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KENTUCKY ALUMNUS 19  
1 Rygtthe Tigers, were registered before the KENTUCKY DOWNS MARSHALL   · `
The SQO1`€ at tl@€ l1alf—Way mark was Eight hundred Lexin ton basketball   l
____ 7 to {C6, with the Wlldeats ll0ld1ng the one- fans spent a dollar each Sgturday night to  
could DOU1 martin- _ help charity, and got their money’s worth ll
,y got Kentucky started off as though it would as the University of Kentucky Wildcats l li
,o_ make a runaway_af`fanj of the game. Yates conquered a brilliant Marshall College   4 Y  2
tipped to Captain SDICBF Wl’10 DaSS€d to quintet, 42 to 26, in the ’Cats’ second bas-   `   
.€ fo,. McGinnis as the latter went under the ketball game of the Season     E
D. lt basket to score a crip. "Little lViac" fol- It was the kind of game that crams ac-   l l
€ntuc_ lowed With a free tl°1rOW befO1`e the Tigers tion into every minute, Both teams used a T` z l
d as a scored on a free toss by Crain. fast-breaking ofense, and the ball ex-   T A   
The Wildcats apparently have their de- €lla¤g€d hands S0 quickly that tl1eimD1`€S-   l °   
1 1931 fense pretty well mastered, but need im- S1011 was gained that the tilt Was a whole . { 1  i
e Will provement in shooting before they meet lot closer than it actually was.   ·,; T i
Cham- the conference big shots, starting with Marshall WaS playing ltS first game of i     l
the University of Tennessee Volunteers the S€aS0n and the Thundering Herd Was Fe   l
  here next Saturday night plaintly git a disadvantage from the stand-   _  E
3   DOIH 0 stamina. The West Virginians   - ~
;r;l¤;;t§— 1931 roornA1.i. scnenurn ggvotghohwglgooto oloogy to thin? ago?   ·  2
· — r e rs ve minu es in eac a . Q _ ·
$1933, By Noel Engg] Tgieiigafter, thleydwerehblowing hard and   ‘  
lcll · With the closing of the present football t B “pll‘°°"l‘? 6 mac ..lll?* Wllll G€°l`g€   i
season comes the schedule of the Wildcats Yoloo alltl Llttle McGlmllS and Calmlm   ‘ ‘
lggl fm. the next yea,.) and it is Om, that will Spicer splitting the basket wide open with E    1 _
Mille cm-y nic interest of the fans and will ooolo from oooo ooo foo oolloo owor to     t
& Lee leave no doubt in their minds as to the Comfmtable l€adS‘   .
aballlél quality Of next ygayls t€gm_ Alabama,     ‘_
Duke Duke, Fo1·ida, Maryland, all finished ahead WILDCATS TAKE TILT FROM BEREA   — 
l, M. I. of the Wildcats in the Southern Confer— ———  ;  
lnessee ence race this year, and should make the Rushed into the game when the tide of j i, ·  .
lryland Wildcat’s schedule for 1931 the toughest battle seemed on the verge of going C     `
V. P. I. in years. against the Wildcats, Forrest Sale, Law-   ;
mth Of   l·enceburg youth, broke l00S€ t01` eight W  
mmgel. Oct 3—Ma¤`YVill€- Lexmgwn iield goals and led Kentucky to a hard-   _ .
is sev Oct. 10—Washington and Lee. Lexington fought Victory Over a Scrappy quintet V 4 . . 
lee and O°°· lll_M*llYlalld· College Pl’ll`ll· Md from Berea College in the U. K. gymnasi-   .
Ing the Oct. 23—V. P. I., Lexington um December 31.  {ig V
Bm,. V' Oct. 31-Alabama. Tuscaloosa. Ala. Fans watched Sale get in deadly work    
Virginia Nov. 7—Duke. Lexington under the basket which sent Kentucky In-   . 
; Could Nor- 14-V- M- I-- Lexington. Va- to a comfortable lead 1n the second half   - 
9 Same Nov. 26—Tennessee. Lexington after the Mountaineers had stayed Stub- ·  ll';  ‘ 
Dec. 6—F10rida, Jacksonville, Fla., ltentative) bgrnly (`jlOSQ‘tO the Wildcats throughout   Q_ 
With this very attractive schedule also th§{§;€$C£$11%%\,iO,,S]y Superior in mam    
comes the discussions of how good the power, althéugh BB,-ea had the best pass-   , 
E TILT Varsity will be next year. The loss, by lng and coached machine to appear here "    
1 graduation, of the center of the line, Capt. SO fm-, was 0ff-fel~m and its difficulty in    
m they FOl`(lll€l`- Wllll*lmS» and Rose and $0mG drawing away from the visitors was due `   Q
agen, a classy substitutes ill COlkel‘, Johnson, nearly as mugh to its Own noel- nlayingias    
lnnish, Baughman, and Bronston; Spicer. who to strength shown by Berea. The Wild- `   , 
its Jan- has been a mainstay in the backfield, and cats, finding nothing new in Berea’s_zone   :
iecntive Louie Toth, always reiable, will be greatly defense, thanks to t h e i r experience    _i
expense missed from the squad. However, the against Marshall College last week, _w0rk—    
yuthern return of both ends, Andrews and Cavana: ed the ball in for enough shots t0 Wln any   1;
_ About both tackles, Kipping and Wright. and ball game by a Wide rnargln. but the mw   i
with such outstanding backs as Kelly, of Rupp were not hitting tha h00P· They   f
lg most Johnson, Tom and Jack Phipps, Urbaniak shot 90 times and were successful on only gg 
gh with and Yates, Gamage should have little 19 of them. That is a percentage of 21 7;  _
l. Only . t1‘0uble in putting a winning team on the per cent and 35 per cent IS about the aVer—   ·
and one _ field next yeal-_ age to expect. The score was 41 to 25.  5 .
· . ..,. ‘ — V TA- ‘ l  ..  `l