In the November-December 2006 issue of the Saturday Evening Post, on page 50, there is an article about the history of football. (I copied down the full cite, but left my purse out in the car. Reading stuff in the emergency room tends to lead to mental lapses.) The author claims the first known cheerleaders were used at a November 1869 game between Rutgers and Princeton and that Princeton, as a favorite college for Southern aristocracy, used the rebel yell to threaten the other team. The author claimed the players found themselves short of breath after rendering the yell, so the Rutgers rematch featured "shouters" on the sidelines.
Is anyone familiar with current Princeton football traditions, and is it at all possible that the rebel yell has survived in disguise?
Is anyone familiar with current Princeton football traditions, and is it at all possible that the rebel yell has survived in disguise?
Comment