oe Don Diehl, V-12, of Smith Center, Kansas, is another fine prospect, but young and inexperienced. Clay Hedrick and Kirk Scott, V-12 ers from Newton, Kansas, are both guards and clever ball handlers. Bob Carr, V-5, of Warrensburg - or te be exact, Knobnoster, Missouri, has been here only a week or so but bids fair to make his presence felt. Ho is diminutive but fast. ; Arthur Cansler, Ve5 from Hopkinsville, Kentucky, is another new arrival, He has had much basketball vinditieiƩs Willard Frank, V-12, from Ottawa, Kansas, formerly played at Ottawa University, and he has seen action Si each game. . William "Bill" Lindquist, formerly of Ward High School, Kansas City, Kansas, is considered one of the regulars. Bill can play any position equally well, He is a valuable member of the squad. Bob Malott, the youngest member of the squad, just turned 17 years of age, the son of the Chancellor, Me splendid fundamentals, but his physique is just a little light for the aggressive game that the service men are now playing this year. He is the counterpart of Tusten Ackerman, and I predict before his years are over, if the war is kind to him, tthat his looks and actions will remind many of the Kansas enthusiasts of the great Tusten "Pug" Ackerman of 1923, '24 and '25. fall, angular, and davtbbeatod, Tus Ackerman's motions were poetry in astion. Perhaps no bey on the Kansas team ever had more perfect coordination, and yet he appeared to be slow sieving. But he always got at the right place at the right time and scored a goal just when Kansas needed one most,