Year's pay wok th, Se asa gasoline saving Pay eee TOI aes é ~ -_ er 0 eee eer wee eet Gt “Ta Jl ed eo | ARE FULL Ob Dr. F. C. Allen Sends hawk Pebounds”’ to i < ft in Service caking of morale building _ isn’t these days?), not & yeen said nf one of th le legs in th: ~the college coach and radents oe. Th arly every coach and pu’ tor puts if considerabl ding f athletes 1 jervices how the old scho. schoolmates are getting « Bnet sovts of methods are . ; Some et prefer mimeographed 1_ws. ters. Others keep stenographers batting out personal notes. Sample: Every month or so, F. C. |“Phog” Allen, Kansas basketball coach, composes his “Jayhawk Re- bounds.” They’re like the great Phog himself, gabby, platitudinous -——and chock full of news. _ Allen doesn’t spare the type- writer—or consider the newsprint ‘| shortage. His last issue rambled 15 pages, single spaced. More than two of the pages were devoted to | expressions of regret from Jay- awkers, scattered the world over, who had just learned thru “Re- bounds” that T. P. Hunter, quiet, likeable Kansas center, had been killed in action on Guam. The names sprinkled thru the “Rebounds” recall many an excit- ing moment in Kansas, and Big Six, history. Such as\Don Ebling, Howard Engleman, Qtto Schnell- bacher, Armand Dixon, Bert Itoga |. and Cecil Smay, who did their Jay- hawking a decade or ae ago. es What Doctor Allen is doing at Kansas is being duplicated in one :| Way or another on almost every campus, ' See A line in a letter to Allen from Irven W. Hayden, in India for more than a year, probably sums up the feelings of all servicemen. Wrote Hayden of the “Rebounds”: “Just like a visit home.” (Dee ee rete ma -— -—