THE DAILY NEBRASK AN tlATMEN PREPARE FOR AMES MEET u.en Unievrsities Have En tered in Western Con ference Tourney. INDIVIDUAL MATCHES TO COME MARCH 14-15 Coach "Doc" Clapp and his staff of lsSistants have been hard at work Sing the past few days preparing Z Busker grapplers for their pair f championship meets at Ames Fri j v and Saturday and at Chicago, Varch 1 nd 15, Nebraska matmen 11 leave for Ames this afternoon to Inter one of the strongest wrestling ?.... in the Valley compet that has !Lr represented the Cornhusker state. The local ratimu pmuuuincu his proteges in top shape with the exception of the 135-pound per former who will be unable to wrestle 0P account of injuries. Kext week the curtain will be lowered on the mat season at the Uni versity when Husker maulers will up Md the Scarlet and Cream at the Westers Intercollegiate conference ;Kvidaal championships at Chicago. This meet is not a team contest and only the outstanding wrestlers of the season will be entered. The Missouri Valley meet is a team meet with the individual titles being awarded at the same time in an elimination contest. Win First Two Matches. The local artists copped the first ivei of matches winning from North western at Evanston 13 to 7 and tak ing the Kansas Jayhawks down for a trimming on foreign soil 18 to 5. In the initial meet of the season, Highly, heavyweight representative, iras injured when his opponent ran kim into the scoring table. Just be fore the Ames meet, Uhler, welter weight grappler, was added to the in jsred list when he dislocated his left sboalder in daily workouts and was kept oat of the next two dual meets. When the University of Iowa met the Huskers, three regulars were outside the ropes with injuries. Coach Clapp announced yesterday that Uhlir would not be in the Ames compet, Highly and Robertson have fully re covered. The Valley titular affair will be the first contest that Highly has wrestled in since the first of the sea son and is expected to cinch his let ter. Five matmen have already made their "N" recognition, Captain Kel logg, Blore, Uhlir, Skinner and Rob ertson. Lot Three Straight. Alter winning the two opening contests, Nebraska dropped three straight to Ames, the University of Iowa and Minnesota. In all three of these dual meets the Uuskers led at the end of the lightweight matches. Ames took a close 17 to 9 win, Iowa won 19 to 10 only after the Hawkeye heavyweight performe r pinned llamsa to the mat with a body chan cery when the Husker had a time ad' vantage, and Minnesota upset the dope container by winning from Ne braska, 9 to 8, for the first time since the two schools have met on the mats. This lone tally margin came in the final bout when Nebraska led 8 to 4. Captain Kellogg has not lost a sin gle match for two seasons in the 125-pound division. Blore, bantam weight has lost two contests on time decisions. Uhlir 'entered the Gopher compet after being out of the game for three weeks to lose his only sea son match by a time advantage win ning from all his other opponents by falls. Skinner and Mooberry Even. Dale Skinner and Mooberry have been on nearly even terms all season for the honor of upholding the 145 pound colors and either can be de pended upon to boost the Cornhusker totals. Mooberry has trained down ta the lS5-pound class during the ab sence of Uhlir. Thomas and Robertson in the 158 and 1 75-pound classes have developed into excellent defensive artists. Nebraska Captures Third in Valley Basketball; Kansans are Champions The Missouri Valley conference pennant race was definitely settled by the game played last week braska eased Washington out of third place by victories over the Pikers and Iowa state. The titular position was won again by Kansas University for the third consecutive year. The Jay hawkers lost only one game in the rre season, the first defeat in two years. URiahoma increased lis noia on second place by a victory over Grinncll. The first three games of the 1924 reason on the home iioor were Husker victories by such decisive scores that fans began early to ex pect a pennant winner. The winning streak was stopped on the first trip, which resulted in three defeats. After that the Huskers took a brace and won the remaining games on the schedule with exception of one at the end of a long trip and the Drake game tonight. Win From Tiger. Missouri was the first Valley op ponent on the Nebraska schedule. The Missourians came heralded as the coming champions of the Valley. At the end of the second half, Nebraska held the better end of an 18 to 24 score. In this game the Huskers un corked a defensive style that has wor rit d opponents throughout the whole season. The offensive tactics of the HasVers were a puzzle for the Mis souri team. Oklahoma fell before Nebraska by a score of 35 to 21. The Huskers kept up the same brand of basketball that won the Missouri game. Usher and Tipton were the main cogs in the Husker machine. The Kansas Aggie game a week later was a repetition of the first two, Nebraska winning 27 to 14. An air tight utfense, and an offense good from any part of the floor marked Husker play. Nebraska was tied for first place in the Valley with Kansas and Washington. Trip la Disastrous. The following week the Huskers Ne. undertook their first trip, an invasion into Kansas and. Oklahoma which tur- cd out disastrously with defeats at th hands of Kansas Aggies, Okla homa, aad Kansas. The Aggies won 26 to 23 in one of the closest games ever seen on the Manhattan floor. Kansas University nosed out the Hus ker five at Lawrence 19 to 18 with . . 1 .1 1 a one-point leaa maae in tne last. minute of play. Oklahoma turned the tables on Nebraska in the game the following night, taking the Huskers into camp by a 32 to 20 score A return game a week later with K.'-.sas. Valley champions, was no better than the first The Jayhawks again won by a close score of 13 to 10. With four defeats behind them, two of them administered by the same teams which had been decisively defeated in the initial games of the season, and with sport writers pre dieting a defeat by at least ten points at the hands of Creighton, styled the "Wonder Basketball Team of the West," the Cornhusker cagemen turned the proverbial Nebraska trick of coming from behind in the face of overwhelnfing odds, and beat the far-famed hoopsters of Omaha 25 to 21 in a game which was described by sport writers of the metropolis as the best game of basketball ever played on an Omaha floor. Cozier and Goodson were Nebraska stars in the game. The guarding of Tipton was a factor in the Husker victory. Huskers Lose to Drake. Tired out from the Creighton struggle, the Huskers dropped the next game to Drake at Des Moines, 19 to 15 1925 BASKETBALL OUTLOOKjS GOOD Huskers Will Have Eight Let ter Men and Large Fresh men Squad. LOSE ONLY TWO MEN THROUGH GRADUATION also played his last varsity game Wednesday night These two men will be hard to replace, but Coach Kline will have the remaining eight veterans, and the freshman squad from which to build up a new team. The 1924 freshman turnout was one ol tfe nest in several years. Some eighty frosh candidates an swered Coach Frank's initial call for practice early in December. Of this number, fifteen stuck through the season to the last scrimmage night. All of them are primising material. Nebraska prospects for the 1925 cage season are the rosiest in many years. Only two men will be lost by graduation and eight letter men, four of whom were first string men on the squad this year, will be back in the harness. In addition there is a fresh man squad of more than ordinary quality to contest for places on the team. In Goodson and Eckstrom, the Cornhusker team will have a pair of centers hard to beat. Goodson was rarely outjumped in Valley games, and Eckstrom is a tall, lanky man built jusfright for center. HaTe Fire Forwards. There will be a quintet of forwards to make a scoring machine in 1925 which should again put the Huskers in first division. Usher, Black Beerkle, Goodson, Eckstrom, and Tipton were some of the heaviest scorers in the Valley this year. With the exception of Tipton and Usher, each has two more years of varsity basketball. For guard positions there will be Volz, Tipton and Wyant All three made names for themselves by their defensive work this year. Tipton and Volz were the main factors in the low scores made against Nebraska by Val ley teams. Tipton was adept at blocking shots for the basket Volz played a fast defensive game in Nebraska lead in the first j which he wore down the opposing for- FIFTEEN TRACKSTERS COMPETENT KANSAS Tigers and Jayhawkers Are Strongest Teams in In door Meet. half but was unable to keep up the pace when the Bulldogs staged a comeback in the second period. A rest over Sunday at Des Moines put the squad into shape for the Grin noil game on Monday night The Pio ( Continued on Page 4) wards. Lose Two Men. Nebraska loses only two . men by graduation. Cozier, one of the best forwards in the Valley, played his last game for Nebraska against Drake Wednesday night DeWitz, guard, Coach Henry F. Schulte announced Wednesday afternoon that Nebraska would be. represented at the Missouri Valley indoor meet at Kansas City Saturday by the following fifteen track artists: Roland Locke, Al Bloodgood, "Red" Layton, Carl Whipperman, Everett Crites, Dean Higgins, Jimmy Lewis, Ted Slem mons, Ed Weir, Wilmer Beerkle, Hobb Turner, Ced Hartman, Hobart Davis, Louis Trexler, and "Duke" Gleason. The team will leave Friday afternoon at 1 :30 on the Rock Island for Kansas City. . Missouri and Kansas University are doped to fight it out for first place in the indoor meet Missouri, by vir tue of her victory over Kansas last week in a dual meet is the favorite. Nebraska, winner of second honors last year, is relatively wek this year. The Cornhusker tarn has been handi capped by the loss of Captain Gard ner, Valley champion in the half-mile, Zimmerman, and Hein, all on the in jured list and by unfavorable training conditions. Locke and Bloodgood are the Ne braska entries in the SOlyard dash. This pair of flashes have been doing (Continued on Page 4) COACH W. C KLINE. Coach W. G. "Bill" Kline finished hi first season as basketball mentor at Xebra&ka with the Drake game yesterday. Kline came to Nebraska from Florida University. Before tkt he was coach at Nebraska Wes kran. He is the inventor of the five-man defense which has been adopted by almost every team in the country. Coach Kline has made an enviable record with the Husker five, bring ing Nebraska up from second divi sion standing of last year to third Place in the Valley this year. p b o - r n V, h CARL C KRUCER. C. Krueger is tudent man fer cf the basketball team, a posi that he has held for the past two rt-Ws. "Uanr", fcs fc Is knowa t-J 3Uid, attends to the physical e-Jre cf the players on trips and W. At side-line, be keeps "k -f the score during the game. ""Tx-rer came to Nebraska from St Aniioty, idlthD He U a sophomore 10 CoHfe cf LaW( and belor WILLARD USHER. Willard Orin Usher is captain of the 1924 basketball team. Usher plays a forward position on the Hus ker five, and ranked among the high twenty forwards inxthe Valley con- fprence this season. This is Usher's, second year on the team, and he will be back next year. Usher's home is in Omaha where he attended Central high school. Usher is a junior in the College of Business Administration, a member of the N club, and Alpha Kappa Psi. He belongs to Alpha Sigma Phi fraternity. u : ) "i 1 - 4 fraternity. WILMER BEERKLE. , This is Wilmer Eeerkle's first year on the varsity wjuad. He holds down a forward position, and has played consistently good basketbalL Before cowiiig to the University, Beerkle was a star athlete at Central high school, Omaha, where he played on the basketball and footbaU teams and was one of the best fcigh school track men. Beerkle is a sophomore in the College of Business Adminb ition, and has two more years of varsity Masketball ahead of him. He is a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. KENNETH COZIER. Kenneth Cozier, stellar forward on he Husker quintet played his first basketball in Montana on the Kalis pell high school team. "Kenny" played a great game cn the team last year, specializing in accurate basket shooting and fast floor work. 1ms year he did even better, and chalked up enough goals to place him well within the first fifteen forwards in the Valley. Cozier is one of the two men on the squad who graduate, and his place will be hard to fill. He is a Bizad, an Innocent Alpha Kappa Psi, member of Scabbard and Blade, and belongs to Detal Tan Delta fra ternity. ' ; v r, t ! . X f i t I i ' ' . i i ' f . .,,-: - e LEO BLACK. Leo Black first came to notice in basketball circles when he was all state center on the Grand Island bas ketball team of which he was cap tain ia ID22. Black played conspic uous ball on th freshman quad last year, and bs continued the same form this year on the varsity. He is a sophomore in the College of Arts and Science, which gives him two years more to play on the Husker quintet He belongs to Kappa Sigma fraternity, and is president of Iron Sphinx, and sophomore member of the student publication board. ,rff L. Jrf- u . .. ORR GOODSON. Orr Goodson is high-point man of the Husker team. This was Good son's second year on the varsity five, and there was never a game in the whole season that he did not break heavily into the score column. Orr was the main point-maker on the Husker squad, and placed near tenth place in Valley basket shooting rec oids for the season. In his work at center, Goodson was outjumped very few .times, and Nebraska generally had the ball from the tipoff. Orr is a junior in the College of Business Administration. He belongs to Beta Theta Pi fraternity. His home is in Lincoln. I v ' V ! ! 1 ') i i i i ' I j ' 1 FRED EKSTROM. Fred Tkstrom was the reserve cen ter on the varsity this year. Eesides taking care of tfie center position, Ekstrom was a forward, accounting for a number of field grai in the gram he played. FlcJ hai lt?o more rears of varsity basketball before nun, and will ve a valuable asset to the Husker cage machine. Ekstrom played bigh school basketball at New man Grove, and was mentioned on the all-state high school teams of that year. He is a sophomore in the Col 1ge of Business Administration, and a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. ' "'' '7 v' M1LO TIPTON. John Milo Tipton came to Ne braska University from Tabor, Iowa, where he attended high school and played on the basketball team. This is Tipton's second year on the var sity squad. He won his letter in the cage sport last year, playing a bril liant game up to the time he was in jured and forced to retire for the season. This year Tipton has con tinued his brilliant style of play and has done air-tight guarding all sea son. Milo is a junior in the College of Arts and Sciences. He is a mem ber of Alpha Sigma Phi, and X club. nvim' ,.""'1 ! p. RUFUS DEWITZ. Rufus DeWitz made two letters in football before trying his prowess on the Husker care floor. This was his MATH IAS VOLZ. Mathias George Volz, more com monly known as "Mutt", played his second year of varsity basketball this season. Volz is usually sta tioned at guard. When he is in the game there is always action ahead for the opposing players. He scores invariably. Volz played on the South Omaha basketball five. in prep days, and will be a big unit in the team next year. He is a junior in the College cf Business Administration and a member of the N club. He belongs to Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. I i'M'l I r 'jftuiai MHMMaal HARLAN WYANT. Harlan "Swede" Wyant guard, is another player from Newman Grove. first year on the varsity live ana re .lUtate man on the New- figured in almost every game played j man nlgn scriooi team vnree years ago. This is Harlan's second year on the varsity squad, and he has one year left to make another letter. Wyant is a fast defensive player. adept at breaking up passes. He is a Junior in the College of Business Ad ministration, and belongs to Kappa thv year. He played a guard posi tion on the team, and was a good basket shooter. DeWiU would make an invaluable addition to next year's squad if he could play another year on the varsity. Rufe came to Ne braska from Stanton high school where be made a name for himself in high school athletics. He is a Bizad, and member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. . Sitna.