Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO)

 - Class of 1926

Page 171 of 225

 

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 171 of 225
Page 171 of 225



Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 170
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Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 172
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Page 171 text:

HSHLQR Sgewgmdigg 7, 'gggsnng-gg W, . ie el' li 15 WIP Ill 4'l it ii I 'll' l .L A ill 'T' l l YELLOW By the Athletic Editor Billy Sanborn came to Swope College with a great record as a high school football and basketball player. Students were expecting big things of him. Imagine the surprise, mine as well as every one's else, at not finding him out at the first football practice. He and I were old friends,.as I had attended the same high school as he one year. I hadn't seen him for two years, but when we met the first day of school, we decided to room together. Well, you can imagine that I asked him why he didn't report for practice. He tried to hedge but I in- sisted, so he told me the whole, but he made me swear to secrecy. I did, but I finally made him promise to come out anyway. Next day there was great rejoicing, Billy Sanborn had reported. But soon rejoicing changed to chagrin. Was this the great Billy Sanborn? He stood like one lost, w0uldn't try to run with the ball, and quailed before a charging halfback. He was afraid! Ile was yellow! Students were dis- gusted. It was positively sickening. Things went right on. Billy became an object of scorn, an outcast. But day after day he was out on the field. I knew he wasn't a quitter. A quitter would never have been to practice the second day. Well, Billy didn't even get to play a single minute that year. It nearly broke his heart. But when basketball time rolled around, he was on the court the first day. Say, the coach and everybody else but me got the surprise of his life Swope had never seen such playing. Flashing down the side of the court or dribbling through the entire first team and looping in that ball from every conceivable positior, when the first scrim- mage was over Billy had won his right to a place on the team N0 one could understand the change. But throughout the district that season the playing of Billy Sanborn was heralded far ard wide Onlv one game d'd the team lose to dec7de the champbnship Ard Billy was l id up in the the school g , But when the footba3l season came again again cam Billys old page 0116 l'1UI1dI'Ed SlXfy SSVCI1 ell - 1' , I . il I 7 L , V 1 ls last quarter with a sprained ankle. Billy was re.nstated in the minds of ! u l 1 H K i i 4 +ec.aaeec..4a+ec..4nee+1926+aee.,...gnrec..geeee..4e+s

Page 170 text:

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Page 172 text:

eagwrwemigrgsadigrg GSH'-HR Q?3rKlgMf5rQ'e...4'9rQga.4'9r?f? trouble. It was unbelievable. Why should he show a yellow streak on the football field and be a star on the basketball court? That year was a replica of the first. Bil'y played about five minutes in one game, but, well, why tell you the result? But the basketball player was again an entirely different fellow. Our Junior year rolled around. All during the season Billy? tried to conquer his enemy. But the final game of the season came and Billy was still, to all appearances, yellow.' The last game with our deadliest enemy was a nightmare for three quarters. Every backfield man we had was carried off the field until at last with Broadwood leading 13-0, only Billy remained. And so he was sent into the game. V On the first play Broadwoodls left guard tackled Billy and then de- liberately kicked him on the top of his head. And then, wonder of wonders, Billy Sanborn, the coward, the quitter, the man with a yellow streak changed from a trembling bunch of clay into a fighting rampaging demon. He didn't swing at that guard, oh, no. He called his signals, bowed his neck and hit at that guard like a pile driver, ploughed through the opposing line, and then amid the shrieks and cries and yells of the fans gone mad with the lust of battle, he twisted, dodged and tore his way fifty yards to a touchdown! Billy Sanborn had come into his own again. Two minutes were left to play. Was it possible to win? It wasn't possible, but-Billy Sanborn took the kick-off under his own goal posts. Amid a heart-breaking silence, while fans just prayed, he far excelled hfs feat of a minute before. Never had such broken-field running been seen on the Swope gridiron. He stiff-armed, side-stepped, out-ran and out-gentraled opposing tacklers for 95 yards and victory. Joy-crazed students carried him from the field. This story might end right here but there's lots to tell yet. That spring Swope won the basketball championship, but Billy Sanborn was the cause. . The first game of the year was won,29-28. Swope was behind one point till the last ten seconds of the game, when Billy took the ball under the goal and arched a shot the length of the court for a goal and victcry. Then there was the Benton game, when 13 points behind in the last quarter page one hundred sixty-eiglt liQSvm4I3?'Qfenm4g?QlewmefEjQ3 8srl926re3 gtQsea..fegitgga..4l5fQ.em4'E5f ...Q .. 1 ......- .4-1.17---W-.. Adi.. . ir ral ll . gl U V l A 'if fffii' .wwf rll if if lil J l I r l e Q QS: Tl AJ We fl -3- W

Suggestions in the Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) collection:

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 112

1926, pg 112

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 88

1926, pg 88

Ozark Wesleyan College - Ashlar Yearbook (Carthage, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 88

1926, pg 88


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