Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1933

Page 21 of 268

 

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 21 of 268
Page 21 of 268



Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

ICE HOCKEY I » I ' I ' HE origin of the game of hockey is obscure. The fighting M -■- Romans enjoyed a pecuhar game that was most hkely the pre- J j cursor of hockey. The old original Scotch shinty was played • .. — on hard sandy beaches with two to three hundred players on — each side. I ' heir equipment for the game consisted of heavy war-like clubs used as shinty sticks and a small rock served their purpose for a puck. The players would try to send the puck past a certain line or boundary. The side succeeding in doing so was winner of the game. You probably can imagine the number of casualties in a game of this kind with so many players on each side. The first developments of modern hockey probably were in Canada about 1880. To a few colleges in Canada the game of hockey owes its present state, on this side of the Atlantic. These colleges organized teams and played against each other. The game played then was very simple with very few rules. Equipment at this time was that which the players saw fit. Hockey was soon introduced in the United States. Colleges and schools throughout the country organized teams and schedules were made up for each year. Artificial rinks are now found in most of the large cities of this country. Teams are outfitted with complete uniforms according to regulations. The puck and hockey sticks are made to a certain standard. According to present rules each team has si.x players: center, left wing, right wing, left defense, right defense, and goal keeper. The rink is one hundred and twelve feet long by fifty-eight feet wide with a goal placed at each end. The goal posts are six feet apart and four feet high, covered with a net. The puck, a piece of solid rubber, is one inch thick and three inches in diameter. The game is played for three fifteen-minute periods with short intermissions. At the beginning of the game the puck is placed between the opposing centers. At the call to play! on the part of the referee, both teams endeavor to drive the puck down to the opponent ' s goal. The puck is passed from player to player of the team in control until either side succeeds in passing it between the goal posts. Each goal counts for one point. Hockey is a scientific game. The secret of a team ' s success is combination play, in other words co-operation and unselfishness. Hockey is known as the fastest game on earth. For real excitement and shrill, it is worth while to see a flashy hockey game. Louis Schmidt Page Sei ' enteen d PPl h s 1 1

Page 20 text:

d Fighting for the Puck Canada Versus the United States in the Winter Olympics



Page 22 text:

o FOOTBALL AS I SEE IT OOTBALL to the uninitiated, presents the amazing spectacle of a multitude of capering lunatics cheering a free-for-all m the mud. This of course, is inaccurate. It may be only a trifle in- accurate, but it is inaccurate. The game of football is much . more complicated than that, or so they tell me. I can well believe it when I read articles in the papers about the changing and rechanging of rules that nobody knew anything about, an ' vay. Also football. I am told, is a very scientiflc sport. The science consists in introducing dark and devious maneuvers into the game, which are ' tended to DU le the opponents and the spectators so that in the confusion the ball can be taken across the goal hne. Sometimes the maneuvers succeed and sometimes they do not. but invariably the man with the ball gets the worst of it. There is a great deal of excitement attendant upon a college or high- school football game. The spectators all bring brightly colored thingama,igs and wave them franticallv whether their side is winning or losing. If their side is winning thev cheer triumphantly. If it is losing they cheer anyu-ay. Each side has several young men who are known as cheer-leaders. These young men have very powerful lungs, and are apparently double-,ointed. 1 hey are interesting to watch but quite painful to listen to. Before the game each side parades around the field to a musical accompaniment. I do not get the exact idea of this demonstration, but I presume that it is intended to frighten the other team and make it wish that it had gone to a movie instead. However. this theorv is not substantiated by the authorities. As seen from the stands the game itself appears very simple. The teams line up. one at each end of the field, and. at a giv-en signal rush fo rd the individual plavers proceed to do things to each other that would get them Irrested if it were an vhere else but on a football field. Occasionally new players will be sent in ' and the wounded carried out. not with lamentations but amid loud encouragement from the stands. I have tried to figure out why football is so popular. Tiddly vinks or sohtaire require so much less time and effort, but the majority of people prefer football. This is a great puzzle to me. and the only explanation that 1 can offer is that perhaps people Hke football better than tiddlywinks or sohtaire. William Reiley. ) Page Eighteen .

Suggestions in the Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

1935

Cleveland High School - Beacon Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936


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