Word: camped
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Dates: during 1890-1899
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Spalding's Official Football Guide for 1895 edited by Walter Camp has been issued. It contains the only official rules that will govern football this season. The official rules are published in full. The Guide also publishes the amendments to the official rules as adopted by Yale and Princeton, and under which rules they will play, and also the amendments to the official rules as adopted by Harvard, Pennsylvania and Cornell, and under which rules these three colleges will play. To a certain extent, the football situation, so far as it pertains to rules, will be much mixed this season...
...appearance and its contents are not behind in attractiveness. Besides a number of general articles and stories, the number contains as regular departments of the magazine "Comments on University News," edited by Edward S. Martin, Harvard '77, and a digest of the month's athletic news, edited by Walter Camp, Yale '80. The number contains "The Wreck," a poem by Albert Matthews, Harvard '82, and "An American Collegian at Oxford," by John Corbin...
...college magazine named The Bachelor of Arts has been started and the first copy has just been published. The editor-in-chief is John Seymour Wood and his associates are Walter Camp and Edward S. Martin. This number contains contributions from Henry E. Howland, Charles Stewart Davidson and Mrs. Todd of Amherst. The magazine is to be devoted almost entirely to college interests and there will be no illustrations, a novelty in magazine work which is enforced by considerations of economy. The advisory board consists of the following men: Joseph H. Choate, Chauncey M. Depew, J. Frederick Kernochan, Buchanan Winthrop...
...HAVEN, CONN., May 16. - Walter Camp, the well known coach was seen this afternoon and said that he had no hand in influencing the Yale management, to take their stand. He did not care to be quoted in the matter. He said that he had handed in his resignation as a member of the athletic advisory committee to Captain Thorne and would not in the future take as active an interest in athletics as heretofore. Mr. Camp stated that reasons of business and health were the sole cause for his step...
...William P. Dutton '96 - Incident of the French Camp, Robt. Browning...