( THE KENTUCKY ALUMNUS. 19
  Another feature of the football season is the most attractive schedule t
  which the University has ever had, and possibly the strongest schedule
  that will be played by any Southern team. The schedule is as follows:
  October 2. Butler College at Lexington.
 1 October 9. Earlhain College at Lexington.
»  October 16. Mississippi A. & M. College at Columbus, Miss.
;  October 23. University of the South (Sewanee) at Lexington.
 ` October 30. University of Cincinnati at Lexington.
 f November 6. University of Louisville at Louisville. .
1  November 13. Purdue University at Lexington.
,  November 26. (Thanksgiving) University of Tennessee at Lexington
Q I think the feature of the football season will be the excellent coach-
l ing staff which has been secured, that is, from the standpoint of capable
Q` assistants. All friends of the University are joyous over the fortunate
g  acquisition to the coaching staff of James Park and William Tuttle, two
  of the best athletes and highest types of men who ever wore the Blue and
*  `White. .
 { Although only three old men will return to renew their gridiron
  battles, yet the prospects are about as good for a winning team as well
  could be, considering the fact that a new machine must be moulded from
  _ green material. Last year’s strong freshman team will form a good
_  nucleus for a ’varsity team for 1915.
A  As yet no baseball and basketball schedules have been made. The
 I; track team will probably go to Vanderbilt and try to redeem themselves
  from the great drubbing handed them by the Commadores at Lexington
  the past season. `
  The baseball and basketball schedules will doubtless be enlivened by
  the renewal of relations with some of the Kentucky Colleges who have
Q  not played the University for several years past. Georgetown College
 J; resumed such relations last spring by entering into a dual track meet.
 ]l_ From many angles, therefore, next year should be a big year in ath-
  letics at the University. Let everybody join in and boost and lend all ·
  possible aid, and may there be no sound from the ancient anvil chorus.
Qi  There are estimated to be 410,000 college graduates in the United
`  States, representing an adult population of about thirty—seven million, or
 ;; a percentage of about 1 to 90. This body, less than half a million people (
 g out of the total population, is the guiding and directing factor in the
(  country to-day. What part are you playing, as a graduate of Kentucky
 hi State, in this great work?
 V}  
 if The budget of Columbia University for the next session totals only
  slightly under four millions of dollars.
 N
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