mG teams will come eventually, as sure as death end taxes. It is the only solution that can come which will entirely eliminate discrimination for both the offense and the defense. As a parallel argument, in football when the goal posts have been placed 10 yards back of the goal line it ee everyvody a chance, but the specialist in drop-kicking or place-kicking is atucchb ides from many attempts which he would lentes try if the goal posts were on the goal line. And so this tall baskotieli specialist who dnupe wadarapetn the basket and reaches, taps or dunks it in will not be the valuable member he would be under a 10 foot basket. By raising the basket you take nothing away from the short player but you Seas Eas aes of height from this gigentic player. As a case in sehive at visaidan symptons, I wish to miaxk eite the elisluctien of the center jump mle. These advocates claim that the elimination of the center jump would drive the gangling, altitudinous player out of the game. All the rule makers did by eliminating the center jump was to add many more out of hounds plays to the already too many plays of this nature, and’ Gee, they placed a heavier burden on the poor officials by creating fire wagon basketball which leaves the players, officials and spectators fatigued and dizzy after 40 minutes of this harum=-scarum basket- ball. . It will be interesting to watch George Kok of Arkansas against Iowa State, Missouri and Pepperdine College. Missouri has substituted for the University of Iowa, which was filling in the bracket so it would be possible for the N.C.A.A. to carry on. The dates are March 24 and 25 in the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City. Dartmouth, Catholic University, Temple and Ohio State will play in New York, and the winder of the western