Yale alumni magazine. ([New Haven]) 1937-1976, May 13, 1897, Page 7, Image 7

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    NEWS FROM OTHER COLLEGES,
HARVARD.
Brown took her second game from
Harvard last Wednesday, May 5, at
Cambridge, by a score of 4 to 0. The
first game was played at Providence on
April 27 and resulted 8 to 2 in Brown’s
favor. In Wednesday‘s game the Har-
yard team played an extremely listless
and weak game, the only redeeming
feature being the pitching of Paine,
which merited much better support
than was given. [In the last 8 innings
he struck out eight men and allowed
but two hits. In spite of their inabil-
ity to hit Paine, the Brown men played
a sharp, aggressive game. Their field-
ing was remarkably clean and sure,
and at the bat they made the most of
every chance to score.
PRINCETON.
It is reported that a prominent and
generous Princeton alumnus has re-
cently communicated with the Execu-
tive Committee of the University Ath-
letic Association inquiring if it would
be of any advantage to the football
players to be able to row during the
Spring. If such was the case he ex-
pressed his willingness to present the
Association with several shells and to
start a movement for raising a. fund to
build a larger lake near the canal. As
the matter is generally understood the
idea is not solely for the development
of the football men, but eventually to
turn out a Princeton crew.
On Wednesday Princeton defeated
Lehigh 11 to 2, in a very loose and slow
game. The home team did well with
the bat in securing fourteen hits, while
their opponents made but six . Lehigh
was especially weak at first base and
made costly errors throughout the field.
R. Shepardson, 1900, who was acci-
dentally shot while trying to hold off
his boat from the dock with the butt
end of his gun on Saturday, May 8,
died from the effects of his wound the
following day.
COLUMBIA.
Columbia’s crew should surely re-
ceive the suport of all patriotic Amer-
icans. The men will row in a shell of
American design, built by an American
workman, rigged according to to Amer-
ican ideas, and propelled by oars of an
YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
American pattern. And an American
coach, a graduate of Columbia, will
teach his pupils a stroke, American in
all of its features—Columbia Spectator.
The anual play of the Skull and Keys
Society of the University of California
was recently given at Oakland. This
society is confined to the last two years
of the course, and draws its members
from members of the various four-year
societies.
oo
Changes in N, Y¥. Athictic Club.
The council of the University Athlet-
ic Club has recently made an amend-
ment in the constitution whereby grad-
uates of less than four years’ standing
are enabled to postpone ‘the payment of
their entrance fees. This amendment,
is, in substance, as follows:
The young graduate need not pay
an initiation fee during his first mem-
bership year, but merely his dues for
the year. These are $25 for the first
half and six months later $25 more if
he is a resident’ member; but
$12.50 each half year, if he is
a non-resident member; for
his second year he pays his anual
dues and $10 of hig initiation fee; the
third year the anual dues and $15 of
his iniation fee, and for his fourth
year he pays $25. This plan allows him
- join the Club at an initial outlay of
25.
The Club has arranged to move into
its new quarters May 15. The building
secured is known as the “Dr. Loomis
House” at 19 West 34th Street, oppo-
site the new Waldorf. The house is
built on a fifty-foot lot and has three
exposures. A. stable in the rear has
been converted into a gymnasium and
five courts. The rooms on the fourth
and fifth floors of the Club’s new
building, about fifteen in all, have been
turned into bedrooms, some of which
will be rented to resident members
yearly at a very reasonable price, while
others will be used for transients. On
this account the above mentioned rule
for young graduates will be greatly
appreciated.
Socially the Club is organized on
much the same principles as a Junior
University Club ,and its social side has
had a rapid development for several
years past in this direction. In fact the
Governing Board has secured the char-
ter of the Junior University Club, and
for the future it will be still further
developed along similar lines.
Why should an Educated Man
be Handicapped ?
<a
One certainly is if he goes into business of any kind without
knowing what is likely to be required of him. Those who know
what is Best in Academic Education can appreciate most keenly
the best
PRACTICAL EDUCATION.
Education in the minor details of any business may be
obtained, it is true, by experience.
But don’t be educated in this
way unless you must. IT’S EXPENSIVE. Employers charge
dearly (in reduced wages) for what they teach. The long wait for
a fair salary means more than the small outlay and short time
required for thorough training in
Eastman Business College,
POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y.,
THE BEST TRAINING SCHOOL OF THE LAND.
Write for its catalogue. It will prove interesting reading.
If you cannot well attend the College you can certainly afford a
course of instruction BY CORRESPONDENCE.
(= By the way, Lieutenant-Governor Timothy L. Woodruff, of
New York, Yale ’79, finished his education with a course
at Eastman.
ME
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Y POCANTICO. |
LINEN. J
Saxe soHO UPANY.
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Trial size inhaler, x15 cents; large size inhaler,
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‘‘No, boys; I have not been burning
the midnight oil to get all that material
for my address. Ihave not spent hun-
dreds for books of reference. I could
not have got these up to date facts and
figures in that way. :
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Press Clippings. ee
‘‘Day by day he sent me editorials and
original articles collected from thou-
sands of newspapers and periodicals
which are read in his offices, and I only
had to arrange the material.”
ROMEIKE’S
Press Cutting Bureau
will send you all newspaper clippings
which may appear about you, your
friends, or any subject on which you
want to be “up to date.”
A large force in my New_York office
reads 650 daily papers and over 2,000
weeklies and magazines ; in fact, every
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through the European Bureaus, all the
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Clippings found for subscribers ger
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Write for circulars and terms.
HENRY ROMEIKE,
139 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK.
Branches: London. Paris. Berlin. Sidney: