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THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

PAGE SIX

Centre Is Dropped From Wildcat Football Schedule
SEEN

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THE"

pRESS BOX

Virginia Cavaliers to Appear
In Place of Praying Colonels
The University of Kentucky athletic council has decided to omit
Centre" College from its 1930 football
schedule, it was announced by Dr.
W. D. Funkhouscr, chairman of the
council, following a meeting Tuesday afternoon in the office of the
Athletic Director S. A. Boles.
The University of Virginia will
take the place of Centre on the
Wildcat 1930 football schedule. The
game with the Cavaliers will be
played on Stoll field on October 25.
In a statement Issued by the council
announcing Its decision in the matter, one point was emphasized. The

Entire Squad Given n Crack
At "Praying Colonels" as
discontinuation of the annual game
Husky Wildcats Sweep on
with the Colonels was a move to
further Kentucky's efforts in the
To an Easy Victory.
to
not

Southern Conference and
due
Kentucky 12, Clrmson 6
any1 unfrlcncUincss between the two
but in case there
STOLL FIELD The story hns been told and
schools.
The Centre game broke
nrc freshmen who rend neither the Lexington papers nor the Associated
into the Wildcats' schedule at a bad
Press reports, here it is again.
place, while they are propping for
History and a perfect gridiron combine to give Stoll Field, home playimportant games in the conference
ground of the University of Kentucky Wildcats, a unique position among
of which Centre is not a member.
college athletic fields. While the Wildcats now call this historic plot or
The members of the council
ground their' own, it was not a University of Kentucky team which first
used the field for football. Nearly 50 years ago, April 9, 1880, to be exact,
'man Funkhouser, John G. Stoll, S.
Transylvania College and Centre College met on Stoll Field, then known
A, Boles, E. A. Bureau, Prof. Enoch
as City Park, in the first game of intercollegiate football ever played in
iCJrehan. Oayle Mohney, and Leon-lar- d
the south. It was possibly the first game ever played west of the Allegheny
Miller.
followed by only a few years the first game ever played
mountains and
in this country. Transylvania won this first game, which was played ac10. Athletic activities should be directed by the professor-emeritu- s
of
cording to Princeton rules.
The Lexington Transcript of April 10, 1880, in commenting on the Latin, if one there be, or else by the lady librarian of the college.
game, says: "A large crowd of ladies and gentlemen, estimated at 500,
Madam Fate was extremely unkind to Given Dye on the day of the
witnessed the game. It was pronounced football had decidedly the adCentre game. Given Dye was to have his first and last crack at the
vantage of baseball as n means of amusement for spectators."
Colonels.
But Given Dye stumbled when crossing the railroad tracks
in Danville as he was getting off the train and struck his knee against
Everybody, from Will Rogers to President the rail. And now Given Dye is at the Good Samaritan hospital with a
THIS IS TERRIBLE
Charles J. Turck, is up in arms at the report of the Carnegie Foundation fractured knee cap and probably will be there for six weeks. (Incidentally,
on the paid athletes in the colleges of the country. The situation is do Given Dye is a football player and not an allegorical character.)
plorablel Something ought to lie done about itl At least let's have some
resolutions passed by somebody. Believe it or not athletic students act
and Lee
Once
ually have been given Jobs so they could work their way through school; Kentuckyupon a time Washington Southern scheduled football games with
to boost their
Conference standing
in
some have been encouraged to study by the offer of scholarships; and easy victory. order now when the sons of the "dark and bloody with an
ground"
And
some have even been invited to attend certain universities.
one on the chin, they stay in the gutter for the rest of the
hand them
I cast my lot with station CBJ and sanction the following suggestions season. If you can remember how the Virginians sank last year after
for remedy of the professionalism problem:
a good start and then a defeat at the hands of Kentucky; and how, after
1. Refuse accredited university or college admission to any well
meeting the same fate from the Wildcats this year they fall, 26 to 6, beknown high school athlete.
fore West Virginia, and 39 to 0, before Tennessee, you may realize what
a shattered morale will do to a team. We have a sneaking suspicion that
2. Those willing to sign n pledge to refrain from football might be ad
mltted and watched closely to see that they do not throw a few forward the big boys over at Vanderbllt believe in psychology. Now wouldn't it
be TERRIBLE if Vanderbllt Vanderbllt, who has always walloped the
passes back of the gymnasium on the sly.
be beaten by Kentucky? Vandy thinks so.
3. Football playing should be limited to those who have never played 'Cats should
before.
North Carolina beat Georgia Tech, which beat Florida, which beat
4. Anv unusual proficiency in the came should be viewed with sus
picion. The student may have a past. It might develop that he had a Georgia, which beat North Carolina.
prep school. Such cases should be
secret football career at some obscure
Unless Georgia beats the Big Green at Columbus tomorrow, Tulane
investicatcd.
5. Any alumni seeking to encourage athletics at their Alma Mater should have easy bowling along to the top of the Southern Conference
as the remainder of their schedule is comparatively easy Auburn,
should be arrested.
Sewanee, and L. S. U. Tennessee, on the other hand, will have tough:
r. Thp nublic should be excluded from football games.
Vanderbllt, Kentucky, and South
They have done much to stir sledding with Auburn, Carson-Newma- n,
7. No sport writers are to be admitted.
Carolina.
up national interest in this dangerous sport.
8. Students may view the games, but there should be no rooting,
Tennessee's massacre of Washington and Lee is made more impressive
cheering, or other boisterous conduct.
when you take into consideration that after the regulars piled up 20 points
9. No paid coaches.
in the first half, the reserves went in and accumulated 19 more,
Illinois has a lineman, Tiny Huddleston, who tips the beam at 250
pounds, but he is an infant as compared with Dick Davis, 310 pounds and
Harry Patchefsky, 296, on the Temple eleven. But Arthur Wolff, playing
on the Thayer high school aggregation, Is 5 feet 11 inches tall and weighs
390 pounds at the age of 17 years. Karcis, Carnegie's backfield star, is
the biggest best football player and weighs 240 pounds.
0

We bid goodbye to Centre with the same twinge of regret that followed
the discarding of our knee britches for long trousers (that was when boys
wore knee britches) ; or with the same regret that came when we left high
school for college it is a necessary step in the evolution to bigger and
better things.

Big Ten. On all such trips, the
team will take its own drinking
Colgate will travel 5,200 miles dur water with it, to say nothing of hav- ing the season, going twice into the ing special training
table menus
mid-we- st
to play members of the provided on the dining cars
COLGATE HAS WANDERLUST

U. K. STUDENTS!

HOWDY!

We are glad to have you with us for the winter.
Our barbers are experts on Ladies' hair bobbing.
Prices: Haircuts, 40c. Shaves, 20c.

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201
G. S.

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1-- 2

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BLACK

CENTRE PRAYERS Big Green Swamps
Wesleyan Freshmen
ARE ALLIN VAIN Kittens
To

BLUE BROWN GREEN

Tvvp ancient warriors met on an
old battlefield
last Saturday
to
settle a lifelong grudge, the Kentucky Wildcats and the Centre College Colonels.
The Wildcats crept
back Into their lair with spoils of a
33 to 0 victory, and
the weak
Colonels aged more with dlspalr.
was witnessed by apThe classic
proximately 8,000 enthusiastic supporters of the two teams.
Both teams were nervous at the
start of the feud's renewal, but
Kentucky settled down early in the
second quarter and piled up 33
points with a varied attack. In the
final canto, Coach Harry Oamagc
gave the second and third string
Kentucky players a chance to display their wares.
The line plunging of Jack Phlpps
was the feature of the game. He
put Kentucky in position to score
on many occasions, and was ever
present on defense. The ball toting
of Covington, Kelly, Ford, and Richards was not to be laughed at while
the entire Kentucky line functioned
perfectly as a unit The running of
Nemecek and Qrabuck was the feature of the Colonel attack. Shearer
placed his punts well and May was
uncanny in his passing.
The victory for the Wildcats
brought Kentucky a little nearer
the level in games won. Since
athletic relations were begun be
tween the two schools, the Colonels
have gained victory twenty times,
two games have been tied, and Ken
tucky now has a total of thirteen
wins. The victory last week was the
third consecutive triumph over the
Colonels since Coach Gamagc took
up the gridiron reins.
Kentucky (33) Pos.
Centre (0)
LE
Brevard
Andrews
Wright
Arnlcar
LT
Forquer
LG
Moore
C
Colker
Anderson
Thompson
RG
Penn
Drury
Owens
RT
RE
Waddle
Yates
Covington
QB
Shearer
Spicer
LH
Grabruck
Kelly
Bourne
RH..
Nemecek
J. Phipps
FB
Score by periods:
Kentucky
0 19 14 033
000
Centre
Scoring: Touchdowns
Spicer,
Kelly, J. Phipps, Ford, Andrews.
Point after touchdown Covington
(place kick), Spicer 2 (place kicks).
Substitutions: Kentucky Walters,
Ford, Richards, Toth, Myers, Cav- ana, Williams, McEIroy, Baugh-ma- n,
Bronston, Johnson, T. Phipps,
Urbaniak, Gentile, Kipping, Kleiser,
Abley, Wilder, Dysard. Centre Hor-ke- y,
Boyle, Hasara, Rufflnl, Ten-nika- t,
May, Dakin.
Officials: Emsweiler, of Ohio
State, referee: Chambers, of Cin
cinnati, umpire; Maxwell, of Ohio
Head, of
State, head linesman;
Louisville, field judge.

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ARE THE HIGHLIGHTS OF AUTUMN
1
FOOTWEAR FASHION

The University of Kentucky Kittens swamped the Cubs of Kentucky
Wesleyan by a score of 19 to 0, last
Friday afternoon at Winchester.
The Green avalanche was featured
by the brilliant playing of Ellis
Johnson and Ray Woolridgc.
The Cubs showed a well nigh impregnable defense and the Kittens
resorted to an aerial attack with
Johnson doing the passing. Captain
Johnson made the first marker with
a beautiful
run. He eluded
Yea Blue, Yea White!
a half-doztacklcrs
and then
Yea Wildcats I Fight I Fight!
dragged a couple of Cubs across
the goal line. The next score was
"It's a great mistake to kiss the
the result of a pass from Johnson wrong girl."
to Darby.
"It's Just as bad to apologize."

I

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Continue March
Stale Title, Winning Hy
Score of 19 to 0.

As the game ncarcd an end, the
Cubs tossed passes with abandon In
an effort to score but Blckcl broke
up this threat when he snagged one
for a touchdown.
The one shining
light for Wesleyan was Rittcr, who
passed and punted with skill.
ran the team in a capable
manner, but the Cubs were unable
to dent the Kitten line. The Wesleyan team never was closer than
line, while the Kittens
the
were checked three times near the
goal in the first quarter.
Johnson and Woolridgc played
brilliantly despite injuries. Johnson's
face was badly bruised and his leg
Woolridge suffered
injured.
a
sprained ankle on the first play but
continued to play and made many
brilliant dashes for material gains.

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