UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR THURSDAY. DECEMBER 7, 1933 Kansans Prepare for Opening Game With Aggies Here Probable Starting Line-Up Will Include Lettermen; Sophomores Look Good Approximately 25 varsity basketball candidates worked out last night in Robinson gymnasium under Freshman Coach "Frosty" Cox in the absence of Dr. F. C. Allen, director of athletics and basketball mentor. Dr. Allen was confined to his home with a minor alient following his return trip from Washington, D. C. Light workouts and brief scrimmage sessions only have been stressed to date for the Jayhawkers who will tangle with the Kansas State College Wildcats here next Tuesday evening. The game will be a non-conference affair, but participants will be played before the regular Big Six season opens for either team. Dr. Allen has not worked out with his squad for several days, and has not outlined any definite means of attack which will be utilized in the game against the Aggies. Only regular formation plays have been run. Starters May Be Lettermen Indications point to the presence of five Jayhawketter lettermen in the starting line-up this year, although some promising sophomores may crowd the early favorites from their places as the season progresses. In the scrimmage sessions last night Dick Wells, Hutchinson, forward and All-Big Six second team choice last year, was shifted to center to fill the vacancy created by the three of Bill Johnson last year. At forwards were Paul Harrington, Kansas City, Kan., twice a letterman and regular starter, and Bob Curt, Lawrence, a regular at the first of last season. The guard positions were occupied by Ernest Vanek, Ellsworth, who was kept out of competition part of last year on account of ineligibility, and Gordon Gray of Newton, a regular in most games last year. Three of the men, Wells, Vanek and Harrington, will be playing their last year, but the other probable starters will be but one previous year of competition. Sophomores Are Promising Sophomores Are Promising Among the others who will will probably see service this year are two former squads members, Raymond Urie, Ellis, and Roy Khaas, Lawrence, and some promising sophomores from last year's freshman team. Francis Kappelman, Richmond, Ray Ebling, Lindsberg, and Wilmer Shafter, Russell, were second choices for last night's scrimmages. The Kansas State College squid will probably be less ably represented by lettermen this year, Stradkai, Dalton, and Lyman, having been lost through graduates having been lost through graduates. Dr. Allen will take over the work of the varsity squad tonight, it was announced. Basketball season tickets which will include all home games, conference and non-conference, will on sale Satur- day. We have their scans reserved next Monday. The Korean recently felt very distinguished when it was chosen as one of the 20 college newspapers in the United States to choose a collegiate All-America football team. This business of naming the outstanding gridsters of the nation has got down to the point where everyone including baby sister has been writing. The Chicago Daily Maroon, of Chicago University, however, felt that if anyone were in a position to know of the outstanding college players it should be the colleges themselves. Accordingly, this year, they inaugurated the idea of asking the leading colleges of a sector to pick their All-America teams and second them in. Although the teams thus chosen may not be more representative than those of other origin, the collegiate selections are at least the official decisions of a specific group. PAJAMAS--- In fine madras and broadcloth, Button and Slip-over Styles $1.35 to $4 Sik Palas in all colors, $6 A real Christmas gift. 力 The Kansan was the only mid-western college newspaper to participate in the country-wide poll, and was recognized along with the publications of the largest schools of the east and west. Which is a way of saying that the Jayahawk is a tough bird to keep down in any type of endeavor. Peter Mehringer, tackle at the University was given an honorable mention on the collegiate All-America lists, and might have received a better ranking if the Jayawker team had finished higher in the final Big Six standings. Mehringer, twice All-Big Six tackle, received a first team berth in the conference on only two of the five first-season selections of any repute, this year. The Kansas linesman has been outed often as ever before and it is a little hard to understand why his individual talent should suffer the lack of recognition simply because his team as a unit failed to function at its best. It looks almost as if the fire-side critics have been right in their contentions that the West coast representative often chooses its opponent on the basis of whether or not it thinks that opponent will be hard to defeat. There are, on the basis of season's records, probably half a dozen teams in the U. S. which have a better right to fight it out with Stanford than Columbia. While we are in the notion of asking why—we might ask along with everyone else—"How does Columbia University rate the trip to California to play in the Rose Bowl, New Year's Day?" Princeton, the only undefeated big school in the nation, would of course have been the first choice if it had been possible for it to have accepted, but after it—Nebraska, Army, Michigan—anyone but Columbia. The Huskers would have given Stanford a real fight, but perhaps that 22 game was the worst of them. little fear into the western boys. Who knows? The last two games on the Jayhawker schedule this year proved that the Kansans will have a tough line-up next year. A good deal of the ground gaining was done by men who will return to Mt. Oread next season. The fast shifty Kansas backs are going to miss the heavy, rugged队 that has been so much in evidence, however. The loss of both ends, a tackle, a guard, and a center is enough to weaken any team. And there will be no way to replace the incompatible defensive bullwark, Beach, in the backfield. Basketball is here again, or nearly so. Kansas will open its season with a non-conference game against Kansas State here on Dec. 12. The Aggies, it will be remembered, won both non-conference pre-season games last year only to lose both of the games that counted to the Jayhawkers later in the season. Both the Jayhawkers and the Wildcats predicted that outcome, it is understood. The Kansans will have three of last year's regulars in suit this year plus others who gained letters and some likely freshmen. 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