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Page 19 text:
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Page Seventeen TIIE TATTLER Conneaut. Cox was Conneaut’s star. He was the mainstay of the team and the pivot in team work. The main game was principally one of excellent guarding, at which Zaek and Cameron excelled for Conneaut. Ashtabula’s team work would be broken up time and again by these two guards. Eades played the best game of the season. Cowden and Curwood starred at passing. Ashtabula’s forwards did not get a basket until the last quarter, due to our guards’ wonderful work. The ball was almost all the time in Conneaut’s end of the floor and they had three times as many shots as Ashtabula. Ashtabula, though, excelled on teamwork and it was due to the playing of our guards that they did not get a basket after working the ball down the floor. Eades proved conclusively that he was the star of the whole team. All of the team work was centered around him. The men looked to him to shoot most of the baskets and he did, scoring 14 of our 20 points. He never seemed to tire and was always on the jump. Curwood and Cowden aided with their passing and continually broke up Ashtabula’s teamwork before it got fairly started. Conneaut got a 6 point lead before Ashtabula got started. Eades got three pretty baskets in a row. Hall got Ashtabula's first basket. He shot 3 of Ashtabula’s 5 baskets. The first half ended 12 to 5. The second half Conneaut scored 8 points to Ashtabula’s 10 and ended the game 5 points to the good, 20 to 15. Cowden missed 8 out of 10 tries at fouls during the game. C. H. S. Second—15. Kurtz, 1. f. McNutt, r. f. Cox, c. Benson, 1. g. Whitney, r. g. A. H. S. Second—14. Krause, 1. f. Rogers, r. f. Quigley, c.„ Jenkins, 1. g. Field, r. g. Payne, r. g. Summary: Goals—Kurtz 1, McNutt 3, Cox 3, Krause 2, Rogers 1, Quigley 1, Payne 1. Fouls—Whitney 1, Jenkins 4. Referee— Kesinger, of Geneva. Conneaut—20. Curwood, 1. f. Rubenstein, 1. f. Cowden, r. f. Eades, c. Zack, r. g. Cameron, 1. g. Ashtabula—15. August, 1. f. Guarneri, r. f. Hall, c. Pearson, r. g. Palmer, 1. g. Summary: Goals—Cowden 1, Zack 1, Eades 7, August 1. Guarneri 1, Hall 3. Fouls—Guarneri 5, Cowden 2. Referee— Williamson.
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Page 18 text:
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Page Sixteen THE TATTLER desperate contest. Conneaut determined not to lose its lead, and Geneva just as determined to overcome it. Conneaut finally succeeded in winning the quarter 4 to 3 and thus saved its scalp. Something seemed to be wrong during the second half. Conneaut did not show any life and did not play team-work. They were way off their shots. A weakness of the team that must be remedied was also shown. They missed 13 out of their 14 free tries at goal. No one seemed to be able to shoot fouls. Cohn, of Geneva, shot 8 of their 14 fouls. If Conneaut had a man who was sure on fouls the score would have been 34 to 16 instead of 21 to 16. It is a great advantage to a team in a close game to have a sure foul shooter. Some of the members of the team should practice foul shooting and be allowed to shoot all of them. Zaek, Cowden and Curwood were the scoring machine for Conneaut. Eades was the main man in passing, while Rubenstein played his best game at guard. The Irving Literary Society and the Broad street Eighth Grade teams played the preliminarv. the Irving winning, 10 to 6. C. H. S.—21. Geneva—16. Curwood, 1. f. Foster, 1. f. Cowden, r. f. Clarke, r. f. Eades, c. Cohn, c. Rubenstein, r. g. Maynard, 1. g. Cox, r. g. Welch, 1. g. Zaek, 1. g. Spring, r. g. Summary: Goals—Curwood 3, Cowden 3, Zaek 3, Eades 1, Foster 2, Clarke 1, Cohn 1. Fouls—Cowden 1, Cohn 8. Referees— Cooley, Williamson, Webb. TEAM. RAH! Conneaut won two of the hardest fought games of the season from their old rival, Ashtabula;—one game by one point, the other by five. The game between these two schools is the athletic event of the season. Tt was certainly an unexpected victory. Several of our players, when questioned before the game, said that they did not expect to win it, but that they would play for all they were worth to even up the old score on the football field. Ashtabula seemed all confidence, before they entered the game, from the remarks that were heard before the fray. Close to 600 people packed the gym. willing to help all they could with spirit. The preliminary was the fastest and closest one that has ever been played in Conneaut. The referee was too slow and allowed the game to get beyond his control several times. There has never been a more hotly contested preliminary. The score remained close throughout. At the end of the first quarter it was 4 to 4, 7 to 6 in favor of Ashtabula at the end of the second quarter and 10 to 10 at the end of the third quarter. The game finally ended 15 to 14 in favor of
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Page 20 text:
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VOL. VII. MARCH, 1918. NO. 3. Published Five Times a Year Entered at Post Office at Conneaut. Ohio, as Second By The Students of C. H. S. Class Matter under Act of Congress of March 3, 187Q PRICE-FIFTEEN CENTS AN ISSUE STAFF Manager ........................................ Roy Sawdey ’18 Assistant Manager...............................Ruth Long ’19 Department Editors Literary ....................................Hugh Coughlan ’19 Society.......................................Margaret Rich ’18 Art .....................................Westanna Baldwin ’18 Athletic.......................................Calvin Rankin ’18 Humorous............................Katherine Blickensderfer ’19 Exchange ......................................Arthur Brown ’18 Faculty Advisor ....................................... Elfrieda Merz STRENGTHEN THE ARM FOR BASEBALL. Those who have had the experience of stepping on a soggy crust of bread or a partially eaten piece of pie while barefooted, know particularly well the disagreeable feeling of having it squeeze be-
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