PAGE FOUR + UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1938 Experts View Big Six Race As a Toss-Up Cyclones Turn in First Season Upset; Sooners Clash With Jayhawkers Here Saturday BIG SIX STANDINGS Team Won Lost Plt. Iowa State 1 1 0 1.000 Kansas State 1 0 1 0.000 Kansas 1 0 1 0.000 Oklahoma 1 0 1 0.000 Nebraska 1 0 1 0.000 Missouri 1 1 1 0.000 It looks like this fall's Big Six grid race is going to pack more punch than a pledge at a sorority reception. And we were not referring to the way the Jayhawkers "beat" Washburn Saturday. Iowa State, with its sparkplug quarterback, Everett Kiser turned in the big upset of the opening week by downing Nebraska, 8 to 7 and for the first time in several seasons it must be rated as a title contender. In the other league get-together Kansas State and Missouri put on a scoring exhibition that showed either will be tough to deal with. State finally won out 21 to 13, but the Tigers' sophomore pass star, Paul Christman, had the Wildcat secondary scared stiff every time he cocked his right arm. He threw every one of his team's 35 passes and completed 17 of them for 309 vards. Sooners Have Rough Line Kansas and Oklahoma both looked impressive in chalking up wins over Washburn college and University of Texas, respectively the Jayhawkers by the large score they ran up, and the Sooners by the caliber of opposition they encountered. It was Oklahoma's second consecutive victory over a tough Southwest conference eleven, and the rest of the Big Six coaches are wondering where Tom Stidham finds those rugged forward walls. urs last season's defensive powerhouse was nearly wrecked by graduation, but back he comes with a line that holds high-geared Rice to one touchdown and the following week shots off Texas, the Longhorns netting only 11 yards on running plays Oklahoma Here Saturday Kansas and Oklahoma are a week behind the rest in starting conference play, but they meet each other here Saturday in one of the loop's feature attractions. It will pit the Jayhawkers' potent offense against the great Norman lines and should be a sort of modified experiment on what happens when an irresistible force meets an immovable object. The Missouri-Iowa State clash at Columbia will attract plenty of attention as Big Six fans are anxious to see if the Cyclone triumph over the Cornbuckers was a flunk and also find relief. There were three on the win column after their one-touchdown defeat at the hands of K-State. Nebraska and Kansas State will go outside the fold for competition and they are very likely to find plenty of it. Biff Jones' Huskers will entertain Indiana's tough Big Ten outfit and the Wildcats journey to Milwaukee for a Friday night contest in Marquette. Shane Several of the league's backs have WANT ADS LOST: 1 Phi Bhi Pi pin. Finder please call 2992 or return to owner at 1225 Oread. Reward. Name on base of pin. -20. DRINK MILK for health. There is no better than goat milk. Try it. E. S. Hurturb, 1319 Summit St.-19 FOR RENT: Attractively furnished 5-room house at 628 Louisiana. Phone 667. -19. LAUNDRY Wanted: Bundle washings called for and delivered. Prices reasonable. Phone 2563M. -19. LOST: Jewelled A.T.O. fraternity pin between center Frank Strong and Blake hall. Finder please call 837. Liberal reward. -19 FOR SALE. Registered Snail Ship- boat, slightly located, located at State Lake. Excellent condition if freshed if desired. Call Chuck Herold at 726. -19 DELTA PHI DELTA jeweled pin lost near or in Administration bldg, Name Ruth Ellison on base. Return to 312 West Adm. or call K. U. 91. Reward. 19 NEAT 2-room apartment for rent at 501 Rhode Island. Very convenient, bills paid. $16.00. Phone 2541. LOST: breakfast morning, blue Ester-Brook pen, somewhere between Administration bldg. and Brick, cafe. Call 1783, Hirschi Tordt. -22 already established themselves as outstanding and must play the rest of the season as "marked men." It's a decided handicap to face a team that is laying for you, but until a ball player proves himself under such conditions he cannot have the "great" sign stamped on him. Ball carriers and passers in this group include Jack Dodd of Nebraska, Elmer Hackey of Kansas State, Bob Seymour of Iowa State, Iva Lawton of Christman of Missouri, and Miller of the Jayhawks. Miller and Christma are the only sophomores in the group and they both perform like they've been around for some time. They are passers delux, as was proved Saturday. Miller completed 10 out of 12 aerials for 227 yards and the Tiger ace hit the mark on more than half of his 35 passes for gains totaling more than 300 yards. Harriers Gird For Team Race Kansas Five To Match Strides With Sooners Saturday. The Kansas "cross country" team will engage in its first meet of the season at 1 p. m. Saturday when they circle the oval at Memorial Stadium eight times in competition with the University of Oklahoma quintet. The race will precede an anticipated football battle between the two Big Six Conference contenders. With but two week's practice, Coach "Bill" Hargis has had time enough to pick only four of his five starting men. The are Ray Harris, Ernie Klam, Charles Toberen, Don Thompson. The fifth member will be chosen from the performances turned in this week by Joe Ryan, John Ryder, Chris Eberhardt, and Sidney Sklar. The winner will be determined by the team with the least number of points, as the runners will be credited with points in accordance with the position in which they finish the race. The first man will receive one point, the second mar will receive two points, etc. Last year the Jayhawkers two-mile team lost to Oklahoma by one point and will be out for revenge Saturday. The fall intramural season got under way yesterday afternoon with competition starting in four women's sports and three men's sports. Intramurals Get Started Touch football, tennis and handball made their bow on the men's schedule and horseshoes, tennis, handball and volleyball were the opening women's competitions. For the men, horseshoe play will start today and women's golf matches will be started qualifying rounds are completed. Razzle-dazle play, despite new rules designed to minimize injuries, characterized the three tee-off contests on the touch-football Throneing weather tool away the large crowd of sideline rooters. On the newly graded, although not-yet-sodded, field, the Phi Pai aerial star, Bob Allen, pitched his team to a 21-9 victory over Triangle. After a scoreless first half, Bowly snagged a looping pass and scampered across the goal line to give the Galloping Dominoes a 6-0 margin against the Helihounds. Less exciting than the other two games, the Pi K. A-Acacia struggle wound up a 0-0 tie. Touch football. West field, Sigma Nu vs. A.T.O.; center field, Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi Gam; east field, Jaybirds vs. Phi Chi. The men's intramural schedule for this afternoon: Tennis: Beta Theta Pi vs. Triangle. Handball: Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Sigma Chi; Kappa Sigma vs. Delti Chi. Deltas: Horseshoes: Galloping Dominoes vs. Phi Pai; Acacia vs. Phi Delta Theta. KAP ◆ in this KORNER by Lester Kappleman Saturday's Big Six grid encounters did one thing for the dopsters. It narrowed the race down to three teams in defiance and K-State gave further warning that they've got a steamroller underway. Nebraska by past Featuring Bud Frink at the "Baby" Grand Tuesday and Thursday 8-9 p.m. The Southern PIT BARBECUE Located on So.Mass.at 19th "Lawrence's Smartest Place" We Deliver Phone 72 At K. U. Business Office Round Corner Drug Store Tickets Now on Sale for the lecture by Hoch Auditorium Saturday, Oct. 22 - 8:20 p.m. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt 50c 75c $1 plus tax (All seats reserved) Sponsored by Lawrence Women's Club for benefit of K.U. Loan Fund. Here are the reasons, straight from Soonerland (take them for what they are worth): ... Diarygarding the ends, whom everybody already knew were good, Tom Stidham has of the biggest and roughest experiences can never be counted out, and Iowa State by virtue of Saturday's conquest at Lincoln, shows us a dangerous threat. ...All who saw the Jayhawkers bounce back Saturday but barely escaping the heat at South Bend have a good idea that Kansas won't end up-upended. ...As for bouncing, though, they might have another bounce coming this weekend when the Sooners come to Town. ... tackles on any team. They've got those Texas wingen. . .They've got a guard named Bolton who is every inch of his name—he takes delight in boltin' through and smacking enemy pans. Rice and Walle Lawson of Texas. Oh yeah, be sure to watch for a back named Rogers...He does everything well...Also a Texas Indian halfback called West...He learned his marksmanship with a bow and arrow. His passes are likewise tipped with poison. They've got a sophomore center weight. He's able to call sight. The Sooner's attack, both by land and air, clicks when they want to use it. ...So far they have just used it enough to win. Their line is better than the stalkwart one of last year. ...Ho hum... The image in the crystal ball right now looks like the Sooners. ... But Kansas has demonstrated to Oklahoma in the past that reflections don't mean a thing... If the Jayhawkers gamble on an attack as they did Saturday, and not play defensive football, we will have to hold our prognostications until after the game... Max Replogle turned in probably the best game of his career against the Iachabos. . . His work so far this year has had "elass" stamped all over it ... K.U.'s tack problem Saturday was turned over to Washburn to solve. . . Evidently the Ichs were better lawyers than mathematicianists and still tried it out when the game ended. . . The yards made through tackle were about as large as the size of your hat . . . "Look out for the Phi Gams'” is the watchword among intramural football outfits.…Defending champions, and with practice the same veteran team back, it looks like the club to beat…S.A.E., perennial contender, is reputedly not as strong this year.…Experts say the less of Jack “Stubby” Nourse, triple-threater now starring for the Baker University varsity, will eliminate the Alpha as a serious title threat…. K.U. Dames Club To Meet The K.U. Dames Bridge Club will meet at 8 o'clock tonight at the home of Mrs. Ruth Carter at 1244 Louisiana street in New York City. The K.U. Dames Sewing Club will meet at the home of Mrs. W, S. Jack, 306 Brady apartments. THE "WINNAHS" In Last Week Football "PICK-EM' CONTEST" Winner: Mrs. J. K. Woodhull 816 Mass, St. Pric: $5 Catolina Sweater Second: Fred Eberhardt, 1231 Lla. St. Price: $2 Box Interwoven Socks Third: John Patchen, 934 Miss. Sr. Fourth: Hazel Simmons, 1045 Vt. St. Fourth: Hazel Simmons, 1045 Vt. St. Price: $1.65 Shirtcraft Shirt Wear a New Carl Suit and Topcoat to the Game Saturday — Yes Sir: K.U. Win! Another Contest this week. Free to all. Get your blanks at our store Now 'THIS PIPE NEVER BITES MY TONGUE' THE PAT'D FILTER WON'T LET IT NEW SHAPES & FINISHES Frank MEDICO has only pat'd. filter combining cellophane exterior and 66 baffle absorbent screen interior. Baffles break up and coal smoke stream; trap nicotine, juices and flakes, automatically breaking in pipe. A winsome young lady from Barrow Hated ties that were stringy and narrow, But she'd fall for the gents Who showed thrif and good sense And always wore neckwear by *Arrow*. $1 ARROW TIES ARE SMART SEE THIS WEEK'S POST page 92 "I SWEAR I'LL LOVE NO ONE!" To gain one hour of society, Alice Gower stole a dress from the shop where she modeled, walked right into an exclusive Washington cafe and waited for something to happen. It did. Read A Little Number in Pique, by JOSEPH HEROESHEIMER. ALSO **HOW TO LIVE IN U. S. ON $7 A YEAR.** Ben Lucien Burman tells you in *Shanty Boat Coming Down*, the story of a strangely primitive life right here in America Read the story of—and by— "PUDGE" HEFFELFINGER All-Time, All-American Guard.. Nobody Put Me on My Back by W. W. (Pudge) HEFFELFINGER with GEORGE TREVOR AT 52,TOO FOOTBALL AT YALE! THE ONE and only "Heff," sometimes called "the greatest football player of all time," highlights his fifty years (yes, we said fifty!) on the gridiron, compares modern and old-time football tactics, and rates the great post-war stars. You'll enjoy every line of this story from the man who says he was barred-at 52—from scrimmaging the Yale Varsity—because he was too rough! Don't miss it! It's on page 14 of your Post this week. Enjoy THE POST TONIGHT THAT DARK NIGHT, when he ran away from home and his merciless father, Ray Talcott but one thought: I'll head West! I'll grow up there, get tough and come back with a gun! Alonely, desperate youngster bound for the Indian country of the 70's. Sashay along with him and meet his partner, Springtime, the cow puncher; and Doctor Antelope Maribel, the artful sneak-thief; sly, foxy old Uncle Coon; and some of the most picturesque rogues and plainsmen that ever crossed sagebrush. Begin this new novel of adventure BITTER CREEK by JAMES BOYD Author of "Drums," "'Roll River"and "Long Hunt" which few of us have ever explored. ...Also a short story of Near East intrigue by Arthur Tuckerman; a sword hunting story by Robert Murphy; a backstage yarn about a Noodler (guitar-player to you) by Horatio Winlow . . . Articles, editorials, poetry and cartoons. THE SATURDAY EVENING POST ---