BASKETBALL ® By far the most successful team on the campus this year was the basketball team captained by Fred Whitehead. A representative lineup of this team which won thirteen games and lost only three would be: Hanna CF); Vestal (F); Whitehead CO); Walker (G.i; Posey CG). Substitutes for Wesleyan: Fulkerson G . Jenkins CF), Davis (F), Ragan (C), Walker, Guthrie, (F). This team started out in a manner which made the stu- dents heave a big sigh and say: ' We won ' t get to cheer much this winter, but after dropping games to Birmingham South- ern and U. T„ bath four year colleges, they went to the finals in the Southern Junior College Tournament at Asheville without suffering a defeat. The play cf the team was characterized by a fast, clean dribbling and passing attack and a clcse five man defence. This method of play made them almost unbeatable. George Hanna always led the floor offense and the ball usually landed in the basket from the hands of Whitehead or Vestal to whcm he fed the ball. The last home game was the best game played in the Wes- leyan gym last winter. In this game the Bulldog ' s won from the Kncxville Y, 37 to 11. Knoxville was rated as a mighty gccd independent team. The true metal of the team was tested on the trip which ended up the scheduled season. Wesleyan was slated to lose at least two out of three of the trip games and she came thru winning them all. The last game at Sue Bennet was the clcsest of the season, the Bulldogs taking it in the last min- ute of play by a field goal which put them one point in the lead. At the tournament in Asheville, the Asheville Citizen gave them an equal rating with any team there. They won their preliminary games by large scores and only lost by five points to Bluefield College, of Bluefield, West Virginia. And next year is coming. SPORT COMMENTS The Sports Editor has suffered thru this year, making navy a comment on the subject of sports in general and as he is now singing his swan song as a contributor to the columns of the noble Nocatula he is going to give the subscribers of this sheet a few of his mental verdicts on the subject of sports and sport editors w.fchout extra charge. College sports have suffered some very justifiable criticism from the academicians in the past few years because of the tendency of sports to usurp the first page in college newspapers, relegating such things as literary societies, schol- arship societies, dramatics, etc., to positions under ten point headlines and on the pages where advertising predominates. Commercialism has also been leading these hounds of re- form a merry chase as has the tendency of the coaches to dictate the policy of the school. One Chinese American stu- dent described the Arr.erican College as an athletic institu- tion where certain of the more feeble were afforded an oppor- tunity for study. Our institution is more cr lees free of all these so called evils. Inevitably sj because it is not heavily enough en- dowed to be commercial and because denominational sm is so prevalent that any other icrce must lift its head with fear and trembling for it will sure get it knocked down again. The trouble in cur school is not too much athletics, but too little athletics. By this we mean that the athletics of tne school is carried on by too few people. Although the modern youth is much touted for his strength of body and freedom of spirit, it remains that the average boy is constitutionally averse to physical exercise and that the average college graduate has a physical development which makes him unfit for a hundred yard dash and common house labor. This may be the fault of the modern trend of college thought — that mind is more important than the body— or the modem methods of operation, which is such in the large college that none but the exceptinoal can stand the commer- cialized competition and in the smaller colleges that so lit- tle equipment is offered and so little variety of sports that, it is soon taken up by the select few. As we see it this should be combated in two ways — tif it should be combated at all and if we are right in our premise ' — first the college student should be taught the value of physical perfection, not merely from a utilitarian standpoint, for it is the mind that earns the living in this age, but from
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WHO ' S WHO IN THE SENIOR CLASS GIRLS Best student Katie Peterson Second best .Margery Ledford Most studious , Yula Barker Second most studious Mae Long Best all-round Chelsea Laws Second all-round Emily Johnson Most Popular Chelsea Laws Second most popular Gladys Parker Most Beautiful Valeria Ogle Second most beautiful Chelsea Laws Best dressed Marie Rogers Second best dressed Emily Johnspn Most Aristocratic , Emily Johnson Second most aristocratic Dorothy Elliott Best athlete Lura Cook Second best athlete Lucile Keys Best musician Evelyn Stone Second best musician Imogene Can- Most dignified Ruby Bailey Second most dignified Catherine Lane Most sociable Gladys Parker Second most so ciable Chelsea Laws Most artistic , Catherine Walker Second most artistic Pansy Thomas Best actress Gladys Parker Second best actress Valeria Ogle Faculty ' s pet Ruby Bailey Biggest all ' round ...Annabelle Skillern BOYS Best student Fred Whitehead Second best student Ycung Querry Most studious Doc. Phillips Second most studious Young Querry Best all ' round Manson Green Second best all ' round Doc. Phillips Most popular Johnson Townley Second most popular George Hanna Most handsome Rathburn Ray Second most handsome Ralph Smith Best dressed , George Hanna Second best dressed Lee Rothrock Most aristocratic Howard Guthrie Second most aristocratic Lee Rothrock Best athlete : Fred Whitehead Second best athlete George Hanna Best musician , Lee Rothrock Second best musician Howard Guthrie Most dignified Howard Dennis Second most dignified Wilsie Wilder Most sociable Hicks Jenkins Second most sociable Manson Green Most artistic Mouzon Peters Second most artistic. Eugene Jenkins Best actor , Johnson Townley Second best actor , Howard Dennis Faculty ' s pet , Hicks Jenkins Ugliest , Roxy Biggest all ' round Rupert Ghormley 20
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