Page 14 University Daily Kansan, September 26, 1980
Kansan Predictions
| Arnold | Bertels | Lewis | Myers | Seeley |
|---|
| Louisville at Kansas | Kansas 21-3 | Kansas 24-10 | Louisville 21-17 | Kansas 31-24 | Kansas 45-12 |
| Arkansas State at Kansas State | Arkansas State 21-3 | Kansas State 17-14 | Kansas State 21-10 | Kansas State 2-0 | Kansas State 14-13 |
| Nebraska at Penn State | Nebraska 27-21 | Nebraka 14-10 | Nebraka 23-14 | Penn State 23-7 | Nebraka 26-17 |
| Stanford at Oklahoma | Oklahoma 42-21 | Oklahoma 30-7 | Oklahoma 27-21 | Oklahoma 33-14 | Oklahoma 24-21 |
| Indiana at Colorado | Indiana 21-10 | Indiana 14-0 | Indiana 21-17 | Indiana 20-14 | Indiana 25-10 |
| Iowa State at Iowa | Iowa State 14-7 | Iowa State 10-7 | Iowa 16-7 | Iowa State I carel | Iowa 3-0 |
| Missouri at San Diego State | Missouri 27-3 | Missouri 21-7 | Missouri 27-14 | Missouri 17-0 | S.D. State 35-17 |
| South Carolina at Michigan | Michigan 27-7 | Michigan 21-14 | Michigan 23-20 | South Carolina 24-19 | Michigan 16-13 |
| Florida State at Miami, Fla. | Florida State 35-20 | Florida State 28-7 | Florida State 20-14 | Miami, Fla. 21-20 | Florida State 36-17 |
| Tennessee at Auburn | Tennessee 14-13 | Auburn 24-10 | Tennessee 28-24 | Tennessee 17-16 | Tennessee 28-14 |
| Season Totals | 17-2-1 | 18-3-1 | 16-3-1 | 14-5-1 | 16-3-1 |
The predictors are Patti Arnold, Kansas associate sports editor; Kevin Bertelis, sports writer; David Lewis, editorial editor; Gene Myers, sports editor; and Matt Seeley, sports writer.
'Hawks face new pressure
By GENE MYERS Sports Editor
There is a different pressure on Kansas this weekend. The Jayhawks not only are favored to win a game but also are expected to overwhelm their opposition.
the opponent.
Las Vegas rates KU a 12-point favorite,
which makes KU the favorite for the first time in
two season.
KU, however, is not the favorite because of its accomplishments this season or in past seasons. KU is the favorite because the opposition, the Louisville Cardinals, is 0-3 and has been outscored 89-19. The Cardinal offense has produced only one touchdown.
"People are saying we should beat Louisville because they've already lost three games," Fambrough said. "But we haven't won any games either."
KU'S PLAYERS are expecting and guarantee a victory in tomorrow's 1:30 p.m. game in Memorial Stadium, Head Coach Don Fambrough is holding the conservative line.
Kansas is 0-1-1, playing to a 7-7 tie with Oregon and Losing or Pittsburgh to 18-3-1. Louisville has lost 24-10 to Miami, FL., 52-0 to Florida State and 13-9 to Murray State.
in a subdued manner. Since the start of the season, they have predicted great things for the season.
KU's navers are preparing for a victory, but
Most of these predictions fell on deaf ears 'For this game, fans will listen.
“THIS IS OUR WEEK to win,” linebacker
Jimmy Reid said. He didn’t jelly yet,
and we intended to keep them from
replacing him.
On offense KU will again start freshman Frank Seurer at quarterback and freshman Kernin Bell at tailback. The duo from Huntington Beach, Calif., starred in the season opener but was bounced off the artificial turf last Saturday by the Pitt defense. The only time Seurer and Bell were not hounded was when they were sent to the bench.
"We hope this week will enable us to run the ball more, make first downs, move the chains and make touchdowns," Ivy Williams, running back coach, said. "We'll be able to do some things we haven't been able to do the last two weeks."
DAVID VERSER, All-Big Eight flanker, expects Seurer to fire the ball in the air, often and deep.
"They're not that fast, and they play a lot of man-to-man," Verser said. "They react to the run and move up. If they do the same thing, we'll have our passing game in fine shape."
On passing him, Louisville's last loss, 13-9 to Murray State, was
a shocker. Murray State is a Division I-A school. Louisville and KU are Division I-AA.
"We shouldn't have been behind at any time in the Murray State game," Cardinal quarterback Pat Patterson said. "We've saved that frustration for Kansas."
KU STIRD opponent of the season has been frustrated in each of the past three years. In 1977, KU was 0-2 before surprising 19th-ranked Washington State, 14-12. The Jayhawks then dumped eighth-ranked UCLA, 28-24, after a 0-2 start in 1978.
sat. 19, 1976.
Last year, the Jayhawks whipped North Texas State, 37-18, after another 0-2 start. During those three seasons, KU won only seven games.
"We can't take anyone lightly," Fambrough prepared just as hard as we did for Pittsburgh.
JAYHAWK NOTES: There are two changes in this week's KU starting lineup. On offense, Lester Mickens has won back the startling split end position from Russ Bastin. On defense, freshman linebacker Mike Arbanas will start for injured Kyle McNorton.
Quarterback Frank Seurer suffered an off-the-field loss last night when he lost his bid to be vice president of the freshman class. Seurer, who was running with the Imagine Action coalition, finished fourth with 76 votes. Larry Cook of the Grand New Party won with 114 votes.
Football Buffet
$1.99All The Pizza You Can Eat
$2.99 All The Pizza You Can Eat plus a hearty bowl of soup, a salad from the Garden of Eatin' and a sixteen ounce soft drink.
Every Home Football Game 11:00 am until kickoff
2449 Iowa in the Holiday Plaza Carry-out and Delivery 842-5824
GOOD LUCK JAYHAWKS!
Rent it.Call the Kansan.Call 864-4358
Bill of Fare
Country Inn Chicken Dinners (4 pieces)
Country Inn Chicken Fried Steak
Country Inn Pork Chops (2 chops)
Country Inn Catfish
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE ALL YOU CAN EAT OF THE FOLLOWING:
Honeymeal, Homemade Preserves, Chicken Gravy, Homemade Biscuits, Honeypump Butter, Homemade Preserves, Bean Salad, Cole Slaw, Vegetable of the Day,
Choice of Beverage: Milk, Iceed Tea, Hot Tea, Coffee, Lemonade, Choice of Dessert: Homemade Cherry or Peach Pie, Hot Fudge Sundae, Sherbet
Children 7-12
Children Under 7
$^5$2.50 (Chicken & Chop)
5 1.50 (Chicken)
Having A Party, Kegger, or Picnic, Let Us Do The Cooking
ENJOYABLE ATMOSPHERE, FOR PARENTS, DATES, OR JUST A BUNCH
Watkins deception won't fool 3rd Dist. voters
Dan Watkins may yet make the making of a (someday) U.S. Congressman, but it seems he is clouding his future with his current mudaling campaign against Larry Winn.
Those outraged voters aren't just the supporters of Larry Winn. Richard D. Williamson, president of the Overland Park Democratic Club, has just sent me a copy of a letter he wrote to Speaker of the House Tip O'Neal, which eloquently sums up his feelings about the mirepresentation by Watkina of Winn's atten-
The campaign is quite young, but already there are signs that Watkins has outraged some Third District voters by his persistent distortion of Winn's attendance record in the House of Representatives.
While Williamson told me he had written O'Neal on his own behalf, he said many other Democrats share his sentiments. The letter follows:
September 10, 1980
Dear Mr. Speaker;
Recently I have received requests from your office soliciting campaign donations for many of our volunteers.
You will be personally advised that a number of
However, Mr. Speaker, I am very concerned about the treatment of Rep. Larry Winn (R.), Overland Park, Kansas. Republican he may be but right is making some very false and incorrect allegations about Rep. Winn. This Democratic opponent is maliciously depicted Rep. Winn as having been abnormally absent from the House when, in fact, he was on "of your" President Carter in the United Nations.
these requests are presently under consideration by me.
Not one dime will I, or my associates, contribute to support a campaign based on such false charges
Yours sincerely,
Reprinted from "Johnson County Sun"
Richard D. Williamson
If Watkins' misleading charges need further explanation, they focus on a three-month period in 1979, when Winn accepted an appointment by President Carter as one of two Congressional representatives to the United States House of Representatives. The congressional Congress each year to represent the Congress at the UN — one a Democrat, the other a Republican. The
Memo
Straight talk
by Stan Rose, Publisher
Senate and House alternate in this service. Former Sen.
Jim Pearson of Kansas did his stint at the UN several
Because of Winn's commitment at the UN, his voting attendance record for last year dropped to 67 percent.
Overlooked by Watkins in his attempt to create the impression that Winn has a habit of shipping his death with Democrats, he has also averaged the average of Democrats and Republicans in Congress. During his 14 years of service as a Third District Congressman, according to a Congressional Quarterly study, Winn's attendance record has been slightly lower.
In attacking Winn for not turning down a Presiden-
trial appointment that he, Watkins, undoubtedly would have jumped at had it been offered him. Watkins is following the Carter handbook on how to fabricate phony issues and make them look real.
Having seen Jimmy Carter and his associates in action during the 1976 campaign, and having watched them pull one deception after another from their bag of supplies, he was surprised if Winn were set up for this sort of attack.
How to help get rid of a Republican Congressman from a fairly conservative district? Send him off to the UN, which is in the doghouse with many middle-of-the-road activists. Then attack his attendance record in Congress!
What makes me doubly uncomfortable over Watkin's tactics is the recollection that in 1978, he helped mastermind John Carlin's successful strategy against Gov. Bob Bennett. Remember that Carlin's campaign was given a last-minute lift by an emotional attack on high utility rates. Bennett was the tool of the utilities, and Mr. Watkin would have also would see the rates lowered. We all know what became of that fake issue, but it helped电驶 Carlin.
Paid for by Winn for Congress
Watkins is an attractive, intelligent political figure who should be above this sort of deceptive, single-issue rule.
Paint Political Ad