 58 to 10. Vandaveer is rolling along at an Engleman-like rate as he tallied 27 and 24 points in the two games before this Dunakin contest. Cunningham scored six of Dunakin's ten points. Newman II continued to keep astride with Newman I, winning from the Ohio Mountain Boys 35 to 9. Maiden and Coyle led the scoring with 14 and 12 points respectively. With Holt and Westfall leading the offense, A.T.O. "B" whipped D.U. "B" 25 to 11, Beta "C" triumphed over Sig Alph "C" 36 to 26, and Newman "C" fell before Phi Delt "C" 34 to 17. The how soon The box score: ALPHA CHI SIGMA (24) | | g | ft | f | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Lincoln, f | 1 | 0 | 1 | | Bryan, f | 3 | 2 | 0 | | Loomis, c | 4 | 0 | 0 | | Johnson, g | 0 | 0 | 2 | | Hoover, g | 3 | 0 | 2 | | — | — | — | — | | Totals | 11 | 2 | 5 | | **DELTA CHI (23)** | | | | | | g | ft | f | | Callow, f | 2 | 0 | 1 | | Wenstrand, f | 3 | 2 | 1 | | Zimmerman, c | 2 | 0 | 1 | | McCarty, g | 1 | 0 | 0 | | Lysaught, g | 2 | 1 | 0 | | — | — | — | — | | Totals | 10 | 3 | 3 | LACE TIGERS— (continued from page four) souri retaliated with two similar throws. Herbie Gregg, ace Tiger scorer, grabbed his first goal on a short side shot, making the score 11 to 9, Kansas. Allen counted on two seemingly impossible one-handers, Vance Hall dropped in an underbasket shot and Engelman counted one from the free throw line as halftime found Kansas ahead 18 to 9. The Tigers moved to the attack in the opening minutes of the second half with Lynn Bedford collecting a pair of charity tosses and George Constanz tallying on two short shots. Vance Hall flipped in a free throw and Allen cracked a long one-handed jump shot down the center to give the Jayhawkers a 21 to 15 third quarter margin. Bengals Rally Late Gregg, Nash, and Constanz poured in four more points, bringing the score to 21-19. Then Howard Engelman moved into action with two free throws. Gregg hit a one-handed side shot and Engelman put the game on ice for Kansas with two unguardable one-handers. Hunter and V. Hall added free tosses and Constanz neted a push shot. Mills' free throw found the score Kansas 29, Missouri 24, with a minute to play. In the final minute, Kansas added six more points to their total. Sollenberger sank a setup, Engelman and V. Hall tossed a free throw apiece, and V. Hall ran the K. U. total to 35 with a difficult overhead shot. MOTOR-IN Boasts of a Business built on better service- It's a service station offering you one-stop service, Skell Products (tailor-made for Kansas), the finest repair dept., new and used car depts., accessories dept., and tire dept. Try Motor-In Today. MOTOR-IN 827 Vt. The Master Service Station Ph. 607 Stars of the Week Intramural Ed Vandaveer, Newman 1 — Is burning the courts up in individual scoring in much the same manner Harold Johnson, A.K.Psi, did last year. Eddie scored 24 points against the Jayhawk Co-op and 26 points on Dunakin 1 this last week. Bob Price, Pi K. A.-Tall substitute who defeated the Beta's with 5 goals in the last half, including 3 in a row after the score had been tied at 21-all. Harlan Altman, Beta—Carried the scoring load against the Pi K. A.'s when his touted teammates, Littooy and Geiger, failed to come through. Altman took eight shots, connected on six of them. Bill Arthur, A. T. O.—Hit a free throw in the last minute of play to defeat a fine Phi Psi team 23 to 22. Warren Isreal, Sigma Nu—Hit 9 goals and 1 free throw win his team's 32-29 lass at the hands of the D. U.'s Warren is now the scoring leader of Division I with 11. average. Warren Lowen, Battenfeld— Was the spark-plug in Battenfeld's 36-33 victory over Kappa Eta Kappa. Lowen hit six field goals, five in the last half to furnish the winning margin. Jim Sealey, Phi Psi.—Turned in a brilliant floor-game against the A. T. O.'s and led the game scoring with 11 points. Also played well against Phi Alpha Delta. Victor Breen, P. A. D.-Starred for a losing cause in the P. A. D-Phi Psi contest. Breen tallied six baskets and rebounded well. Ace State Guard . . . NORRIS HOLSTROM Kansas State Guard Harassing Kansas forwards when Kansas State invades Hoch auditorium Tuesday night will be Norris Holstrom, senior guard who forms the bulwark of a rugged Wildcat defense. The best intentions are futile if not acted upon promptly. AS WE SEE IT— Husker bigwigs are interested in returning boxing to the curriculum of competitive conference sports . . . Raport, who is rated as one of the best boxing instructors in the Big Six area, favors the proposal even though Kansas has no adequate place to stage the shows . . . The last of conference ring competition disappeared some six years ago. (continued from page four) AFTER COUNTING the tattered tailfeathers of a victorious Jayhawk, which included a wrenched knee to John Kline, a charley horse to Bobby Allen, and a twisted ankle to Mary Sollenberger, one can conclude that Missouri's Tigers forgot few tactics in trying to stifle Jayhawker title hopes in Columbia Friday night . . . Coach Allen explained yesterday that he did not know how near top shape the three would be for the Red and Blue's conference tussle with Kansas State here Tuesday. AND APPARENTLY Tiger fandom upheld it's end of the deal—and reputation also—as it delivered it's longest Bronx ovation to the Jayhawkers in years. . . The Partisan strong booed lustily when Kansas players were introduced, Popular Records The Girl In My Dreams Tries to Look Like You Flamingo ... Duke Ellington Charleston Alley Good-For-Nothin' Joe ... Charlie Barnett Pale Moon Hep-Pee Hootie ... Tony Pastor Pale Moon When Cootie Left the Duke Petite ... Raymond Scott shouted whenever a Kansan stepped to the free throw line, and maintained a constant run of banter to the final whisle . . . Choicest targets for the Brooklyn-bred bleacherites were "Phog." who received his annual expected share of boisterous Tiger welcome, and Howard Engleman, the Jayhawkers great forward who turned up in the throes of his first cold night of the year . . . "Phog" and a few of his third year men were accustomed to the perennial greeting in Tigertown, but that fact does not excuse the yearly show . . . If Missouri school heads had an ounce of athletic pride they would throttle such demonstrations until at least average courtesy is achieved. ALTHO SPORT scribes in this area have been tabbing Friday night's K.U.-M.U. contest as the one-hundredth basketball meeting between the two schools a check thru the University sport's publicity files finds that it was the one-hundred and fourth meeting. WHILE IN Columbia covering the Jayhawk-Tiger contest, sports staff writer Clint Kanaga ran into "Blackjack" Harry Smith, former All-American guard at U.S.C., whom the Tigers recently signed as grid assistant to Don Faurot . . . Smith named the 1938 Duke aggregation which the Trojans defeated 7-3 in the 1939 Rose Bowl game as the best team against which he has ever played and U.C.L.A.'s great Negro back, Kenny Washington as the back which gave him most grief. AGS HERE— Norris Holstrom, a stellar defensive guard, and Tom Guy, big lumbering junior with a left hand hook shot, round out the first five. Geo. Mendenhall, a sophomore guard and Danny Howe, a rebound specialist, are likely to see much action or may possibly start. (continued from page four) 5.9 points per game while Larry Beaumont, a 23 year old sophomore guard, has connected for 5.5. A tailor-made suit looks better, feels better and is better. Latest styles and patterns $25.00 up