Page Eight

SPORTS OF ALL SORTS
EIGHTEEN REMAIN AFTER
MAKES FIRST

BUCHHEIT

CUT OE WILDCAT SQUAD
Shift From Four to Five Men
Defense is Foreseen From

Practices
VANDY
Court

TO OPEN SEASON

Candidates
20 to 26

The Wildcat court squad swung in
to its last full week of practice before
the annual Christmas Holidays, Monday with an intensive workout on defensive tactics, and with a shift from
the four man defense to that has characterized Wildcat quintets in the past,
to a five man system. Whether the
change will be permanent remains to
be seen, ibut from all present indications Buchheit intends to change his
method of defense.
The Cat mentor cut the squad to
eighteen the latter part of last week
in order that he might be abl- to devote more time to each man and whip
the squad into shape for th opener
with the Vanderbilt Commodores on
January 1. The following survived the
initial cut: Captain A. T. Rice, Tracy, .McFarland, Underwood, (Htelm.
Hughes, Kinwan, Poyntz, Wilkinson,
Alberts, Brown, Riefkin, White, Selle,
Hendricks, Milward.
The squad will suspend practice
from Friday of next vecK until Wednesday following Chr:itm-and will
tnen take up tihe workouts in prepara-i:;- n
for Vanderbilt the following Tues-

i

day.

Although the squad h.is been dividinto three quintets attampts to
pick the five that will start against the
Commodore are hazardous. But one
t! ing seems certain, that a majority of
tuose taking the floor for :hc opening
whistle will be former m,m',ers of the
1923 Kitten squad.
Fr.ir oT the five
that is recognized as the most probable
starting quintet played on the yearling
team last winter that win; through the
season undefeated, after meeting some
o: ithe best 'freshman
fives in the
South.
Hughes, Helm, and
McFarland,
Underwood, former Kittens, and Captain "Chuck" Rice make up one qu:n-!f- t,
while Riefkin, and Boren, letter
men from last year, Milward and Al
berts, members of the 1923 yearling
squad, and White, fornver Cumberland
star, compose a second five, between
which there is very little to chose a't
the present time.
ed up

K-

ELEVEN
By Gene Moore
Lemon, Centre
Gordy, Centre
Chinn, Centre
Kubale, Centre
W. H. Rice, Kentucky
Ramsey, Kentucky
Kirwan, Kentucky
Covington, Centre
Hughes, Kentucky
.
Spurlock, Centre
Sanders, Kentucky
--

E

T
(

.Sept. 27 Kentucky
at Lexington.
Oct. 4 University
ville at Lexington.

G
C
G

T
E
Q

H
H
F

K-

NO KERNEL NEXT WEEK
Following a long observed custom
there will be no issue of the Kernel
next week. This is on account of the
nearness of the Christinas holidays,
which begin next Thursday and as the
Kernel appears on the campus op Friday it would be too late, to get it into
the hands of the students before leaving for home. This has been a custom of the Kernel since its beginning
and since the holidays begin early in
the week wc will not deviate from it.
The next issue of the Kernel will appear January 11.

BASKEBTALL

Oct. 11 Washington and Lee
at Lexington.
18

Sewanec at Lexing-

1

Centre at Lexington.

Nov.

Nov. 8
loosa.

V. M. I. at Lexing-

15

Nov. 22 Tennessee at

Knox-vill-

at

19
Chattanooga
at
Jan.
Chattanooga.
Jan. 26 Centre at Danville.
Fcg. 4 West Virginia at Lexington
Feb. 9 Centre at Lexington.
Feb. 13 Clemson at Lexington.
Feb. 15 Virginia at Lexington.
Feb. 18 V. P. I. at Lexington.
Feb. 29 Southern Conference
Tournament at Atlanta.

Alabama at Tusca-

Nov.
ton.

Vanderbilt

e.

Georgetown at Lex-

25

1

Lexington.
Jan. 8 Mexico City Y. M. C.
A. at Lexington.
12
Georgetown
at
Jan.
Georgetown.
Jan. 14 Mississippi A. & M.,
at Lexington.
Jan. 18 Tennessee at Knox-vill-

of Louis-

Oct.
ington.

SCHEDULE '

e.

Tentative.
K

sixpence. He looked everywhere for
) it, but in vain. That night, when retiring, the coin fell out of the fold. The
next day he had the trousers "cuffed,"
and the tailor, discovering the reaspn,
Robert E. Lavin, former Cat grid soon built up a big business. Chrisiron and court star, who has been tian Advocate.
K
coaching at Barrett High School in
Henderson, will leave that city to acClother That Passed in the Night
cept a position with the Van Deren
Passenger (after first night on board
Hardware Company of Lexington, at ship) "I say, where have my clothes
end' of the first semester.
the
gone?"
Lavin was captain of the Cat bas
di
dyou put
"Where
Steward
ketball quintet his senior year
them?"
guard in 1921.
chosen
Passenger "In that little cupboard
Lavin also played on the Cat eleven. there, with the glass door to it."
Steward "Bless me, sir, that ain't
A very amusing subject was brought no cupboard.
That's a porthole"
up for discussion at the Southern Con
ference meeting in Washington last
weelc when the representative of one
Expensive
of the more extreme southern institu"My daughter's music," sighed the
profestions arose and proposed that
sional coaches be abolished and that mother, "has been a great expense."
"Indeed?" returned the guest; "some
the captain of the team be the instrucneighbor sued you, I suppose." Bostor and coach the team.
ton Traveler.
It must be admitted that such a
plan, were it an operation, would tend
to increase the individual's initiative
and cause him to think out plays for
himself. But at present such an Utopian idea is out of the question.

SCRAPS

anid-wa- s

That freshman intercollegiate contests will be thrown into the discard
in the near future and that either the
gate will be thrown wide open for
college stars-- ' participation in summer
baseball or that a tight ban will be
placed on any playing of ball in summer, is the belief of Dr. W. D.
chairman of the athletic council, and one of the university's representatives on the conference board.
Funk-house-

Circumstances Alter Cases
"When dc jedge he say t' me is I
guilty," said Charcoal Eph, rumina-tivel"I says if yo' all kin prove hit,
jedge1, I is; but cf'n yo'all got any
doubt about hit, not guilty, jedge, not
guilty I" RichmondJ

y,

January

Wcs'ley-a- n

Oct.
ton.

to Suspend

Workouts From December

--

TENTATIVE GRID SCHEDULE FOR 1924

r,

It would not be surprising to see
the yearling teams confine their activities to Stoll Field and to being merely
"scrimmage
meat" for the varsity
within the next three years. Conference officials have voiced their disapproval of freshman teams meeting
and the conference itself seems to
think along the same line.
The summer baseball question has
been a very much discussed one in
recent gatherings of the conference
members. Three plans to control the
question have bee uproposed: to abolish entirely eummer baseball; to wash
their hands of the matter and throw
the gate open, and third, to allow college athletes to play with teams playing less than three games a week. The
third plan was recommended by the
Constitutional Committee as a temporary arbitration.
K
Origin of a Great Idea
The cuff on the bottom of trousers
came in this way. A Scotchman had
been out in a rain and had turned up
his trousers at the bottom. When he
returned he found that he had lost a

Timcs-Disfiatc-

h.

K

The Latest Crime
"There is no name," thundered the
Rev. W. Howard Graham, "for crimes
that follow the drinking of bootleg
booze." There's a name for everything, Doctor, if you just put your
mind to it. How about gynthctic sin?
F. P. A. in the New Yiork World.
K
Common Case

I

SANFORD'S
FOUNTAIN FEN IMC

I

jf ht Ink TJhH Mftnle
VThe Fountain Pen PouiM

"Docs your hotel ovcrloo kthe sea?"
"Oh, yes, completely." London
Bail.

Don't Forget the Folks at
Home

MISS HOLLADAY'S CANDY FOR MA!

PIPE FOR PA!
KEYTAINER FOR BUD!
MANICURE SET FOR SIS!

Lexington Drug Company

YOU Kentuckian
DOlater years Know)
ftat in
will
Hie

become

one of your most Cherished Keepsake
H win fafouJbaekf
ttote glorious CoUtg 0aj

*