Word: out-of-town
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Three new rulings in regard to football games were recently passed at Yale both by the faculty of the Academic School, and the Sheffield Scientific School. The first one states that all college exercises are to be omitted on the day of an out-of-town game, but that triple cuts would be given any absences immediately preceding or following the day of the game. Secondly, on the days of Princeton and Harvard games in New Haven, all classes after 11 o'clock are to be omitted. Lastly, it was strongly recommended that the football team should not leave...
...University soccer team will play the first out-of-town game of the season against the Millbury Association Football Club at Millbury, this afternoon. This will be the third and last practice game before the intercollegiate season opens with the Cornell game next Saturday. The team has been improving and appears to be a strong one. The two games played so far have shown that the new men can be counted on to more than fill the places left vacant last year...
...suggestion in the CRIMSON that men spend a good deal of time on second teams and scrub teams, and that the rule, to be more effective, should be extended to cover such cases, has some weight in view of the growth of the out-of-town schedules for second teams. The whole question seems primarily a matter for the Faculty to decide. Perhaps a reference to the Administrative Board for approval or disapproval might be advisable. In the reorganization of athletics which is under way, it should be seriously considered whether all matters affecting scholarship should not, as at Cornell...
...Yale Advisory Athletic Committee in conjunction with the Faculty Committee has announced some important athletic reforms. They are in brief: that the number of out-of-town games shall be cut down; that the athletic squads on out-of-town trips shall be very much reduced; that only the minor teams and class organizations shall be allowed to solicit subscriptions; and that students shall be charged only half admission to the championship games...
...meetings, and a part will be utilized for a dining room. While the restaurant in the old club can with difficulty accommodate fifty people, the space in Harvard Hall will provide for two or three hundred. The fourth and fifth floors will be occupied by bedrooms to accommodate out-of-town members. Two squash courts are to be built on the roof. The architects for the new addition are McKim, Mead & White; the contractors are Norcross Brothers...