JANUARY 14, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE 'Lawyer' Engleman Takes Time To Coach K.U. Basketball Teams A mixture of law school and basketball isn't always a profitable combination; but Howard Engleman, former Kansas cage star, is putting them together and doing it well. Engleman, a graduate student in the law school, and All-Student Council president, started the year as coach of the "B" basketball squad. and has replaced Dr. F. C. Allen as regular coach during the doctor's stay in the hospital. HOWARD ENGLEMAN Before he left the "B" squad to take up his varsity duties, Coach Engleman had guided the Jayhawk juniors to four consecutive victories. The blond mentor spends his afternoon hours instructing new players in the fundamentals of the Allen system—which differs completely from that used by most high schools and many colleges. It is his job to impart the fine points of screening, playmaking shooting, and floor play to those who aspire to varsity berths. So, in his three-year stay on the Kansas varsity, he treated fans to a display of accuracy on drive-ins, scoop shots, and push shots with either hand, which rivals the best in Big Six court history. Engleman himself stands a bare six feet tall and therefore was seldom able to take advantage of tip-ins who stood from directly under the basket. His 165-point total scoring record set in 1941 has since fallen, but he led the Jayhawkers of that year to a league co-championship. Engleman was twice named all-American, in his junior and senior years. He spent 20 months in the navy, he spent the rank of senior grade legionnard. Now he claims to have retired from active competition, devoting his attention to coaching and to the law books; but if you look closely, you probably will find his name in the box scores of a local city league squad. You may expect to find it on top, as usual. University High To Play Eudora The University High cage squad will go after its second victory of the season at 4 p.m. today when it meets the Eudora five on the Community building court. The Eagles have only one victory in seven starts, one of the defeats coming at the hands of Eudora earlier in the season Eudora uses the Oklahoma Aggie style of basketball to some extent, working the ball in until a certain shot is available. Expected starters for the Eagles are Gene Riling, forward and the squad's leading scorer; Joe Dunham, forward; Bob Powers, center; Dick Cochram, guard; and Rich O'Neill, guard. The "B" game between the two schools was slated to start at 3:15 p.m. K-State Looks For Successor To Adams Manhattan. (UP)—Milton Eisenhower, president of Kansas State college, said today the athletic council would begin "at once" to interview candidates to replace Athletic Director Hobbs Adams. He said in a letter of resignation that he was considering a "number of fine" offers. In a letter of reply, dated yesterday, President Eisenhower told him"I would recommend you for any athletic post in the United States. Mr. Adams, who resigned as football coach last month after a disastrous season, has asked to be relieved as director in order to take a coaching job elsewhere. Mr. Adams stepped down as head football coach after Kansas State finished the season without a single victory. At that time, the coach-athletic director job was combined, and he asked merely to be relieved of the coaching job. The athletic council agreed and separated the two positions. President Eisenhower said that the council would interview candidates for both positions. Competing with Carnegie Institute of Technology, the K.U. Women's Rifle club will hold the first of 26 postal exchange matches at 7:30 p.m. tonight on the R.O.T.C. rifle range, Military Science building. Women's Rifle Club To Fire By Mail Coached by M/Sgt. Arthur W Millard, the team will fire under the supervision of R.O.T.C. officials. Participants will be given five practice shots each, after which they will be allowed $7\frac{1}{2}$ minutes to fire 10 shots from the prone position. The best five scores will be selected and mailed to the rifle club at the Carnegie Institute of Technology to the scores to the local club for comparison. Team members are Frances Chubb and Peggy Baker, co-captains, Margaret Sue Cloyd, Shirley Otter, Kathleen Brewers, Janet Belt, Armilda Lincoln, Mary Anna Ward, Betty Ann Sanden, and Jane Keith. Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the health service at Watkins Memorial hospital, and George Baxter Smith, dean of the School of Education, attended a meeting of the Kansas state health education council in Topeka Saturday. Canuteson, Smith Attend Health Council Meeting Galveston, Texas (UP)—A 50-star flag is ready in Galveston if Alaska and Hawaii should gain admittance to the union. Plans were made for a health workshop to be held June 23 to July 3 in Topeka. In the afternoon Dr. Canuteson attended a meeting of the Kansas tuberculosis and health association, of which he is vice-president. The modern Betsy Ross—Mrs. Rhoda Crawford Twyman—has prepared a United States flag with two new stars added. It also carries a symbolic picture of the four freedoms. Modern Betsy Ross Adds Stars To Flag The flag is broken up into four fields of stars, four stars across and three down in each field. A space separates each field. Joining the four fields in the center are two stars for the territories, placed horizontally. The flag is orthodox otherwise. College Basketball Kentucky 82, Vanderbilt 30 Indiana 62, Dauvergne 46 Illinois 61, Ohio State 42 Iowa 77, Minnesota 64 Michigan 49, Northwestern 41 Alabama 45, Louisiana State 38 Florida 50, Georgia 47 George Washington 45, George Washington & Lee 54, Virginia 5 Marshall 87, Concord 45 Bradley Tech 51, Iowa State 49 Westminster 55, Pittsburgh 45 Drake 46, Creighton 40 Irish Will 'Follow' In Grid De-Emphasis South Bend, Ind. (UP)—Notre Dame university will not lead in dephasis of intercollegiate athletics, but will follow other major schools which establish "practical standards," the Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, president, told the annual Irish football banquet last night. "If the great educational institutions agree on practical standards for athletics and decide not to schedule other institutions that will not observe these standards," he said. "Notre Dame will go along, providing the decent corollary of such a policy is put into effect, that no institution observes these standards will be excluded from competition," he said. Left, Left, Left—No Right In the later phrase, it was believed he was requesting continuation of grid relationships with Notre Dame, which for years has conferred to Western conference eligibility standards. Recently several midwestern sports writers have speculated that various top schools were "dropping" the Irish from their schedules because contests with the power-laden Irish eleven ruined any other team for several weeks. Philadelphia (UP)—The thief who stole a box of 18 shoes from Louis Berman's parked auto last night got a white elephant. They were all left shoes—samples. Cagers Hit Fast Scoring Streak Regarding the recent break in the 33-year-old relationship between Notre Dame and Army, Father Cavanaugh said only that the danger of gamblers "getting to" players of either team had nothing to do with the rupture. The nets were kept hot in Robin- son gymnasium Monday night as intramural basketball teams hit their fastest scoring pace of the season. Phi Gamma Delta roared over I. S. A. by a score of 70 to 18 in the most one-sided contest of the night. Hargiss took scoring honors for the victors with 14 points. Phi Delta Theta swamped Batten- feld, 66 to 26. Debus and Mitchell both looped in 12 points for the Phi Delt's. Individual point-making laurels for the night went to MacDonald of the Sigma Chi team. He netted 20 counters in leading his quintet to a 46 to 31 conquest of the Live Five. The Wolks downed a previously undefeated Phi Kappa Psi team, 22 to 20, in the hardest fought contest of the night. Broederdorf paced the victors with 11 points. Other results: Beta Theta Pi over Wicked Seven, 42 to 22. Independs over Westminster, 52' to 26. Normans over Gamma Delta, 39 to 30. 'Army Football To Be Small Time'—Taylor Washington. (UF)—Army's mighty grid dynasty is about to be ended in favor of small time football for the fun of it, according to Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, superintendent of the U. S. Military Academy. Taylor, principal speaker at last night's annual Touchdown club banquet, said he was more than willing for West Point football to return to the "old regime" of prewar days. He said there was no place at West Point for big time commercial football. Future army elevens, he added, will be manned exclusively by players whose primary purpose is to become army officers. Bachelor's Laundry Service We also do dry cleaning for both men and women. ACME Bachelor's Laundry & Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. Phone 646 Sunflower Ball 9 to 12 Tickets on Sale at Business Office $1.25 per Couple 10-Day to 2-Week Service GUARANTEED WATCH REPAIRING ALSO ENGRAVING Friday, Jan. 17 LAUTER JEWELRY A COMPLETE JEWELRY STORE Jimmy Holyfield AND COMBO Between Tenn. and Ohio on 14th 411 W. 14th St. Phone 307 SEE A SHOW TONITE Official Representative of L. G. BALFOUR CO. NOW — All Week Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 LOVE has the quality of Blindness . . So has HATE! - X-TRA SPECIAL NEWS - ROSE BOWL — SUGAR BOWL and ORANGE BOWL . . 80th CONGRESS HEARS TRUMAN Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 GRANADA NOW! — Ends Wednesday A Lucky Winner of Laughs & Love ROBERT YOUNG BARBARA READ FRANK MORGAN "LADY LUCK" THURSDAY — 3 Days ALSO: PETE SMITH and DISNEY COLOR CARTOON Epic of the Pony Express "The Plainsman and the Lady" WILLIAM ELLIOTT VERA RALSTON GAIL PATRICK SUNDAY—"THE KILLERS" Patee Now Playing IT DARES TO STRIP BARE A WOMAN'S MIND G. 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