PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18, 1931 Passes and Line Tactics Stressed in Brisk Workout Six Coaches Drill Men i Specialized Groups to Insure Good Practice MULLINS BEGINS WORK Regular football practice yesterday afternoon was started with setting up exercises under the direction of Line Squad and the coaching squad was divided, the lineman going to one end of the field under the direction of Coaches Getto and Roland Koch. The two teams put through their paces by Coaches H. W. Harpers, Forrest Cox, Steve Hinshaw, and Larry "Moon" Mullins, who participated in his first practice ses- The linemen were drilled on the pivot and shift for half an hour before going to work. The men were hitting the dummy. They worked on the art of taking out a man, first taking them off the ground, then taken out and then pairing in three, with two men working on taking out a third. Backfield candidates were put tackled without toes up on the leg muscles, and they were used on shifting. They also used the tackling pit and were given a long hairy cord. Coach Hargins then called for all ballfields and center court games and the rout into push to push the sled around the field. The group under Coach Hargins was drilled through the grass before successful last season and that were known to both freshmen and varsity players. On the passing end of the plays were Lee Page, letterman, Phil Borelo, and Raymond Dunn, the latter two inning players. On the receiving end of the plays Elmer Schaake, letterman, Richard Weaver, and Frank Watt, completing many of the passes. Centering the ball were "Pete" Baugh, last season, and Frank Watkins, fresh Nearly 100 persons watched practice session yesterday. Allen Begins Trip to East To Attend Meetings of Basketball Coaches and Rules Committee Dr. F. C. Allen, athletic director of the Eastern College Athletic Conference, morning by morning to the East where Doctor Allen will attend the annual meeting of the National Basketball Association, April 28, and the joint rules committee meeting April 10-11. Both of these meetings were held in New York. Doctor Allen will be the honor speaker at the Indiana annual basketball dinner March 19, which is held in Indianapolis. He will play basketball tournament in Indianapolis. He will also stop at Pittsburgh and Philadelphia on the way to While in the East, Doctor Allen will be interview members of the eastern state medical system to attempt to tie up some special events for the Kansas relay program of April. --schools, for example Detroit, the students didn't think that prohibition is worthy of notice; it fact they denied it even existed. Strobid said. --schools, for example Detroit, the students didn't think that prohibition is worthy of notice; it fact they denied it even existed. Strobid said. Intramurals Entry blanks for spring intramurals in four events will be sent out by the intramural office this week. Play will begin as soon as all the entry blanks are returned. The four events are ten-minute, horseback, or playground ball. The winners of the fall tournaments in these events are as follows: tennis doubles, Ralpholp and Libermann, Triangle handball singles, Kausch, unattached handball doublets, Brecker and Nash tennis doubles, Theta Tau; horseback races, Hannon and Berze, Theta Tao, and the playoff tournament was won by the Kentucky Colonels. Individual point standings in the intramural league has been compiled by the American Football Coaches' events executive of the semi-final and final results. The leaders are Killen, Leahy, Fulton, Mills, W. Harrington, A. K. Pike, Bumgarn, W. Hartstrom, A. K. Pike, Bumgarn, Cooper, Delta Sig, 79. (Courtesy) At the end of the season all the individual points will be totaled and the five highest will be awarded medals. Emporia-Powers Happgood, of the Columbia Conservancy company of Indianapolis, spoke Monday and Tuesday in Emporia. He appeared before the Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday and at Kansas State Teachers College and the College of Emporia, as well as several others. Atchison—Attichon will have a seed treasure hunt Thursday March 19, when 1,100 packets of garden and flower seeds will be given away. Farmers are to register their name and license numbers with merchants. Numbers will be disbanded during the day. A one finding his number may claim a package of seed 'Green' Team Wins Game Increased Passing Characterizes Game Using 12-Foot Goals The experimental game of basketball that was played between two freshman teams last evening on the Robinson Trail, in which the proposed changes in the rules, resulted in a 26 to 16 victory for the green team. Mitchell Petrich, Harvard, Harrison, McGuire, and Roberts. Numerous substitutions were made on each team during the game. The game, as the one of last week, showed that passing won more in evens, but neither team was not as easily made as in the present rules, which call for a goal 10 yards from the basket. The raised goal as was used last night which is two feet higher than the present score. While the raising of the goals is not considered as likely to be charged when the joint rules committee meets in New York next month, nevertheless it is important that staff have an opportunity to watch the ball, Dr. F. C. Allen, athletic director and basketball coach, who has suggested the raising of the goals at this change should come at this time. Doctor Allen is a member of the joint rules committee and he will bring up the subject of raising the goals when the committee meets. Outdoor Track Campaign Follows Indoor Seasor Tryouts for Texas Relay This Week Will Decide Kansas Team With the indoor season over, the track team under the direction of Coach Brutus Hamilton, is working out on the cinder track in preparation for the season. Traitors will be hold the latter part of this week to determine who relocates. Warner Riley to be held at Austin, March 27 and the Rice Relays to be held in Dallas March 31. Couch Hamilton stated yesterday that he would probably taken a sprint relay team built around Ralph Sickel and Joe Klaner to participate in the 440 and 880-mile race. Poytin is in the middle for positions on the sprint team will be held. Should the times of the quarter and half milers be fast enough in the try-outs, there will also be one and two relay team relations with both Waikato and Flick and Gridley in the hurries are other possible entries. The relay meets in Texas will be the last appearance of Coach Hamilton's men before the Kansas relays which will be held here on April 18. The remainder of the track schedule is no follows: April 24-25, Drink Refres. May 2, Kansas Aggies at Lawrence May 9, Nebraska at Lawrence. May 22-23, Big Six outdoor meet at Lincoln. June 5-6, National Intercollegiate a --schools, for example Detroit, the students didn't think that prohibition is worthy of notice; it fact they denied it even existed. Strobid said. What's Doing Back Home --schools, for example Detroit, the students didn't think that prohibition is worthy of notice; it fact they denied it even existed. Strobid said. Emporia - The Emporia Teachers College is the largest teachers college in the state and the third largest educational institution in Kansas. These facts are based on the current student and faculty enrollment of the Department of Interior office of education. According to officials of the school this report sets at rest any argument as to the respective sizes of the teachers as in Emporia, Hays, and Fulton. *Tupcka-* a-Dale Hape, 11 year-old pupi in the sixth grade in District 49 school in Lansing, Michigan, is in the hospital and is still wearing a cast on his broken leg did not let this happen. The report shows that enrollment on October 15, 1930 was Eoporia, 1,294; Hiya, 635; Pittsburgh, 1,215. When bi-monthly examinations came last week he wanted to go to school. His father fastened a wheel chair to the front of his car and took him to the doctor's office. His school chair to take his exams, he made an average of almost 95. Baseball Aspirants Divided by Bishop Into Two Squads This division in the squad is not permanent, Bishop said, and the men will be shifted from squad to squad as they show improvement or lack of With the first week of baseball practice over, Couch T. C. Bishop has divided the candidates into A and B, and the B team is better at practice better. Besides Bishop the a squad is composed of Carrie Smith, George Tromblood, Charles Neal, George Mulligan, John Snyder, Paul Fisher, Leyton Frank, Ralph Marcoux, Jerry Coolay, Gene Price, George Hullett, John Martin, Arlen Kruemer, Carl Johnson and Charles Snead. PRACTICE GAME SOON Divisions Only Temporary With Many Changes Later, Coach Explains The team, consisting of Russell Strobel, Burton Kingburg, and Frederie Anderson, returned Sunday from a trip to Mexico, took them to the following schools: DRINK AND FORGET DRY LAW ON SOME HILLS, DEBATERS SAY The A squad went through a mummy infeld drill on the diamond yesterday while the T squad was in the snow. The practice this year has been held up by the cold wet weather which has delayed his training and the wet condition of the diamond. The men who took the field for the first practice were all left alone except the coach, Smith, catcher. The infield was composed of "Hook" Fisher at first, Brett Siemens at top, at shortest and Trombold at third. At present about 40 men are reporting for practice daily. With so large a number of them to be sent to school for Bishop to cut the squad to a smaller number. This cut will be the result. Kent College of Law at Chicago Notre Dame, Northwestern, Marquette Purdue, College of Detroit, and the University of Michigan. "We notice that the K. U. faternities have raised the issue of "mourning" among their colleagues made by entrance at College of Detroit to members of the K. U. debate team when they visited." Everyone seemed to know about the flag Siquatule and the lime situate its base, but only a few students were ready to discuss the lime situate in their home school. The women's glee club will start on its annual spring tour March 21 and will be gone a week, touring the southern part of Kansas. With the pitchers rounding into form owing to the warm weather of the past week, Bishop announced that a pause in play probably be held Saturday afternoon. The annual University May fest will be given on May 14 this year. The festival takes place in the gardens of an old English village May fest in Chelsea, Essex. It is a popular festival on the village green. "If the great number of jobs open is an indication, there should be plenty of work for students next year. At present the supply of work greatly exceeds the demand. Merchants are calling for students to fill positions and putting in calls for student workers much faster than they can be supplied." (Editorial) Other Schools Get a Big Laugh Over Big Six Squabble and Fraternity Dry Resolution Prof. R. C Moore, state geologist, will attend the meeting at the American Association of Petroleum Geologists at Tallahassee, Ohio, March 14, 18 and 19. Ten Years Ago Mrs. W.B. Thayer will give the second of a series of art lectures tonight. The exhibition now on display in the Gallery will be at next Monday. It is open to the public. Orders for senior invitations will be taken this week. The invitations will be similar to those of last year in leather, leather and paper-bound booklets. In reference toaving the roots on the campus, Mr. Shea said, "The legislature made no special appropriation for university, if it cannot be done at present." The Royal Order of Kansas University Bannermadens held a meeting host to discuss place for attending the university in Kansas City, Mo., Friday. The Big Six squable which resulted in the declaring of Jim Bauch ineligible, seemed to be a laugh for everyone. "Nortie Dame students even went so far as to express surprise when they loudly insulted Anderson, but evidently too soon. Anderson said. But evidently too soon." *Mollim has a good place.* --in The new building, just over the Hill from Powder Shops, which is near the library, laundry room, garage and in general, an addition to the shops, according to J. M. In all the talk it appears that at every school there are certain elements that make a school better, said, but every school is much like K U, in that there is less drinking this year than other years and that the light get unrivaled publicity. RELAY PROMOTION METHODS DISCUSSED BY PRESIDENT The purpose of the meeting was to discuss methods of relay promotion among students in the University, according to an announcement made this morning. Yesterday, Finch reported to the university that he had four weeks trip about the state speaking to high schools and city groups in the interests of the relays. A meeting of presidents of all University organizations was held this afternoon, following the final arrangement of the student relay committees which met with Robert Finken, promotion manager for the K. U. Relays, yesterday after- O'Leary Will Not Be Out for Tennis This Season Workouts Began Monday on Serving; Matches Planned Theodore O'Leary, letterman in tennis last year, will not be for outtakes this season, according to W. R. Smith, tennis coach. O'Leary decided that he had enough skills to do another tournament and would like to devote more time to his schooling attainments. The members of the tennis squad began taking light workouts the first of the week on the old varisty courts because the new courts are a little too wet. Practice on serving, and a few shots to round out this week training work. Yesterday afternoon George Allred, captain of the team in 1928, and Douglas Scott played against each other for a few sets and vore even matched. Coach Smith, ranked nationally ranked tennis star, will play his first match, probably against Scott. Coach Smith is highly pleased with the prospects of a winning tennis team against the opponent. Coach will occupy the team and the positions they will occupy according to rank. Sport Shots --in The athletic relations between Kansas and Haskell Institute which were returned last fall in football after a break from their strong pitching, have strengthened by a dual track meet on the University field April 11. Two baseball games have also been assembled, including an intercollegiate game will be played on the Kansas fieldVID the second on the Haskell diamond. The Indians have in Buster Charles, the national Decayball champion who was born to a black family. He is also the decayball champion of the Kansas Rushs, setting a new re-record. Haskell has turned out some great athletes in the past few years. Among the more famous are the names of John Leet, Thierry Huebok, and Willie Simons who are now in school are also among the best athletes in the country today. The Kansas Relays should have an added attraction for the public if Coffman, star Kansas sophomore, is entered in the decathlon. A meeting between Campus Comment The Kansan reporter that used the word 'hypobono-dirac' in last night's paper was flattering to protestants. Coffman and Charles would produce some record-breaking marks. Coffman, who placed second to Berlinger in the sepatah at the Illinois relays last Saturday, is one of the most promising athletes that Kansas has had. In placing second, Coffman scored more than 100 points in a competition exception of Berlinger, who has won the event for the past three years, since the event was established years ago. The Kansas relays have attracted athletes from 20 states and three foreign countries since it was established nine years ago. The only foreign countries are Norway, Mexico, and Holland. The relays this year promise to include athletes from all foreign countries are entered as yet. -R.W. London, March 18.—(UP) - Ambas- sadors for the United States and Somali- Dewey, W. Morton, reopened a regi- nation at the foreign office today in connecticut with new French-Italian Slickers with the campus swing WHEN millions of college and business men adopted the flash camera, wet-wet weather garment, they were moved both by common sense and by their own. Fish Brand Varsity Sliders are built for real protection. Rooftop and comfortable, they can float on the water ankle. Full-lined, to keep out wind and rain. Long, dependable, durable, they retain their mascu- You can buy a Tower's Fish Brand Slicker anywhere, and choose from a pleasing variety of styles. Write for illustrated folder. A. J. Tower Company. 24 Simmons St. Boston, Mass. 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