6 YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY. Published every Thursday during the College Terms and conducted by a Graduate kaitor and Associate Editor, und Assistants from the Board of ditors of the YALE DAILY NEWS. SUBSCRIPTION, - $2.50 PER YEAR. Foreign Postage, 35 cents per year. PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, Checks, drafts and orders should be made payable to the Yale Alumni Weekly. All correspondence should be addressed, Yale Alumni Weekly, New Haven, Conn. ‘ADVISORY BOARD. For College Year, 96-7: H. C. ROBINSON, °53. J. R. SHEFFIELD, '87. W. W. SKIDDY °65 8S. J. A. HARTWELL, ’89 8. C. P. Linpsury, 75 S. L. 8. WELCH, °89. W. Camp, '80. E. VAN LNGEN, '91 8. Ww. G. Daaaerr, °80. P. JAY, 98. EDITOR, LEWIS 8. WELCH, °89. o ws ASSOCIAZTE EDITOR, WALTER CAMP, ’80. ——$—$_— NEWS EDITOR, GRAHAM SUMNER, ’97. ASSISTANTS, JOHN JAY, 798, D. H. DAY, 99. BUSINESS MANAGER, BK. J. THOMPSON. (Office, Room 6, White Hall.) Entered as second clase matter at New Haven P: OQ New Haven, Conn., JANNARY 7, 1897, ne renee YALE AND NEW HAVEN. The Evening Leader recently printed with a good deal of flourish an article purporting to indicate an ani- mosity on the part of the financial management of Yale University towards the business portion of New Haven. The incident suggesting the publication was the attempt now be- ing made to compel Yale to pay taxes on a certain part of its property. In the article it was said that only a few years ago a very large sum was placed in local securities, but that this had been slowly withdrawn un- til the amount of Yale money loaned hereabouts was very small. It was intimated that the feeling between New Haven and Yale was not im- proved by such a policy as Yale was alleged to be pursuing, and that the outcome of the attempt to tax Yale depended not a little on the strength of this local prejudice against the University. Like most articles of its kind, the further it proceeded the less justification there seemed for the head lines and the introduction. It was finally frankly admitted that the reduction by Yale of New Haven in- vestments from $800,000 a few years ago to !ess than $200,000 at present (to quote. the figures of the Leader) was simply due to the desire of the University to get a higher rate of in- terest than New Haven borrowers would pay. The Register has taken up the cudgels for Yale and declares the attack an unworthy one, and sim- ply a part of the effort to create ill will toward Yale. It asks only to have Yale left alone. We are not disturbed over the agi- tation. If it did not confess its own weakness it would still be far from formidable. At the same time, we must admit that it suggests a point in Yale’s policy which is not well eared for, in our humble _ opinion. Yale and New Haven are not close enough together. There is every rea- son why the feeling between them should be one of mutual good will at the least, if not of enthusiastic de- votion to each other’s interests. Any- body can see, that, on the one hand, H. K. SmrrnH, °98., YALE it is of the greatest advaniage to any community to have located in it such an institution as Yale, and, on the other nand, that the University is very much hampered if it does not enjoy the good-will and receive the co-operation of the municipality in all its efforts to improve its plant and equipment. The interests are so dis- tinctly mutual that it seems a pity that the feeling is not more strong. We do not mean that there is ill-will. Sensible people of New Haven appre- ciate Yale and Yale men and Yale’s officers generally show an apprecia- tion of the fact that they are a part of the city of New Haven. But it would seem very easy to make this tie which, by nature, is strong, very much stronger, so that any act of animosity on the part of one side towards the other would be entirely out of the question. We would not want Yale, threat- ened with an enormous tax assess- ment, to seek in any way to curry favor with the powers that be. We hope she will fight this direct at- tack on her resources with all the strength in her power and without yielding in any point out of fear. But that is only an incident in the situa- tion. A few days ago it was announced that the citizens of Baltimore had given outright nearly $250,000, just to help Johns Hopkins out of the diffi- culties in which it is temporiarly placed. Would such a thing, or any- thing like it, happen similar circumstances. © not? here, If not, why a al THE PUNISHMENT OF CRIBBING. The Harvard Crimson doubts tie wisdom of the plan adopted by the au- thorities there for the punishment of cheating at examinations. There is no attempt on the part of the Crimson to extenuate the crime, or to make it seem any less dishonorable than it in fact is. The point at which it declines to endorse the action of the Adminis- trative Board, is that part of the plan which contemplates the publication of the names of those who are discovered cheating in an examination. It says:— “The Administrative board may have the legal right to publish to the world the names of those who break the rules, but it has not, we believe, the moral right. The man who is thus punished will have his College life ruined and may have the first few years of his life after. leaving College severely in- jured. If the authorities wish to weed out from the list of its members those who are dishonest, the best way, the just way, is to expel the offenders at once and for all, but not to thrust their faults upon the whole University and upon the outside world into which they must enter.” We would not be inclined to criticise the details of any scheme undertaken to root out this evil. The publicity given to the crime will be, we believe, a most effectually deterring influence. There is always a disposition to shield from the public gaze those who have first committed some evil, and news- paper offices are daily besieged to keep from. the record of the police court the name of this or that man or woman who has fallen for the first time into the hands of the law. It is always a questionable exercise of clemency to yield to these requests. The way to keep one’s name out of the police court record is to keep out of the police court, and the harder it is for any one who reaches there, the less often will people travel in that direction. ALUMNI under. quite regularly. W EEK LY It is undoubtedly true that a good deal of dishonorable work in exami- nation has not been appreciated by those who have committed it, so dulled has been their sensibility by the amount of sophistry with which this thing has been shielded. But college Students are not the ones among whom an offense against honor is to be excused on the ground of carelessness. It is of course true that the reform of this evil will not be successful, un- til the student body appreciates the evil. We believe such efforts as these planned at Harvard will be a power- ful educating influence in this direc- tion. ————_——__4>>oe___————- NOTES ON FOOTBALL, The end of the season’s play in foot- ball has brought the usual discussion of the rules of the game. There is unusual unanimity of expression in favor of a more open game. The last amendments to the rules aimed largely at this, but have yet, however, succeeded only par- tially in their purpose. Indeed, in some respects they are en- tirely inoperative. It takes a good team and very skillful work to develop a play like a tandem, with such perfection as, for instance, the Princeton eleven showed in the game with Yale, while the mass ‘plays of Pennsylvania in the last half of her game with Harvard also indicated a high order of skill and strength. At the same time, this style of piay does tend to make football a pushing game, with too much depending on avourdupois, and to lessen the chances for the skill and agility of lighter players. Mr. Whit- ney in Harper’s Weekly recommends an increase in the distance to be gained in four downs, making it ten instead of five yards. A good team, fairly trained in pushing plays, can make the five yards To make ten is very much harder. A stout resistance against one or two plays would almost invariably force a kick, an end play, or a long pass, or some other device, more open and more interesting and on the whole more worthy of this splendid game. The recommendation seems a reasonable one. Outing for this month also strongly condemns the extreme use of mass plays, and favors rules to restrict them. It is to be hoped, and we think reasonably, that some improvement in this line will be shown next season. The review of the football elevens of the different schools as printed in the last Weekly showed one result which quite surprised us. It will be remembered that rather more than half of the players who graduate next year from these schools are coming to Yale. This is in- teresting enough as a fact but we do not attach any particular significance to it in forecasting next year’s eleven. Pre- paratory school reputations do not neces- sarily forecast athletic strength. It would be pleasant enough to find that Yale was able next Fall to develop) an eleven of strength out of new material. ——— eu Steins or 22: “was §=Cankards. Z 3 In FLEMISH « * & 3 WARE decorated in cS 3 colors, GERMAN S WARE, brown = gy DOULTON, blue eS with College Seal * 3 Growlers “Here’s to = Z good old Yale” are = > shown by * # Se THE ie 3 GEORGE H. FORD & 3 COMPANY. ‘& 8° TIN ITIP I ININIPIN I -2 Let the first entry in your ’97 diary be $3 for a year’s subscription to OUTING If you follow this advice you will never want for good reading during the year. THE HOLIDAY NUMBER (Jan.) Ts rich in illustrations and brimful of Holiday reading. CONTENTS (JANUARY, 1897). Hunting for an Arctic Larder (an incident of the 1898-4 Peary Expedition)—Red-Coat and Continental, -by Sara B. Kennedy—Bicycling in J se eee Fishes ot Florida—Ice-Boating on Beaver Lake—The Passing of Xaxtia—A Tramp on Snowshoes—After Caribou on Snowshoes—Quail Shooting on the Snow—In the Land of the Marseillaise—Christmas with Trapper Lewis— National Guard of Maine. Price 25 cents. THE OUTING PUBLISHING CO., 239 Fifth Avenue, = = New York. 1851 - A CORPORATION - 1896 having Forty-five Years’ successful business experience offers for sale 5% 20 Year Income Bonds, which are just as good as Governments. For prospectuses, terms, etc., address the Phenix Mutual Life Insurance Company OF HARTFORD, CONN. Or Agents in any of the large cities or towns. Such teams are always most interesting because the unexpected is more liable to happen while freshness and ambition give a particular dash to the play. But this is looking a long way ahead. The University Athletic Club was never interested in a more wholesome measure than the one in which it is now occupied. We refer to ‘the investigation of the sub- ject of New York football, or to put it a little differently the determination of its officers to have no more New York foot- ball as far as Yale and Princeton go. We shall be very much _interest- ed in the report of the Com- mittee and in the steps that are taken to make the annual Princeton-Yale contest one of a more distinctly Univer- sity character, and one which those most interested can have a fair chance to wit- ness. —_—_—__40¢—_-——— 95—F'rederick M. De Forest is study- ing philology at the University of Halle, Germany. Tighe. Lane Wheeler & Farnham, Attorneys at Law, Manhattan Building, St. Paul, Minn. AMBROSE TIGHE. |, JOHN W. LANE. HowakD WHEELERz CHARLES W. FARNHAM 109-112 JONATHAN B. Bunce, President. Joun M. Hotcomset, Vice-President. CHARLES H. LAWRENCE, Secretary. NEW-YORK LIFE Insurance Company. JANUARY 1, 1896. ASSETS..... $174,791,990.54 LIABILITIES. 150,753,312.65 SURPLUS ... _$24,038,67'7.89 INCOME..... $37,892,265.56 *New Business )} paid for in 1895. ‘ $127,492,555.00 *Insurance in force... t 799,927,329.00 *No policy or sum of Insurance is included i this statement of new business or insurance in force, except where the first premium therefor, as provided in the contract, has been paid te the Company in cash. JOHN A, McCALL, President. HENRY TUCK, Vice-President.