PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1939. Cornell Ohio State 23 14 Fordham Pittsburgh Iowa Wisconsin Michigan Yale Notre Dame Carnegie T. Oklahoma 41 Okla. A. & M. O Texas Rice Huskers Crush Wildcats, 25-9; Tigers Win Iowa State Falls Before Missouri Powerhouse,21-6 Kansas State Outplays Nebraska in Many Departments but Bows To Steamroller Attack Manhattan, Kan., Oct. 28—(UP) —The University of Nebraska settled down to a relentless offensive drive today after a slow start, and won a decisive 25 to 9 Big Six conference football victory over Kansas State. It was the second conference triumph for the Cornhuskers and left them with four victories and a tie for the season to date. State, suffering its second defeat in as many weeks, took over last place with Iowa State in the league standings. Robriq Leads Huskers Herman Rohrig, Nebraska's loa- motive-like halfback was the lead- ing performer for the winners, scoring one touchdown and setting up two of the other six-point counters. Bob Defruiter, Walter Luther and Harry Hopp, each scored once for the Nebraskans. Neither team scored in the first period. Nebraska advanced to Kansas State's 10 late in the period on a pass, Hopp to Luther, but the play was called back and Nebraska penalized 15 yards for holding. Nebraska Takes Lead Early in the second period Nebraska attempted a field goal from the Kansas State 10, but rohr's kick went wide. Duwe, Kansas State back, broke through the Husker line on his own 20 and ran to the Nebraska 45 where he was downed. Duwe and Melvin Seelie then carried the ball for a first down. With the ball on Nebraska's 14, Jim Brock went into the lineup replacing Elmer Nieman of Kansas State, and made a place kick, giving the Wildcats a temporary 3 to 0 lead. A little later in the second period Nebraska made its first score when Robrih took Seebye's pit and ran laterally across the field behind perimeter line to line. Robrih's try for point went wide. Score In Final Minutes In the third period the Nebraska steamroller started working and Kansas State was badly outclassed. Adna Dobson, Hopp and Luther alternated in carrying the ball to the Kansas State 4. Hopp went over for the score. A few minutes later Selye fumbled and S. Schwartzkopf recovered for Nebraska on Kansas State's 26. On the next play Luther went across for Nebraska's third touch-down. In the final minutes of play Kanse State opened up a desperate passing attack. With but 20 seconds left to play, Seelye seeled to Frank Barhardt in the end zone for the final score of the game. William Nichols place kick went wide and the game ended shortly afterward. In the final period Duwe fumbled on Kansas State's 25 and Nebraska recovered. Robrig passed to Knight on the Kansas State 9 for a first down. Robrig passed to DeFrituer who remained the five yards for a touchdown, making the score Nebraska 25, Kansas State 3. Ames, Ia., Oct. 23 — (UP) — The University of Missouri football team overpowered Iowa State, 21 to 6 today and didn't even need its passing ace, Paul Christman, to do the job. A homecoming crowd of 14,000 saw Missouri drive down the field to score three touchdowns in the first half. Perfect football weather prevailed. Christman Missing With Christian's absence, Coach Don Faurot of Missouri kept his eleven to ground plays, Council, a substitute fullback, tailed the first score early in the first period after he and Gale had driven from the 33 to the four-yard line. Cunningham placed kicked the extra point. And it was Cunningham, Gale and Starner who marched down the field for the second score before the fourth. Cunningham, Cunningham again converted. Early in the second quarter Rouse intercepted Osborne's pass on the Iowa State 23. Two laterals from Motowt to Wager and Hydron to King, put the ball on the five-yard stripe. Then Wager passed to King for the score. Motowt place-kicked. In the second period Glab of Iowa HOLDEN LINES By CLAVELLE HOLDEN, Kanson Sports Edi*or By Jim Bell, c'40 Guest Conductor A quick glance over the statistics of the Kansas State-Nebraska game at Manhattan yesterday will show Jayhawkers that they will have their hands full against their interstate rivals here Friday. Despite the fact that the Aggies came out on the short end of the 25-9 final count, they took Nebraska's measure in almost all the important departments of the game. Kansas scored first downs to six and had a margin in both passing and play from scrimmage. The Corn-huskers, however, come home at the end of the day with a big lead in punt returns, and it was just this department which was responsible—to a great extent—for the Husker victory. It will be remembered that the story was just about the same at Columbia a week ago. The Ags look good on the statistics chart, but seem to be unstable to drive the ball across the double chalks in the pinches . . . a discouraging habit, as Headman Wes Fry will probably agree this morning. Speaking of Fry, he must be a rather discouraged young man these days. Prior to the opening of the season, he—and his assistant Stan Williamson—had plenty to say about their chances of knocking the socks off of the conference. They got a great start and then lost Hackney for two games. The moral is that they have no chance counting your chickens before they hatch, or rather . . . don't put all your hopes in one fullback. Fry wasn't the only Big Six coach who had a lot to say about chances this fall. Jim State blocked Gale's punt to give the Cyclones the ball on the Missouri 14. A fumble by Griswold gave Missouri the ball on its own 10, but Cobb broke through and stole the ball from Council to give Iowa State the ball on the 8. Lechiaplunged into yards, and then Wallace plunged over for the score. Wallace's try for the place-kick was short. In the second half Iowa State made numerous ground and aerial gains against Missouri, but was unable to penetrate within the 20-yard line. During the few minutes that Christmas was in the lineup for Missouri, he threw but two incomplete passes. Cornell 23, Ohio State 14 Columbus, O., Oct. 28 — (UP) Ohio State knocked the ivy off Cornell with two quick touchdowns to then found barbed wire wired underneath. Overhelmed in the first 20 minutes of the football game, and trailing 0 to 14, the big red team from far above Cayuga's waters came roaring back to score threeSenior first-rounders to topple Ohio State from the ranks of the undefended and win the day's biggest intersegmental game, 23 to 14. The victory kept the Aggies in the ranks of the nation's major undefeated, united teams and made them one of the top three teams in Southwest Conference championship. Texas A.&M. 20, Baylor 0 Engines and engine parts, live fish and poultry and similar articles are carried by air freight in the Netherland Indies. College Station, Tex. Oct. 28—(UP)Tex A. & M., exponent of power football in the razelle-dazzle battle, and (UP)Tex A. to advance today to traince Baylor 20 to 0. Work began yesterday morning on the construction of the 50-foot entrance to the tent which will house the exhibit. The entrance was designed by Richard Tippin, e'40, in a contest among 26 juniors and seniors in the department of architecture. (Continued from page one) game will not be available for this duty. Four Booths--seal of Kansas will decorate the face of the 30-foot tower. The red, yellow, and blue front will display a huge Jayhawker, a picture of Governor Payne Rattner, a message from the governor, and the words "Resource-Full Kansas." Twenty-Nine Guides Yenger, of Iowa State, and Don Faurot, of Missouri, weren't any too modest. Biff Jones, the Nebraska grid prof, Tom Stidham, and our own Gwinny Henry kept their mouths tightly shut. These last three men are of the coaching school which does not believe in playing games in the newspapers in early September. Jones, Stidham and Henry go about their jobs quietly and let results in November do their talking for them. The state seals of the eleven midwestern states participating in the cornhusk contest, topped by the Sport Shorts: Here's a backfield combination that the Aggies will probably see here Saturday; Milt Sullivan, Dick Aimerie, Ralph Miller and Ed Hall . . . Miller will probably be in there for a while . . . When he does get Henry's "g sign," the opposition had better be on its toes . . . the capable young man from Chanute is really rinn' . . . Cadwalerden, Suage and Bukyat need only a glue fingered loot that makes great passers . . . The college quarterback are saying that Kanute is not old ned Friday. This is the time of year that track mentor Bill Hargiss has a heck of a time resisting the temptation to get out among the moleskins again . . . Doe Allen is driving his cages charge hard in preparation for the season opener against Oklahoma A. and M. here Dec. 5 . . . Jake Fry, Denzel Gibbens and Marvin Vandeveer are three of the best sophomore backs to hit Mt. Oread in these many years . . . Jay Kern, the big aggressive guard from Lake Michigan way, is coming into his hole. By end of the season, he ought to have a pretty fair scrapbook of press notice . . . Cheerio! Twenty-nine students, members of the K-Club, Ku-Ku Club, and the Owl Society will serve as guides to University visitors during the Cornell contest and the exhibit accordiing with the account of Henry Werner, dean of men. Tours of the Campus will be conducted from the Memorial Union building all day Thursday and Friday morning. Bob Allen, Charles Case, Oliver Edwards, Melvin McDonald, Ernest Klema, B u dd Russell, Maurice Jackson, Brent Campman, Jack Beach, Sam Swig, and Loria Thompson, all juniors in the College. Students acting as guides will be James Arnold, b'41; John Kline b'40; Joe Ryan, b'40; Charles Toberen, f'40; Dale Hekendon, b'40; Howard Engleman, b'41; Max Cole, ph, Dave Young, b'40; Paul C. Yankey b'41; Charles M, Siller, c'42; Bob Wilkens, e'40; Lane Davis, c'40; Roy Edwards, c'42; Chuck Kraemer, b'40; Tommy Arbuckle, c'41; Bob McKay, b'40; Stuart Bunn, e'41 Intramural Lead To Ten Teams At Midway Mark - Beta's, Phi Psi's Pace Division One and Are Seen As Top Contenders for Championship By Clint Kanaga, c'42 By Clint Kanaga. c'42 As the intramural football-team passes the mid-season mark, several outfits have displayed championship form. In the eleven-man-circuit, at the present time, four teams play out the rest. They are Beta Theta Pi, Kappa Pi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Sigma Nu. The best teams in six-man football are the Beta's, Pi Delta Theta, Sigma Epilho, Sigma Chi, and ISA7B. The current season will reach a conclusion, as far as the regular schedule is concerned, about November 14. The playoffs for the championships will follow shortly after this date. Looking over the various outstanding elevenths, this writer would venture to predict that the Beta's and the Phi Pa'is will play for the intramural title. They have already met each other once this year and the contended in a 6-0 draw. The Beta's and the Phi Pa'is are tied for first place in Division I, and Sigma it is the leading eleven in Division II. The Sig Alph's are the top team in Division III. Other teams which must not be counted out yet are Sigma Chi, Sigma Phi Epialoma, Delta Theta, Alpha Tau Omega, Giamma Delta, and the Galloping Dominies. | | W L | T | t op | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Fli Kappa Pai | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Beta Tiesta Pi | 3 | 1 | 0 | | Sigma Chi | 2 | 1 | 0 | | ISAa | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Islands | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Triangle | 2 | 1 | 0 | | Delta Chi | 2 | 1 | 0 | ELEVEN-MAN FOOTBALL Division I Division II | | W L | T | t op | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | sigma Nu | 3 | 0 | 0 2 | | 'hi Delta Theta | 2 | 1 | 0 2 3 | | 'hi Alpha Omega Tau | 2 | 1 | 0 7 13 | | delta Tau Delta | 2 | 1 | 1 6 34 | | delta Tau Delta | 2 | 1 | 1 31 6 | | Cappa Sigma | 1 | 1 | 1 6 9 | | ecacia | 1 | 2 | 1 13 57 | | SA-7 | 1 | 6 | 0 0 0 | | II. IV | WL | T | t p | op | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Sigma Alpha Ep. | 3 | 0 | 10 | 0 | | Sigma Gamma Delta | 3 | 1 | 14 | 0 | | Sigma Alpha Upsilon | 3 | 1 | 14 | 7 | | Delta Upsilon | 2 | 1 | 8 | 2 | | Phi Kappa Alpha | 2 | 2 | 22 | 21 | | Delta Iota | 2 | 0 | 10 | 0 | | ISA-6 | 6 | 0 | 0 | 0 | SIX-MAN FOOTBALL Basketball W L T tp op Phi Delta Theta "B" B Phi Gamma Delta "B" B* Sigma Nu "B" B* ISA-18 1 1 0 12 14 Eita Kappa 1 1 0 13 25 Eita 4B 1 2 0 12 15 Eita-4B 1 2 0 12 15 Eita-6B 3 0 0 14 W L T iop Sigona Pia Eo P "B" 3 0 1 Beta Theta Pi "B" 3 1 0 Kappa Sigma "B" 2 1 0 Ns SB 3 2 1 Pibh Kpaio Pai 0 3 1 ISA-B 3 2 1 Delta Upsilon "B" 0 3 0 9 2 0 9 Most Popular Records of the Week Division III W L T ip 1 IA7-B 2 0 1 34 12 Sigma Ch "B" 2 0 1 27 16 Phi Delta Theta "C" 1 0 1 6 12 IA2-B 1 0 1 18 18 Lippo Pai "B" 1 0 1 34 12 G. Dominus "B" 0 2 0 33 Hexagons 0 2 0 13 12 IA8-B 0 3 0 12 14 Baby, What Else Can I Do So Many Times Tommy Dorson I Must Got a Letter Can I Help It? ... Glenn Miller Tumbling Tumbleweeds Through Glen Grau Does Your Heart Beat For Me? The Girl Behind the Venetian Blind ... Russ Morgan Bouncing Buoyancy A Lonely Co-FEd Tumbling Tumbleweeds Through Stop Kicking My Heart Around Stop Kicking My Heart Around At Least You Could Say Hello ___ Jack Teagarden Bouncing buoyancy A Lonely Co-Ed Duke Ellipson Freshman Football Player Receives Fractured Ankle James E. Schanbacher, c 43, freshman football player, received a fractured ankle in football practice Friday afternoon, officials at Watkins Memorial hospital said yesterday. Schanbacher, a guard, was admitted to the hospital after practice and an x-ray was taken to determine the extent of the injury. Oklahoma 41, Okla. A.G.M.0 Norman, Okla. Oct. 28, (UP)—Unbeaten Oklahoma completed ten out of 15 forward passes and gained 258 yards by rushing today to overwhelm an out-manned but game Oklahoma Aggie football team 14 to 0. The Aggies held Oklahoma scoreless in the first quarter, but Oklahoma made two touchdowns in each of the final three periods. A crowd of nearly 25,000 fans watched Oklahoma make its most spectacular offensive splurge of the season in beating their intra-state rivals in the most decisive fashion since 1928. Berlyl Clark, 165- pound halfback, continued to spark Oklahoma as he has done since he featured the Sooners' upset victory over Northwestern. He made two touchdowns and helped set up two others. Bob Scournell, Bill Jennings, L. G. Friedrichs and J. S. Munsey made the other Oklahoma touchdowns. BIG SIX STANDINGS | | W L | Pct. | Pts. OP | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Nebraska | 2 | 0.0 | 1000 | | Missouri | 2 | 0.0 | 1000 | | Mississippi | 1 | 0.0 | 1000 | | Kansas | 1 | 1.0 | 501 | | Kansas State | 2 | 0.0 | 163 | | Iowa State | 2 | 0.0 | 190 | It's STILL the HILL at the Michigan 27, Yale 7 BLUE MILL We Deliver Call 409 Ann Arbor, Mich., Oct. 28—(UP) —Tom Harmon and the unbeaten University of Michigan football team, toying with a completely out-clasped Yale University eleven, rolls over dogs today in an impressive offensive showing before $3,719 homecoming spectators. Fordham 27, Pittsburgh 13 New York, Oct. 28—(UP)—Prom se into performance at the Polo grounds today when a Fordham team, highly touted at the opening of the season, began to live up to its reputation by defeating Pittsburgh, 27 to 13. Take advantage of your opportunity to eat Elsie Turner's delicious cooking every day. Rock Chalk Cafe always offers well balanced food. Now introducing a special 25 cent meal.-Adv. GET SET! for this week's events For the National Cornhusking Contest For the National Cornhusking Contest Suits Arrow Shirts Top Coats Arrow Ties Rain Coats Stetson Hats For the Friday Football Game Card Slacks Wool Socks Sweaters Tweed Slacks Sport Coats Finger Tip Coats IF IT RAINS—— Slickers Trench Coats Gaberdines Dyeing Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE can restore new beauty and service to garments E. W. Young Ed Young TOMORROW NIGHT! THE KANSAS PLAYERS PRESENT THE OPENING PERFORMANCE OF THE DRAMATIC SEASON THE EMPEROR JONES By Eugene O'Neill AND MY HEART'S IN THE HIGHLANDS By William Saroyan Curtain - 8:20 Exchange Activity Book Stubs For Reserved Seats — Ticket Office Basement of Green Hall A FOUR NIGHT RUN MON., WED., THUR., FRI. OCT. 30, NOV. 1-2-3 X