Tuesday, March 24, 2020

COLOR WILDCATVILLE CARDINAL WITH (POLITE) RAGE


What to do ensconced at home during coronavirus crisis 2020?

  • Sleep in.
  • Read.
  • Watch TV.
  • Snack or try not to snack.
  • Etc.

Today's choice: Look on the Internet for Linfield College (as this is written -- March 24, 2020 -- soon to be Linfield University) "school colors."


Color Wildcatville cardinal with (polite) rage.


Found a site (there may be more, didn't look) listing "purple and red" as Linfield colors.


Not.


The colors are cardinal and purple. In that order. These days purple dominates in what Linfield Wildcat athletes wear and what's sold in the Linfield Bookstore. But, cardinal and purple are the colors.


Cardinal is a shade of red. It's not accurate to list "red" as a Linfield color. Cardinal or "Cardinal red" is correct. "Red" is not.


The Linfield athletic "L" letter (see photo posted here) is the Cardinal L. The Linfield club for those winning athletic letters is (was? Does it still exist?) “Cardinal K.” Linfield Athletic Hall of Famer Bob Ferguson (Class of 1965), who earned Cardinal "L"s playing Wildcat football, has an organization called “Cardinal Circle.” 


If you’re not convinced, the Linfield Athletics website says this


“Cardinal and Purple


“Linfield athletic teams sport one of the most unique color schemes in all of college athletics. The college adopted the current colors of Cardinal (Red) and Purple in 1917.


“Purple, a symbol of wealth and power during the Middle Ages, was worn by Roman emperors and by Roman Catholic popes. Wealthy popes used gems and purple stones in papal architecture. Pope Paul II (1464-71), who enjoyed a luxurious lifestyle, introduced the use of scarlet, calling it “Cardinal’s Purple,” because it was worn by his cardinals. Cardinal red, similar in hue to burgundy, also became a luxury dye during the Middle Ages. “