THE KANSAS CITY STAR, SUNDAY, _ A New Form of Basketball Enlivens Summer on Mt. Oread 6 hae relative quiet of the summer school session at the University of Kansas has been broken in recent weeks. by brisk scrimmages of sprightly athletes around a post with a strange wire contraption atop it. The men, high school basketball coaches taking summer instruction, are — playing hi-goal, a quite radically different form of basketball developed by Dr, F. ©. Allen, veteran and expert basketball coach at the Jay- 5 hawker school. Hi-goal is played on a 50-foot circular area atid both teams shoot for the same goal. When a goal is scored the ball bounces down upon the contestants and immediately is in play again. The game calls for brisk, unbroken action and extremely accurate shooting, as pictures on this page indicate. Hi-goal isn’t the only spirited summer activity on the campus, however. Notice the summer schoolgirls. at play. Kansas City Star Photographs, oe Thomas M. Bowlus THIS IS HI-GOAL and making a basket—as Gerald Barker (arm upraised), Minneapolis, Kas., coach, is doing—isn’t as easy as in con- ventional basketball, for, as you see, there is no backboard. The ball will drop down through the basket and the game will go on without | pause. A game consists of four quarters of seven and one-half minutes each. In the play (eft to right) are Clifford Olander, coach at Argen- tine high school, Kansas City, Kansas; Alvin Emch, coach at Madison, Kas., high school; Kenneth Center, coach at Great Bend, Kas.; Barker; “ Vernon Hays, Lecompton, Kas., coach; Kenneth Cassida, Towanda, Kas., coach; Loren Florell of Topeka, a B. vz varsity players and Art Lawrence, coach at Rosedale high school, Kansas City, Kansas.