Colors and Crest
The club plays its matches either white or red jerseys with black shorts and black socks. The club crest is a shield similar to Spanish football giants FC Barcelona with the top half of the shield being split down the middle with the Portugal National Football Team crest on a half red and half black background underneath a horizontal gold stripe goes across the middle of the shield bearing the name F.C. Hudson across it and underneath the bottom half of the crest has four vertical red stripes on a white background with a soccer ball in the center of the vertical stripes.
They have folded as of 2008. For reasons unknown
as of 2012 they have back up as a over30s team
Read more about this topic: F.C. Hudson
Famous quotes containing the words colors and, colors and/or crest:
“The butterflys attractiveness derives not only from colors and symmetry: deeper motives contribute to it. We would not think them so beautiful if they did not fly, or if they flew straight and briskly like bees, or if they stung, or above all if they did not enact the perturbing mystery of metamorphosis: the latter assumes in our eyes the value of a badly decoded message, a symbol, a sign.”
—Primo Levi (19191987)
“We may say that feelings have two kinds of intensity. One is the intensity of the feeling itself, by which loud sounds are distinguished from faint ones, luminous colors from dark ones, highly chromatic colors from almost neutral tints, etc. The other is the intensity of consciousness that lays hold of the feeling, which makes the ticking of a watch actually heard infinitely more vivid than a cannon shot remembered to have been heard a few minutes ago.”
—Charles Sanders Peirce (18391914)
“The history of any nation follows an undulatory course. In the trough of the wave we find more or less complete anarchy; but the crest is not more or less complete Utopia, but only, at best, a tolerably humane, partially free and fairly just society that invariably carries within itself the seeds of its own decadence.”
—Aldous Huxley (18941963)