THE DAILY NEBRASKAN VALLEY TEAMS START SEASON Basketball Quintets Clash Important Games This Week. in NEBRASKA MEETS KAN SAS AGGIES ON FRIDAY THIS WEEK'S VALLEY GAMES Jan. 8 Kansas al Grinnell. Missouri at Ames 9 Nebraska at Kansas Aggies. Kansas at Ames. Missouri at Drake. 10 Nebraska at Oklahoma Kansas at Drake. Missouri at Grinnell. Jan. Jan. RIFLERS TURN IN HIGH SCORES Captain Eggers Predict Season. Eight Missouri Valley basketball quintets will swing into action this week in the first games of the round robin schedule which slates nine teams against each other during the season. Every Valley school except Washington University has a scrap this week. Nebraska will play its first Valley game Friday evening against the Kansas Aggies at Manhattan, fol lowing Saturday with a game at Norman, Oklahoma, with the Soon ers. The Cornhuskers lost to the Hillyards, a St. Joseph club team, during the Holidays by a 22 to 19 score. The game was won by the club in the last few minutes of play. Nebraska's cagers showed up cre ditably well in the prelim contest. The Hillyards are classed as one of the strong amateur teams of the West and have been defeated only four times in the last three years. The Cornhusker quintet was work ing together fine but could not main tain the lead which they captured early in the game. Goodson and Tip ton were the high scorers. Kansans Beat Hillyards. Last year's champion Kansans opened with a win over the Hillyards at St. Joseph last Saturday. The final score stood at 19 to 15 after the Jayhawkers had staged a bril liant comeback from a topheavy score in the first half. The scor ing machine of last year started working in the last period and did not let up until the high score was on the Kansas side. The champions worked out in Kansas City immediately after Christmas, practicing between halves of the Butler University K. C. A. C. game and working out at the K. C. A. C. gymnasium. They returned to Lawrence December 29. The Jayhawks open the Valley season with a northern swing to the Iowa colleges. The slate calls for Grinnell on Thursday, Ames on Fri day, and Drr.ke on Saturday. Dope- sters believe that Kansas will retain a clean slate after this visit. Aggies Are Training. The Kansas Aggie squad resumed practice at Manhattan December 29 in preparation for their first game of the season against Nebraska. They will play the Cornhuskers Friday in the game which may give an insight into their condition for the cham pionship. Coaches report a satisfac tory outlook for the Aggies. The Missouri team won from Cen tral Wesleyan college December 19 at Columbia. The Tigers showed up weak in spots and many faults are being righted now by Coach Bond. The squad will journey north this week, playing Ames at Ames, Drake at Des Moines, and Grinnell at Grin nell. The scraps will be on Thurs day, Friday and Saturday, respec tively. Grinnell cagers reported to Coach Charley Black on January 1. Prac tice has been hard since then in preparation lor the first game against Kansas Thursday. The team is unusually small and must gain a lot of speed to make up for the lack of size. Oklahoma, Washington and Ames are in stiff workouts for their first games. Oklahoma meets the Corn huskers at Norman and Ames plays Kansas and Missouri this week, but Washington will not play its first game until January 16 against Okla homa. Drake Beaten Twice. Drake has perhaps the poorest outlook of the Yalley. They lost miserably to the Hillyards and to Creighton University. The score of the latter game was top heavy and proved that the Bulldogs will have to show a lot of improvement to nurse even first division hopes. Kansas, Oklahoma, and Nebraska again look to be the ones in the run ning. That trio finished in the one-two-three order last year and they are expected to fight hard for hon ors this season. The Cornhuskers liave what seems to be better team than last year and are out for the championship. Kansas showed class in defeating the Hillyards and will be a strong contender. Oklahoma's second-placers have five-letter men returning, on an all-Valley man. Nebraska and the Sooner should fight it out Saturday. Successful With thirty matches scheduled, and with several more in the making, Cap tain Eggers predicts a successful sea son for the 1925 rifle team. All six letter men of last year will be in school, and several new men have been turning in some high scores in practice. The inter-fratcrnity match will be held next week, beginning January 12. The first match will be fired the first week in February and the sched ule will last for seven weeks. In this will be included the Seventh Corps Area match, which was won by Min nesota last year. The other matches will be held at the same time, with schools all over the United States. Nebraska lost only five of the fifty four meets held last season. D. D. Lewis was the high point man of the team. According to an announcement made by Captain Eggers, the rangj will be closed after 4 o'clock every day, to all but those trying out for the team. It will be open at all other hours for those who care to shoot. Captain Foster, and Sergeant Rich ardson will be on the range with cap tain Eggers. Five letter men, Captain Donald Roberts, Dale Skinner, Walter Lam- mli, Robert Currier, D. D. Lewis, and Willard Dover, are practicing daily. Among the new men are Paul Tread well, and Victor Foss, who tied for first place in the highest score made GRID CHAMPIONS STOP THURSDAY All of "Four Horsemen" May Not Be Present on Account of Injuries. ATHLETIC DEPARTMENT WILL ENTERTAIN TEAM Notre Dame's champion grid war riors will stop in Lincoln tomorrow at 1:35 o'clock on their return trip from California where they defeated Stanford University in a New Year's day tilt. The champions will be in Lincoln until 9:30 o'clock when they will leave for South Bend, Indiana. Plans for the reception and entertainment of the gridsters have been made by the athletic department and include a dinner for the team and the Ne braska squad at the Lincoln Coun try Club. It is doubtful whether all of the "four horsemen" will be present or not According to reports, Crow ley is believed to be seriously injured and Stuhldreher is hobbling about on crutches. The invitation to the champions to stop in Lincoln was extended to Knute Rockne, Irish mentor, by the athletic department and accepted by him. white determiner, but the germ cells will remain pure, being- either wholly black or wholly white. "The second law says that if two determiners are present, one is al ways dominant and one is always re cessive. That is, if one black and one white determiner is contributed by the parent animals, the young one will not be spotted or blotched with both. "The third law, one which has led us to a knowledge which would en- hla us in one generation to rid the world of criminals and social delin quents, is interesting. It Is that when pure germ cells unite they unite in a definite mathematical ratio- , . , "In this way we can determine as in the case of rabbits just how many animals of each generation will be black, and in the case of man, just how many children will be mentally deficient if one or both parents are in that condition." Professor Barker lecture with slides. illustrated his TOWNSEND Portraits. Pr. serve the present for the future " Adv. " WANT ADS LOST New tan kid gauntlet right hand. Call B4800. for BARKER SPEAKS TO FRESHMEN ON HEREDITY (Continued from Page Three.) at Fort Snelling last summer. Other men with good scores arc, Huddle son, Ross, and Hunt. The inter-fraternity meet will be held throughout next week. Each team will be composed of five men, and the four positions; prone, sitting, kneeling, and standing, will be fired. The men who are to make up the teams should fire for practice this week, for next week no men will be allowed to fire except for the final scores according to Captain Eggers. Entries for the team will be made to either the range officer or Sergeant French. acteristic of an animal there is at least one. and most times two, of these granules. "During the development of the young animal the chromatin contrib uted by the parent animals deter mines the character of the young. While this process is going on some of the new characteristics will be lost and only part of the originals will remain." Trofessor Barker described the granules as "determiners." When there are two determiners of a cer tain characteristic one become domi nant and the other recessive. In this way, he said, a black rabbit will be born of a black and white parent In this case black was the dominant characteristicand white the recessive, or hidden one. The three fundament al laws of Mendclism were cited by the lecturer. "First," he said, "an animal may be mixed with respect to deteminers, as a rabbit having one black and one Prices on Farquhar Col lege Clothes Are Sharply Reduced! Take Advantage of the Savings At Your First Opportunity Twice a year it is our custom to sharply reduce prices on all seasonal goods and broken lines to effect a complete clearance and make room for new goods. Such reductions are effective now and the savings are worth your imme diate attention. Farquhar College Clothes as you know combine splendid quality and the smartest styles. And now when you have the chance to buy them at uncommonly low prices it's an oppurtunity you can't afford to miss! Come today or tomorrow if possible for the good things are going fast. 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