Best Copy
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL

PAGE SIX

Kelly, Gibson Tied In Vote For Track Captain
Eighteen Thin Gads
Awarded Letters by
University Council
By Bill Luther
John Sims (Shipwreck) Kelly and
Bob Gibson were tied at 9 nil for
the honor of lending the 1931 edition of Conch Bcrnle Shivcly't flying thinly sqUnd. A popular vote
wns enst nt n meeting of 16 letter-me- n
In the basement of the gymnasium nt noon. The vote wns tied
nt thnt time nnd the two absent
lettermcn were called by phone for
their votes. One went to Kelly and
the other to Gibson leaving matters
as complex as before.
Whether the decision of the men
will remain the same nil owing two
capable men to pilot the next year's
track squad will be left to "Daddy"
Boles, athletic director of the University, nnd Conch Shlvely. The
latter Is in favor of the two captains
but "Daddy" is In doubt. Should
Coach Shlvely have his way it will
establish a precedent In the University athletic records.
Eighteen men were awarded the
"K" for sterling work on the cinder
path. They Include: Captain Hayes
Owens, Captains elect Kelly and
Gibson, Cavana, Hieber, Johnson,
Jones, Porter, O'Briant, Roberts,
Shipley, Thomasson,
Ruttencutter,
Thome, Twaddell, Wieman, Williams and Wright. Of the 18 men
only four will be lost to the squad
by graduation this year.
The 1930 track probably was the
most successful one on record for
a Wildcat team. Several individual
stars have been developed In the
past years but no one team has been
composed of such sterling
Kelly
"Shipwreck"
performers.
developed Into one of the greatest
scorers in southern track circles,
scoring from 15 to 25 points in each
dual meet, and adding 4 points
more by placing in the
dash
in the Southern Conference meet in

Birmingham, May 17, to bring his
total past the century mark, ii tne
big blonde keeps up with his record
in the next two seasons ho is
eligible to compete on the thinly
team he probably will set a record
for all time at the University nnd
possibly in the Southern Conference.
Tennessee holds the honor of being the only team to hand out a
track victory over the Big Blue
this season. With more than a
dozen lettermcn back next year nnd
several stars from the freshman
ranks, including Sam Tuttle, a
great discus thrower, Conch Shlvely has hopes of getting revenge on
a certain group of Volunteer track
performers.
All the other dual meets of the
1930 season, with the exception of
Cincinnati U., were but practice tilts
Wildcats. The
for the
above meet was not decided until
the great Wayman Thomasson,
anchor man on the Big Blue relay
team, broke the tape far ahead of
the Bearcat anchor man to send
Kentucky to a 56 to 51 victory.
A better schedule, if possible, will
be prepared for the 1931 campaign
which is expected to be as successful as the season just closed.

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AFTERNOON TEA
Wednesday afternoon Dr. and
Mrs. Frank L. McVey were at home
school and the guests of the
University at the usual Wednesday
afternoon tea. Honor guests were
the graduates of University High
School and the guests of the
campus.
The tea table held bunches of
spring flowers in brilliant tones.
About two hundred guests called
during the receiving hours.

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Everyone (Especially Students) Eats

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COCOANUT CHOCOLATE LOG
CHERRY BOUNCE
NUT EGG

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Phone, Ashland 7703

Lexington, Ky.
205 Woodland Avenue
jj
:au::u:j:::::u::::::::::::::::Jnnjn:u:n:::::::::::::::::::n:::::
ANNIVERSARY

SEVENTY-FIFT-

IL'Sportitorial
By Mac
Another school year is coming to a close at the University
of Kentucky. In the realm of sports it probahly has been the
most successful the University has ever had. A winning
football team a winning basketball team n fair baseball
team a winning track team. All this has been accomplished
without lowering the scholastic standards of the school
which is probably a disappointment to those who think all
athletes are "dumb;" that the school fostering intercollegiate athletics is destined for the dumps; and that college
athletics should be abandoned entirely.
It is the constant knocking of this;,
kind of people that gives college (appearance of two of the most
athletics a bad name. They run icoiorim looioau piaycrs ever 10
South s nee the days
nn rvtrnmn nxammc of some P?a.r. ,n.
....
,OI MCiVU1ian
nna noDeris at ucn- little Jerk water school that stresses trC) nntj Barron and Harlan at Tech.

sports to the exclusion of studies There have been other great names
and play it up as much as possible ln southern football Wycoff, Bo- taking no cognizance of the ex- - mai. "Rabbit" Curry, the Vandy 145
ample of the many big schools pounds of dynamite who sleep on
which lead the nation m botn ac- Flanders fellds Crabtree, Father
tivities and yet permit neither to Lumpkin, Peter Pund, Bounding
suffer. After all, however, we are mm cspcars, ana otners too numerous
not much alarmed over this class to menti0n but since the days of
of reformers and are not likely to thos
football heroes none have
be as long as we can point to Uni drawn the attention Southward as
vprsitles like Yale. Harvard. Prince have the triple touchdown combinaton, Chicago, Purdue, Illinois, Cali- tion at the Volunteer institution.
fornia and Stanford, to mention only
In our summer look we are giv
a few which are able to have win-nin- ing all the conference teams a
tpnms on the athletic field place position to the Wildcats in
and not subsidize their athletics to t dI
nd DredlctinE a six point
That margln of victory for the 'Cats when
their scholastic curriculum.
the University of Kentucky can do)th
meet the greatest team ever to
'
the same thing we are quite cer- -,
n(. Tennessee.
tnln.
Wp do not believe this has ever
And here is one for the book
been the case at our University but
Vipi-nrp those who have main "Shipwreck" Kelly, the big, speed
tained that Kentucky would never merchant of the U. of K. track and
get any place in tne wona 01 am- - football teams Just naturally doesn't
he's saving his
Sairc1eredetofnnrmaTeer!" to walk-ma- ybe
uamage s looioau team
of studies. Perhaps the teams in dogs lor Mr.
fall-a- nd
heres the story as
the past that have worn the colors next
correspondent
of the Blue and White have not, given to 23--us by our
Number
hppn so hot and were used by the,
While in Nashville recently witn
teams as doormats
other conference
y
but this is not so any more. The emveiys trues learn,
v,
onVi
tvio tn hnve strolled auite a few blocks
position of being one of the most! from the hotel used as 'Cat
noon lunch
quarters.
foes in --the entire South, 'Vinnr ns If. Came n.the
iui.i..
"
uu uuuna
UI Course
" Vino tired: andOf doinC.
'e uu "Shipwreck" was ", hilbit hungry,
scholars but we believe that the
street car or taxi was in sight,
the Uni-iN- o '
teams that represented
versity throughout the year had on Strolling by a display room of a
man
an average about as many good Packard sales agency, the bigriver)
.T,iofi,. 'ctn.ifrnm fho Smith fof the Ohio
point as any team in the country, stuck a cigar in his mouth, assumed
u
one member winning the coveted a noncnamut uu, wm
display room where the salesman
Tau Beta Pi key.
was aiSCUSSlug U1U wit: jjuwus ui
latest gas chariot
NTnr fw. hnRVpthnil. hnsnball. and Mr. Packard's
demon-llmellghave had their share of the creation. Kelly asked for a
track
got it. After driving
He
we naturally turn our at-- ! stration.
tention to football as the next thing over the city for about 20 minutes
on the program and which will in the course of which Mr. Kelly
have its first curtain next October learned all about a Packard, the
4.
From a personal viewpoint of noon whistle blew and "Shipwreck
ii
h..k irot,,w .ni Vinvo inctnirtpri thp salesman to dron him
its biggest year in this sport. Coach at "his hotel" and return the next
.
uui
Gamage has made no mention oi day wun a am ui auu.-Conference championship am- - respondent failed to state whether
any
we have a sneaking nus-- 1 the salesman called or not
bitions but
picion that when the Wildcats line way the 'Cats returned home with
- a victory over
the Vandy track
up for the klckoff with the Volunaay at team.
teers next Thanksgiving
.
.
Knoxville that the Southern cham-- 1
And we are wondering if Coach
The 'Cats
plonship will be at stake.
u.
mm
will play seven conierence games i oiuveiy nus u
t oii T'.v. vnHnrr fVin 'riots OK nnp nf thp bOVS tore UD the PillOW
easy winners of every game until and scattered the feathers from the
November 27. The Alabama game tenth floor of the Andrew Jackson
will be the first defeat the 'Cats hotel ana wnicn cost mm me bum
hnvo handed
the Wade coached of three bucks for replacement
mnrhinp. Mv prediction is another "Babe" snouian t De so piayiui.
game of last year 20 to 6
W. & L.
They say Bud Cavana's favorite
KENTUCKY. The Tennessee game
will be the toughest. Although the stunt while on the track trips this
wildcats will nresent a team that year was to date up some "Girl
should be 50 per cent stronger than From Woolworth's" and then just
a
the team last year, so win Ten- before time for his date go tofor
nessee. It will be the last game of used car dealer and get a car
Again our correspondent
the great "Hack, Mack and Dodd" "tryout."
combination and will find a Yellow was not specific the car or the girl.
p.lad tpam on the field that will
Some of the best fun in life is a
have as inspiration the memory of
of the day's work.
two
cnampionsnips
conference
snatched from their grasp by a
snarling, scratching, clawIf you like people, you'll generally
pack of
ing, Wildcats. It will be the last find they like you.

""'

'

The oven . . .
the cook . . .
and the cake
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industry . . . making steel castings for high
as it does to the simplest domestic
pressures
cookery. In basic-line- d
Heroult electric furnaces that apply the heat directly and cleanly
to the metal and permit exact control of tem- Jjiperatures at every stage, the steel for Crane
T?
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asi sieei vaives ana uumgs is prcpareu. .every
t. casting is annealed under temperatures held at
i6oo F. for hours, then slowly shaded ofF
to cooling. Interesting as is the Vulcan-lik- e
foundry equipment in Crane foundries, complete as are the manufacturing resources that
give exactness and uniformity in production,
the vital secret back of quality in Crane electric
steel materials is not the "oven" but the skill of
the "cooks". . . the chemists, the superintendents, the workmen who watch and control
each step and process. Through 75 years, this
skill has been developed and refined. Hack of
it is an exhaustive scientific library of laboratory studies and test charts. Much of the data
that has enabled Crane Co. to produce dependable valves for the enormous pressures and
temperatures now used in industry is collected
in a book, "Pioneering in Science." It is a valuable reference book for students Let us send

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Intercollegiate Pictorial, a new
magazine in the collegiate field, has
representative at
a photographic
the University of Kentucky.
The Publicity Bureau has been
gathering pictures typical of the
University of Kentucky campus and
the student activities and will
submit them to the Publishing
Board at Dartmouth College, where
a group will be selected for publication representing Kentucky's share
of the pictures in the magazine, the
first issue of which will appear the
first of November.
This new publication is being
edited by a group of undergraduates
at Dartmouth College and is being
published as the official organ of
the Intercollegiate Photographic Association, whose purpose is to foster
photographic
organizations
and
publications in the member colleges,
and through its medium bring these
colleges Into closer contact with one
another.
The Intercollegiate Pictorial magazine will contain pictorial material from seventy of the
leading colleges and universities of
the United States and Canada, and
will also contain features of definite
interest to college men and women.

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Don't rely on your wits alone.

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GRADUATION

Including

NOW

RAN F

Twenty freshmen were awarded
track numerals, according to rules
made nnd adhered to in the Southern Conference schools, at the close
of the 1930 track season for the
University of Kentucky Kitten thinly performers.
Only two hiccts were entered by
the freshmen but these, Georgetown
and University of Tennessee freshmen, went to Coach Potters men
in easy style. The Georgetown meet
held the same afternoon of the U.
varsity meet, was
won in handy fashion 77 to 44. The
last meet was held by telegraph
communication and gave the Kittens
even more prestige in the large 156
to 31 win.
Several good men were discovered
by Coach Potter during the season's
workouts. Sam Tuttle, a big boy
from Berea academy, who was handicapped in the first meet by an
ankle injury received in spring foot
ball practice, came back in the Tennessee meet to hurl the discus 126
feet, four inches. He will be a
valuable asset to Coach Shlvely next
season, Willie Hubbell attained a
height of 11 feet 6 Inches In the pole
vault to make himself dangerous
Mllllken
In varsity competition.
turned in good time in the
run during
the
dash and
the two meets. Two fine hurdlers
were discovered in Baker and Emmerich. Foster and Goodwin will
help Kelly and Heiber win meets
in the dashes next season.
Those receiving numerals were:
Baker, Clark, Emmerich, Foster,1
Gottlieb, Darnell, Hirsch, Luther
McGaughey, Maddox, Mahan, Miner, Mulligan, Milliken, Seale, Skinner, Splllman, Tracy, Tuttle, and
Turley.

The bad men would be easy to
handle if they didn't have so many
redeeming qualities that force us to
like them in spite of ourselves.

Has a Complete Line of

you a copy.

i

Numerals Awarded to
Twenty Freshmen for
Track Work at U. K.

N. LIME, OPP. BARR

PHONE 397

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