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Page 54 text:
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ROOT DIL E. C. JONES, Foam-li MORRIS MYRBERC FOSTER RITCHIE WUKTZ NORINE KLEINKAUF NEAL HICUSNEIC JOHANSON Basket Ball, 1926 Due to the lack of a gymnasium in which to hold regular practice the Grand Island College basketball team did not get started until after the hol- idays. This put the squad nearly a month behind other schools in practice. Although the Zebras lost every game they were a scrappy bunch. Cliff Wurtz was the only letter man on the squad until Buck Myrberg showed up and demanded a berth on the team. He soon proved that he desei'ved it. Outside of these two veterans, the rest of the cagesters were inex- perienced men. The Zebras' first game was played on the High School floor against Midland. The boys fought hard but were decisively defeated. But with encouragement and training from one of the best coaches in the state, namely, Doc Jones, they became determined to do their best. The next game was with Cotner and was another walk-away, for the opponents. After this fast game Heusner and Norine declared they could do the Charleston. The next night the Islanders were defeated by Doane. The guards were indeed thankful that the opposing team refrained from putting in their giant. Morris was elected captain before the game. The team is still trying to find out how York Won the next game. It seemed as though the jinx was still trailing the Zebras. Even the Dean admitted something the matter. The Zebras were defeated by York again and lost to Kearney, Mid- land, Omaha, and Wayne. Hastings also defeated the Islanders. It mattered very little whether the boys were losing or winning- they played fast and hard, always keenly enjoying the game. Their cour-
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Page 53 text:
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Resume of the l9Z4 Football Season What, for Grand Island College, did the 1924 football season hold in store? G1'aduation had depleted somewhat the ranks of the Zebras, but with the return of eight letter men the arrival of several high school graduates from the different towns around the prospects for a winning team increased materially. Under the able leadership of Captain Orval Auhl, the Zebras set about their task with a determination to carry the fight to the finish. And, although at times, the adverse Winds of Chance smothered the Fires of Ambition, they carried on nobly to the end and established one of the best records of any team that has ever carried the Orange and Blue onto the gridiron. ' For four weeks the Zebras trained and drilled and scrimmaged under the skillful tutorage of Coach Ernest Frank. At the end of that period of training the Panthers of York College were beset in their lair and after much snarling and rearing the Zebras emerged from the fray victorious. The Chadron Eagles next swooped down from their aerie, bringing with them a wind that blew no one good but themselves. On a dry, dusty field swept by a strong wind and with the weight advantage on their side by several pounds margin, they were able to hold the Zebras in check and blew themselves to a 3 to 0 victory. Central College was next subdued in a ve1'y peaceful manner but it was only after much forceful persuasion, in the form of several hard raps from the sharp Zebra hoofs, that the Doane Tigers were content to hand over their pelt. An out of state game with St. Benedicts College of Atchison, Kansas, ended in a scoreless tie. The Warriors of Midland College failed, for the third time, to corra! the crafty Zebras which ran amuck and refused to be subdued. On Turkey Day, with a brilliant rush of color, the Orange and Blue triumphed over the Maroon from Omaha. And thus came to a close one of the most successful football seasons of Zebraland: a season in which a record was made that will undoubtedly stand until a championship team makes its appearance. The record made is that of a goal line uncrossed and eighty-three points scored by the Orange and Blue to their opponents three, a place kick by Chadron. Several men also won recognition as all-state players-Roy Rehder as first all- state quarterbackg Captain Orval Auhl and Bob Krall on the second team at end and right-half respectivelyg Elmer Scheel left tackle on the third team, and Harry Neumayer honorable mention. The end of this season marked the close of the college football careers of the Four Horsemen of the Orange and Blue, Captain Orval Auhl, Harry G. Neumayer, O. A. Niess, and Roy Rehder. THE SEASON'S RECORD G, I. C, U .......... 7 York College ...w. --- O G. I. C. --- --- 0 Chadron Normal -- --- 3 G. I. C. U- ---25 Central College --- --- 0 G. I. C. --- .... 10 Doane College --- --- 0 G. I. C. --- --- 0 St. Benedicts ----- --- 0 G. I. C. --- .... 9 Midland College ..... --- 0 G. I. C. --- .... 32 Omaha University --- H- 0
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Page 55 text:
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ageous spirit, in the face of handicaps, was admired by all the school. With the same team back next fall and a new gymnasium in which to practice-Watch the Zebras go! Those who received letters are as follows: Captain-elect Johanson, Captain Morris, Myrberg, Wurtz, Heusner, Root, Norine, Beal, Kleinkauf, Foster and Ritchie. The time and attention given to the boys by Coach Jones is appre- ciated by the student body and by the faculty. Basket Ball, 1925 The basketball season of 1924-25 was a hectic struggle. The team under Coach Jones rounded into shape in a reasonably short time on the Y. M. C. A. floor. The first foe was Kearney at home. They had been preceded by tales of their strength, and possibly this had something to do with their defeating us by a narrow margin. In the second game with Doane the Zebras stepped out in midseason form and smothered the Tigers in a fierce struggle that looked like rugby practice. Other games followed in too quick succession. We took a trip and fell before Doane and Cotner. Then drew blood at York. Invaded Kearney for revenge and got it in a combat that was anybody's till the last gong. Then we couldn't resist the temptation to take York again. York had a scrappy team, and it was no walkaway for us. Then we were visited by the talented crews from Wayne Normal, and Peru Normal. Both were successful in mopping us, which automatically b1'anded them as fast aggregations. Cotner didn't have such a bad layout and proved it when they upset the dope to win handily over the Zebras at G. I. On an earlier trip the Jones men had reached the crest of a mid- season slump simultaneously with a defeat at the hands of Peru. They were now to make one more invasion which was the last inter-collegiate contests for four long-term men, Rehder, Auhl, Cunningham, and Chord. The first game played at Midland was a primitive struggle with the oppo- sition chalking up a one point win. The next game was a little surprise for the Wayne lads. The lighter boys from the Island had Wayne looking them up in Who's Who, for a while but they organized the second half and showed a brand of ball which brooked no criticism. In the final game with Omaha U. it seemed in the first half as though victory had placed her shield over us, but the heretofore savage attack of the Zebras weakened in the second half while the Omaha boys found it rather hard to miss the steel hoop. Omaha counted 24 while the striped Zebras counted 20. Thus ended a hard-fought season. The warriors who went through that campaign need not be ashamed. They fought for G, I. and Jones until the final whistle. Lest we forget, the three battlers not mentioned above were: Seibert, C Slewfoot , etc.J, the flashy Smokey Wengert, and the hefty Flop Holmes. Let the names of this team be honored in basketballdom as long as the referees' whistle shall echo on the plains of Nebraska.
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