PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1932 United Press Team Includes Johnson, Page and O'Leary Difficulty in Selecting All Star Quintet Overcome by Championship of Kansans M.U. AND O.U. SECOND First Team Forwards: Ted O'Leary, Kansas. * (Capt.) John Cooper, Missouri. Center: Bill Johnson, Kansas. Highland, Main, Oklahoma. Lee Page, Kansas. Second Team - Forwardes: Andy Beek, Oklahoma, *(Cap.); Andy Skradski, Kansas * State. - Center: Albert Heitman, Iowa * State. - Eldon Auker, Kansas State. - Guards: Max Collings, Missouri * Eldon Auker, Kansas State (By William B. Dickinson, Jr., '29) (United First Team Championship) City City, Mo., March 14 — UIP- Solemba, history of biography of Bix conferences basketball, has it been so difficult to do justice to all the all-pied players of the league in choosing an all-star team. Had not the Kansas Jayhawkers emerged as undisputed champions in time, the task would be well-eight impossible. The victory of the Kansans over Oakland Saturday night, 33 to 24, left the Cincinnati Akiese Aggie team, 22 to 28. However, lifted the Lawrence aggregation out of the muddle, and gave proof of their ability to play. Kansans on First Team It also cincinnati for Kansas players a couple of places on the first all-star team, which might have been extremely doubtful had the Oklahoma attack tacked against the Jawahresu at center and Leo Page at guard. Ted O'Leary, veteran Kansas fan would, could hardly be ignored in make-up for the game. He stood 6 feet, and possessed of the experience of three variality campaigns, O'Leary was the Kansas spark plunk player for all of the games, every minute of every game, and with Cooper, tied for the conference scoring average, for every point per game, a total of 110 points per game, a total of 110 points. Cooper, chosen to team with O'Leary at the forward posts, is a sophomore in the game. Lacking the all-around ability of O'Leary he has a shot-making wizardry ability. Johnson Gets Pivot Position The pivot position, which furnished perhaps the strongest competition of any post, goes to Johnson, over such states as Holtman of Iowa State, Wagner of Missouri, and Skriskov of Kansas State. Johnson, off to a poor start, rounded into a form about mid-season, and from there on out played a splendid center game. Page, playing consistently fine ball was not the conference's most flashy guard, but there was never minute that he was not the steadiest. With Page has been paired Perey Main of Oklahoma. Main, playing his first year of conference basketball, was a fine scoring guard, and an inspiration to his team. At least two he started scoring rallies in the last few minutes Sport Shorts Phog Allen and his Kansas Jayhawkers have answered another basketball ball. Phog has acquired a habit of taking the honors in conference as well as showing teams from other schools that we play basketball here at K. U. Kansas took the championship, m... ning in the last game of the season with their star center dramatically arriving in time to play, by chartering an airplane. This all happened after the Oklahoma team had expressed their desire to play the game on schedule even though Johnson could not get there. C. E. McBride, sports writer of the Kansas City Star expressed himself in his sports column rather forcibly a few nights ago. McBriden said that Oklauna and defended Kenyon at home court Johnson and all. It is his opinion that the sporting thing for the Oklauna team was to give Kansaun Johnson and any time that was satisfied with the result he would win that they should early in the season. After all it was through no fault of training nor was it directly due to him-self that Johnson was away as the time dreear near to the play Sooners. He was a teacher, and he had the gift of his father. Johnson's father, before his death had expressed his desire that Bill should play a good game against Oklahoma and his mother advised him to take the trip to Lawrence by boat, ower to be here for the opening whistle. After all it was an Oklahoma alumnus, and manager of the committee that would have been selected to drum who showed true sportsmanship and piloted the plane that brought them home. Gain Places on United Press Big Six Team LEE PAGE WILLIAM JOHNSON Lee Page, Ted O'Leary, and Bill Johnn, the three Jayhawkers who were given births on the United Press mythical Big Six basketball team. SEVENTEEN JAYHAWKERS SAW ACTION IN 1931-32 BASKETBALL Page and O'Leary have played their last game for Kansas, and Johnson, a junior, will have another chance at the Big Six all star team next year. John Cooper, Missouri, who tied with O'Leary for high scoring honors, and Percy Main, Oklahoma, a hard-fighting guard, were the other two men securing places on the first team. Only Four Men. However, Played in Every Game in Season Just Completed Seventeen men saw service in one or more games in the 18-game schedule just completed by the University basketball team. Ten of these games were conference battles and the Jachawkers of Dr. F. C. Allon, by winning seven and losing eight, in the conference championship. Of the eight non-conference games played Kansas won six and lost two. Only four Jayhawkers played in all eighteen games this season, they being DTE Leonard, forward, who led the squad scoring with 79 field goals and 39 free throws for a total of 197 points; William Johnson, center with 147 points; Jamie Harrison, forward, 97 points; and Lea Page, guard, with 59 points. TOTAL SCORING FOR SEASON Player Goals Free Throws Mismatch Total Points Game Theodore O'Leary 79 39 16 18 197 18 William Johnson 62 23 50 10 147 18 Paul Harrington 36 25 23 17 97 18 Lee Page 27 5 31 8 99 18 Ernest Vanuck 5 5 9 3 15 11 Ernest Casini 5 0 11 0 10 11 Elmer Schaake 3 1 12 4 7 5 Hudson McGuire 3 0 0 0 6 3 Frank Bauch 1 1 11 1 3 11 Kerneth Johnson 1 0 0 0 2 2 Dick O'Neil 0 1 0 2 1 5 Lawrence Filkin 0 1 0 0 3 Raymond Knight 0 0 1 0 2 Stewart Chambers 0 0 1 0 1 Garden City, March 1—UP) (The largest crop of sugar beet since 1906 was refined this year at the Garden City factory, the only sugar mill in the state. About 371,400 pounds of sugar, almoze nine pounds for every person who buys it, were turned into the season. The crop yielded farmers $255,000. Note—James Brazil, Warren Plaskett and Phil Beauty each played in one game, but did not agger. SCORING IN BIG SIX GAMES | Player | Goals | Throws | Fouls | Free Throws | Total Points | Game | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Theodore O'Leary | 44 | 22 | 8 | 11 | 110 | 10 | | William Johnson | 40 | 15 | 29 | 6 | 95 | 10 | | Paul Harrington | 18 | 16 | 13 | 4 | 52 | 10 | | Lee Pigeon | 16 | 4 | 21 | 7 | 36 | 10 | | Elmore Schaake | 3 | 1 | 12 | 4 | 7 | 5 | | Ernest Vanok | 2 | 2 | 8 | 1 | 6 | 7 | | Hudson McGuire | 3 | 0 | 8 | 0 | 6 | 3 | | Ernest Casin) | 1 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 4 | | Frank Bausch | 0 | 1 | 4 | 0 | 1 | 7 | | Dick O'Neil | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | | Lawrence Filikin | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | Churchill, Manitoba, March 1- (UP) —Fur-c陕 Eskimos and husky sour-dough today hurried to this sub-acre season for fear they be left out of pairings for contract bridge champion all regions north of the 50th parallel. ESKIMO CONTRACT PLAYERS RUSHING TO MAKE PAIRINGS Totals 127 62 100 34 316 Exponents of the official Arctic and Culbertson systems, who have vied all winter in informal matches, today announced a gigantic tournament. Trap stars from five companies, watchmen, and other residents of Churchill all have entered. Percentage of free thrown made in all games= 60.9 Percentage of free threw made in conference games= 64.5 Women's Intramurals --- The following intramural deck tennis matches are to be played off before next Friday, according to Miss Ruth Crawford, assistant professor of physical education. Margaret Roberts, fa 33, and Mar- tine Roberts, fa 32, and the match between Rose Polewski c*34, and Mary McGuire c*35, vs. Orshe Rongsh, c*35, and Lillian Zimmerman Margaret Lawson, c'22; and HelenLawson, c'29; vs MargaretKemple, c'34; vs MargaretLewis, c'32; and HelenCampbell, c'23; and HelenCampbell, ed'33; and ElizabethMoldy, ed'uncle, and CatherMcIlroy, ed'uncle. Frances Hunter, c34, and Mary Elizabeth Belfair, c24 will play the winnings of Virginia Hulbert, c35, vs. Jean Murdock, c18, and Alice Lovett, HEIRLOOMS OF 1932 A young member of some far-off generation will take down a piece of stemmed glassware from a cupboard . . . "Look, they used this glass on their daily table.". . . He will lift a length of glowing drapery from a chest . . "They used this curtain at their window. Heirlooms such as these will indicate to them our 1932 civilization. But there will be another record the pages of our newspapers and magazines Here in advertisements they will read of everything worthy that is possessable today. They will sense the countless shops that carry these offerings . . . the endless labor in factories, improving, perfecting things. Likely enough they will marvel a little that you can buy good so fresh. ("This mayonnaise might have just been made in your kitchen") . . so carefully prepared ("It took us three years to perfect this cream") . . so dependable ("This cigarette has always the same satisfying fragrance") . . so recent ("Only the other day this diamond bracelet came to this country"). Perhaps those far-off readers will want to make some of these purchases themselves—and won't be able to, because of time and distance intervening. But you can! You do! Neither time nor distance deters you. Here it is—anything you wish to buy. Homespun tweeds from Scotland . . . breakfast flakes from sunny wheatlands in the West. There is romance back of every advertised good thing. Romance of change, of the ceaseless effort at perfection. Advertisements are true mirrors of the best to be had today. They give you an easy, happy survey of all that is buyable. They help keep you chic in yourself, your surroundings every inch of your purchasing . Read them and remember their news.