PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20,1938 Phi Psi's and Delt's Push Into Football Semi-Finals S.P.E., K-Sigs End Up Even With Rivals ★Deadlocked Conte s t s To Be Replayed Monday After Two Overtimes Fail to Produce Winner Eight teams began the play-off series for the intramural touch football championship yesterday. Phi Kappa Pai emerged victor over the Miami Lady eleven, 18-0; while Delta Tau Delta outed 7-4 win over Theta Tau. In the Sigma Phi Epsilon-Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Chik-Kappa Sigma skirmishes, the scores ended in ties. After two extra five-minute periods, the Eps and the Fij's were compelled to stop in a 0-0 deadlock. In a like manner the Chi's and the Kappa Sig's would up 38 minutes of play in a 13-13 tie. By mutual agreement the four squads decided to play a final game Monday afternoon. These contests will be run on the four quarter basis, with each stanza seven minutes in length. There will also be no stopping of the watch for incomplete passes, out-of-bounds plays, or such things. If the teams win against them at the end of this time, the only alternative will be to flip a coin. Pass to Win The 19-0 Phi Psi win over the Dominoes set the Pai's up as the team to beat in the remaining play-off games. At no time in the battle did the Dominoes threaten the winners. From the opening kickoff the greedished Phi Psi eleven dominated the play. Bob Allen, Psi palr heavier, figured in all scoring with his exact tossing. Touch-and-tap distributions from Allen to Francis Franklin, George Golay, and Fen Durand. The extra point was gained on a flip to John Kine. Delta Tau Delta was given a scare in its encounter with Theta Tau yesterday afternoon. It was by a scant one point margin that the Delts squeezed out a 7-6 victory. The winner's six points were tallied after Ed Wilies scooped the piskink out of the ozone and hot-footed the distance to the flag. On the point after touchdown Wiles took another flip for the score which provided the margin of victory. The Theta Tau's division three winner's shortest flight was a Florida Thinlumberd plunged of fistleck. A series of Tau passes had set the ball on the 2-yard stripe, when Thudium pushed the counter over. The try for conversion was bad, and the Delts protected their scant lead to the remainder of the game. By virtue of their win, the Phi Psi's will meet the winner of the Sig Ep-Phi Gam return engagement, tomorrow afternoon. Theta Tau played heads-up ball all the way, while the purple shinned Delta Tau eleven, even though vice-president did not show as well as usual. The division winning Kappa Sigma squad were forced to end in a 13-13 tie with the Sigma Chi gridier. Larry Hensley, Kappa Sig end, was the big scoring gun of the West team, and he was all the K-Sig points. John Begert and John Tyler did the scoring for Sigma Chi. Probably the most outstanding player was Miller Cameron, rubber-blegged Kappa Sig back. Time and time again the elusive Cameron would knife his way down the field, outstepping and outdistancing would-be taggers. In addition to his brilliant broken field spirits, the Kappa Sig ace was the center of the fine passing attack. Bother Sutherland, Stigma Chi back, was the spearhead of the yellow jersey squad. On Verge of Victory It was a tired twenty-two men that wound up the Sig Ep-Phi Giam deadlock. Twice the Ep's were on the doorstep of victory, but both times a strong Fijil defense made the scoring threats short-lived. Later in the struggle they pushed the pigskin deep into Ep territory, but the Sig Ep$_s$ in turn, held their own and drove the offense back. Early in the contest Loren Floren, passing star sent a 60-yard heave to Lester Kappelman, who was waiting by the goal line. With the pig's head down, he marked the marker, the Ep's unsuccessfully tried four times to push across the FRED DICKENSON END When the Jayhawkers journey to Columbia Thursday, one of the major problems they will have to confront is how to skirt the end guarded by this senior wingman, Dickenson is one of the major factors in the success of the aggressive Missouri line. He weighs 182 pounds and halts from Independence, Mo. Women's Class Teams To Play Volleyball The class teams in the women's volleyball division will play their games tomorrow night at 8:30 in Robinson gym. At that time the freshmen will play the juniors, and the sophomores are scheduled to meet the seniors Tuesday night against the seniors, and against the seniors, and the sophomores and juniors will fight it out. The final class tournament games, Nov. 28, will have the juniors opposing the seniors and the sophomores entertaining the freshmen. The class team managers who win the games will be Gladys Bitters, ed4 20, freshmen Lillian Fisher, c'4 19, sophomores Irene McAdoo, ed4 40, juniors; amy Mary Ann Edgerton, c'49, seniors 'Love the Jews,' Says Goebbels Berlin, Nov. 20.—(UP)—Nazi intensified their anti-semitic campaign tonight as propaganda Minister Joseph Gobbs indigently protested American and other forerunners of the German internal policy. Without reference to any specifie foreign criticism to Nazi, Goebbels said in a speech that German hoped to impose the policy on Jews, "so they may take our Jews," He ended with a warning that foreigners should cease protesting. seore. The Gam threat upon a flip from Jim Bell to Al Lemoine, put the ball on the 5-yard line. This time it was the Fiji's who were unable to make their scoring attempt materialize. For the remainder of the game, the team desperately needed to long serial and the final gun scored no appreciable headway had been gained. It had been hoped that second round contests could be started tomorrow afternoon, but due to the tie games they will have to be postponed until Wednesday. Tomorrow the goalkeeper, Kappa Sigma Phi Gamma Delta and Kappa Sigma will once move face Sigma Chi. Harris Second In Two Mile Run ★Kansas Harriers Place Third in Big Six Meet As Record Falls Paced by Ray Harris, Jayhawk sophomore heat, the Kansas two mile team took third place in the conference race at Columbia yesterday. Kansas State won team honors scoring 36 points and Missouri finished second with a total of 71. Kansas' score of $1 gave the Jay- hawks third place over Iowa State by a safe margin. Harris finished second, Ernie Klamm was sixth and the other three Kansas runners, Joe Ryan, Charles Toberan and Eric Eberhardt, finished well down the list. In finishing second, Harris upset the depo considerably. The new Jayhawk distance star, who hails from Trenton, Mo., had not showed up as well as expected in the early races this fall and it was expected that he would trail such veterans as Hofesfess and Mitchell of Kansas State and Brownlee of Nebraska. Instead he'finished ahead of them all and trailed only John Munski of Missouri. Beaten beaten by Munski was no disgrace, for the thin Montanan smashed Glenn Cunningham's meet record of 9:32 with a time of 9:17.5. Cunningham's record had stood since 1932. Klann, a senior, also ran a fine race and finished well up in the running. Both Klann and Harris should show up to even better advantage in the mile run this winter when running than at the two-mile distance. IWW Team Beats Pi Phi's To Win Volleyball Title Although the athletes of the F Phi house won five volleyball game before coming to the finals, and the IWG women only defeated four teams, the latter beat the sorority team 31-27 in the women's intramural championship game in Robinson gymnasium last Thursday night. An interesting and well played game was credited to both teams. The first half was definitely the IWW's, who captured 18 points to the Pi Phi's five. However, in the second half, the sorority team gained in scoring points and made 22 points to the IWW's 13. The outstanding players for the IWW team were: Margaret Van Cleave, ed 39; Virginia Bell, ed 41; and Evelyn E. Harrison, ed 44. Those playing outstanding volleyball for the Pi Phi's were Elizabeth Barclay, c' 40; Leone Marie Hoffman c' 40; and Denee Lemoine, c' 40. We Deliver Call 409 It's STILL the HILL at the BLUE MILL We Deliver CALL 409 Irish Win Over Over Northwestern Evanston, III., Nov. 19—(UP)—Another dazzling backfield star paraded for Notre Dame today, and his fleet and accurate toe carried the undefeated Irish from near disaster to their eight straight victory of the 1938 season against the Northwestern wildcats, 9 to 7. While Northwestern, inspired, scratched and mauded Dame Fame's running attack, big Bill Hofer sit beside Elmer Lyden on the Notre Dame bench. Finally in he went and before his job was done the quarterback took a jump, slapdash downhill run with an intercepted pass and brought the Irish from behind with a fourth period place kick. Manhattan, Kan., Nov. 19—(UP) — Kansas State college scoring two touchdowns in each of the first three crumbs crushed Washburn today 41 The Wildcats took command from the outset and never wavered. Kansas State Crushes Washburn 41 to 14 St. Louis, Mo., Nov. 19-(UP) — The University of Missouri football team outpaced and outran a weaker St. Louis University team today to win the mythical Missouri state championship. The score was 26 to Iowa City, Iowa, Nov. 19—(UP) —Nebraska maintained its ixn over the luckless University of Iowa football team today with a 14 to 0 victory which ended the Iowa season. Eleven thousand fans saw Iowa lose to Oklahoma in the NCAA Tournament. The Hawkeyes's record boasted only one win and one secrelce tie. Tigers Pass and Run To Outscore St. Louis Nebraska Jinx Holds Over Hawkeyes Valiza Korjus, Fernand Graver, Luise Rainer in "The Great Waltz" MGM's greatest musical romance of the life and loves of Johann Strauss whose waltzes swep the world, now at the Granada for 4 days. AT THE GRANADA With the men's individual fall tennis tournament rapidly drawing to a close, four top-notch racket wielders have reached the semifinals in the play-off series. Survivors of the upper bracket are: Francis Domingo, Galoping Domince, and Howard Engleman, Kappa Sutori, and Dick Sutorii, Sig Ep were finalists if the lower bracket. PATEE All Shows 15c Any Time Continuous from 2:30 TODAY 3 BIG DAYS WAR DECLARED! It couldn't happen, but it did! PLANET INVADES EARTH "MARS ATTACKS THE WORLD" HEART HEART ON THE AIR— NOW SEE IT ON THE SCREEN In all it thrilling realism! I wantn't believe your eyes! PREPARE NOW FOR . . . "DRACULA" AND "FRANKENSTEIN" —2nd Feature— WATCH FOR DATES In their semi-final match played yesterday morning, Sutors outstroked Radford, 6-0, 6-1, to pass him into the finals, where he will win the winner of the Engleman Domingo match for the championship. KAP in this KORNER by Lester Kappelman Those who say they know tell us that "Tom-Tom" Stidham's Sooners are just like Old Man River—they just keep rollin' along." . . . Sid Feder of the New York Associated Press inquiries of this korner as to whether the Big Six authorities frown on post-season games. . . . Yeh, they frown on 'em, Sid, but if Oklahoma gets a bowl bid and then is refused permission to accept by the faculty moguls you could "bowl" this correspondent over with a billard ball. . . . Somebody must have aroused the "fish" in Notre Dame's Earl Brown before the game started with the bruising Northwestern Wildcats yesterday. . . . The big pass-grabbing end simply made the fur飞 all afternoon with his vicious play, and consequently linked quite a blotch for himself on the 1839 all-American honor roll. . . . Ed "Whitey" Beinor, the 217-pound tackle who flanks him, is undoubtedly the most handsome of all. Bill Hofer, in scoring all nine points for the Ramblers yesterday, rung up the first tallies of his three-year college career. . . . He plays the blocking back, where you let the other fellow do the scoring. . . . 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