YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY SUBSCRIPTION, - $2.50 PER YEAR. Foreign Postage, 40 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. The office is at Room 6, White Hall. ADVISORY BOARD. H. C, Roprnson, 58. J. R. SHEFFIELD, ’87. W. W. Sxippy, 658. J. A. HARTWELL, ’89 8. C. P. LInDsLEY, 75S. L.S. WELCH, ’89. W. Camp, ’80. E. Van INGEN, 79158. W.G. DaaeertT, ’80. P. Jay, 92. EDITOR. Lewis 8. WELCH, ’89. ASSOCIATE EDITOR. WALTER Camp, ’80. ASSISTANT EDITOR. E. J. THOMPSON, Sp. NEWS EDITOR. FRED. M. DAVIES, ’99. PRESTON KuMLER, 1900, Athletic Department. Entered as sccond class matter at New Haven P. O. NEW HAVEN, CoNN., Oct. 21, 1897. DAY OF RECEIVING THE WEEKLY. Subscribers are requested to let us know at once if their WEEKLY is late or irregular in reaching them. The mailing department is in the best possi- ble condition and there is no excuse for delay in the mails. New. Haven subscribers should receive their papers on Thursday afternoon, and New York, Hartford and places within six hours of New Haven should have their bundles in time for distribution Friday morn- ing. Readers at more distant points know when to expect the WEEKLY. Please write us at once, if it does not reach you on time. —___-++—____ WHERE ARE THE COACHES? Where is the goodly company of Yale coaches, who used to rally Fall after Fall, particularly in such an emergency as that of this season? It is quite un- fair to Mr. Butterworth to leave this load entirely on his shoulders. They are broad and he is doing splendid work for Yale. He is not complain- ing, but Yale men are wondering why he is not better supported. If it is un- fair to Mr. Butterworth, it is doubly unfair to Yale that anyone who can be here now should be absent. We do not criticise; we know the loyalty of Yale’s football leaders. We do not think they understand the situation. They do not seem to appreciate that the work at New Haven must be all done over again. Princeton, with her team of veterans, has a coach for every man; Harvard, largely made up of seasoned material, is abundantly sup- plied with helpers. Rumors of possi- ble visits of a day or two from football men in the next week or so, do not make one feel comfortable. Whether the Yale eleven of 1897 makes a record worthy of Yale will depend on the coaching of the next four weeks. The material is here; the spirit is here, and we can hardly believe the Yale players will have to wait very much longer for teachers. —— YALE THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS. It should be a source of very sin- cere joy, on the part of the friends of the Theological School, that a higher standard of scholarship, set in the en- trance examinations, has resulted as it was hoped that such a plan would re- sult. Considering that those times are = Adie “ALLO Re WA BR ae now a part of the past, it may be pro- per to record in print, what has been the common subject of conversation and even the theme of platform utter- ances on the Campus itself, that it has been a source of wonder and keen re- gret that the ranks of Yale ministers were so numerously recruited from such peculiar material. Why in the world has this been so? Congrega- tionalism in New England has been led by men of princely parts. As far as Yale has a sectarian character, it is a Congregational institution. May the grounds for the former criticism remain only facts of history, never reappearing. + + INSTRUCTION IN INSURANCE. An additional fact is in evidence in relation to the proposal to secure in- struction in insurance at Yale, an- nouncement of which was made in the WEEKLY of October 7. The plan, as stated at that time, has been given up for the present, the Yale Corporation taking the ground that it did not care to inaugurate such a course, until it could be sure of its permanence. Such as- surance, so those interested in the plan were told, could not be had until the College had a permanent fund, giving a sufficient income to allow for a series of lectures or for the salary of an in- structor. This being the case, those who were advocating the plan proposed to bring it to the attention of the officers of another university. Just as this was about to be done, the facts in the case came quite by accident to the knowl- edge of the WEEKLY. At this paper's request Dr. Ward furnished the state- ment of the case as it had been made to the officers of Yale. It seemed to us a good thing to have the graduates and friends of Yale know of this plan. Some of those who are best acquainted with the facts and theories of insurance, have very strongly approved the in- stitution of such a course. If it is a good thing to have instruc- tion in insurance, it may pass without contradiction that Yale should have it. ———_—____4>__—- Sharp Words for Ninety-Nine. The Vale News prints the following editorial on the marked decrease in the Class scholarship as shown by the ap- pointment list: _ “Tt was hoped that Ninety-Nine would continue the advance made by Ninety- Six, Ninety-Seven and Ninety-Eight in the number of Junior appointments an would come out with the largest list ever published at Yale. This they have failed to do. “Comparisons are not at all times profitable, but the difference between this year’s figures and those of the Class of Ninety-Eight is so astonishing that a comparison may not be entirely out of place. Ninety-Eight had thirty-one Philosophical appointments, — Ninety- Nine has sixteen; Ninety-Eight had twenty-four High Orations, - Ninety- Nine has eighteen; Ninety-Eight had twenty-six Dissertations, Ninety-Nine has nineteen, and almost through the entire list Ninety-Nine is behind. “It may seem hard on the members of Ninety-Nine to make prominent their deficiency by these comparisons, which may seem only to discourage, D them remember that their stand is low not because of a lack of intelligence, but because of a lack of work; that their college course is only half com- pleted and there is still time in which to redeem themselves; that the coming two years offer the same opportunities for high-stand appointments which the last two years have offered; that in a single year, with a stand of 3.30, Phi Beta Kappa may be won; that they are held responsible as a class for what the individual does, and if the individual cares nothing for scholarship and acts accordingly, his class will suffer; that the men in the class who have worked to keep up the scholarship at Yale, suffer together with the indolent, and that as Yale scholarship has been lowered in the last two years by in- but. let. dividuals, so it rests with individuals to build it up in the next two. “We do not advocate working pure- ly for high marks, but marks often in- dicate whether the student is earnest in his work or not. Whether, as has been said, a Phi Beta Kappa key is ‘ one of the things most prized at graduation’ or not, it certainly is a great source of satisfaction in after life.” Charles Anderson Dana, editor of the Sun, died at his home on Long Island Sunday afternoon, aged 78 years. The Yale Spirit of To-day. The Morning News of this city prints an interview with Colonel N. G. Osborn regarding his views on the _ University spirit as presented in his speech at the opening of the Yale Club of New York last Friday. - In the inter- view Col. Osborn is quoted as follows: “The spirit of Yale College pro- ceeded from interclass competition. By interclass competition, I mean contests in boat races, football games or in whatever way it was possible to enlist class feeling. Such feeling was also shown by the class rushes or by the contests over the carrying of canes, etc. It was these events that made the col- lege feeling as it existed under Presi- dent Porter. Ina large university there are a greater number of interests which tend to divide the spirit which, in the college would attach itself to athletics alone. In the English universities, for example, it is possible to retain this college spirit. Each large university is divided into a number of colleges, each having the same number of students as the different classes in’ Yale. By a series of intercollegiate contests, simi- lar to the interclass contests of fifteen years ago, it is possible for this spirit to exist. The American university is an institution peculiar to this country. “The Yale spirit of to-day is the same as that of years ago, but under the Uni- versity this spirit is much broader and more comprehensive, attaching itself to all the different departments of the institution. It is a mistake for any one to claim that the Yale spirit is waning. It is not waning, but has merely under- gone a change which was necessitated by the growth of Yale from a college toO'a university. This change is a dis- tinct gain. Some of the students are interested in athletics and some in intel- lectual attainments. Each division has enough supporters, but all are grouped. under one head. It is this spirit which no longer causes regret when Yale loses the championship in a football game, a boat race or a baseball contest, so long as the intellectual spirit is kept alive. When all of this spirit seems to have been lost, then is the time to ques- tion the lack of Yale enthusiasm. The kind of spirit which the undergradu- ates of fifteen years ago look for is not the American university spirit of to-day, but it is the athletic spirit of the Eng- lish universities.” ee lp Generous Gifts of Undergradu- ates for New Stand, It is not generally known that the expense of erecting the so-called East Stand, at the Yale Field, was borne by a few undergraduates. This stand is the one first built. It if so constructed as to allow its transfer to the side of the baseball diamond. The total cost of its erection was $5,000. Considerably more than half of this sum was given by E. Harkness, ’97; D. Byers, 98; A. G. Vanderbilt, ’99, and P. Rockefeller, 1900, who con- tributed in equal amounts a very large total. Those who added other gener- ous subscriptions to make up the full amount were: C. Tiffany, 1900; H. O. Havemeyer, 1900; H. Boocock, 1900; a? Meceorniiek, ~ro00S He. TE -Tent: 58 SS; J. E. Bulkley, ’99;°'S.-A. Smith, ’99; W. B. Smith, ’99; L. D. Armstrong, 90; °C... Doyle, 99, Yale Law School. For circulars and other information apply to Prof. FRANCIS WAYLAND, Dean. ~*Insurance in force Junior Prom. and Sophomor©€ German Committees. Meetings of the Junior and Sophe- more classes were held on Friday 2 Thursday, October 15 and 14, respect- ively for the purpose of electing thet Junior Promenade and Sophomore committees. At the Junior meeting, on the preliminary ballot the fol- lowing men were nominated: W.- a S. Griswold 151, F. H. Brooke 97, F. Whitehouse, Jr., 94, J. M. Magee 83> H. C. Cheney 79, C. A. Brayton 75, C. F. Sweet 67, A. G. Vanderbilt 59, C- A- Powers 67, i T.. Noble 57, H- Bowles 47, H. W. Chambers 46, C- H- Welles, Jr., 45, J.. Brown . 44, : - Day 42. On the final ballot the follow- ing were elected and will compose the Junior Promenade Committee: LE liam Edward Schenck Griswold of Erie, Pa., 179; Frederick Hiester Brooke of Birdsboro, Pa., 170; William Fitzhugh Whitehouse, Jr., of New York City, 145; James McDevitt Magee of Pitts- burg, Pa., 142; Carroll Fuller Sweet of Grand Rapids, Mich., 143; Henry Thornton Bowles of New York City, 131; Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt of New York City, 123; Charles Hopkins Welles, Jr., of Scranton, Pa., 120, and Harold Clark Cheney of New Haven, Conn., 118. At the Sophomore meeting the fol- lowing men were nominated on the pre- liminary ballot: W. L. Chittenden 83, B. Wi One 73,2); Cteteciway 71,22 B. Adams 6s, P. A. Rockefeller 46, S. B. Camp 39, B. Johnson 34, M. Doug- las 27, J. D. Dana 26, GC. E. Sullivan 23, and F. Allen 22.. On the final bal- lot the following men were elected and will constitute the Committee: Stuart Brown Camp of West Winsted, Conn., 134;. James Cowan Greenway of Hot Springs, Ark., 133; Frederick Baldwin Adams of Toledo, Ohio, 130; Percy Avery Rockefeller of New York City, 108, and Walter Lyon Chittenden of Binghamton, N. Y., 104. ee Co-operative Report. The regular annual meeting of the directors of the Yale Co-operative Cor- poration was held last Wednesday in the Superintendent’s office. Assistant Superintendent W. J. Tilson resigned _ his. position and F. O. Robbins was chosen as his successor. A. F. Judd, 30.1.5, iy LOY, -0.0.,, ate. a>. Twichell, 1901, were elected to fill the vacancies in the board. Superintend- ent Vincent rendered the following report: RESOURCES. Merchandise; $5,436.78 Consigned stock on hand, 779.03 Office furniture and fixtures, 415.60 Accounts receivable, 735.903 Cash, 728.34 $8,095.68 LIABILITIES. Accounts payable, including consign- ments, 1,894.29 Net resources, 6,201.39 Net resources at last report, 4,504.82 Net profits (1896-7), $1,696.57 ‘94-05 95-90 96-07 Net profits, $1,239.49 1,364.10 1,606.57 ‘Lotal,.cash business, 28,389.26 32,136.32 32,130:04 NEW-YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. JANUARY 1, 1897. ASSETS 2% $187,1 76,406 _ LIABILITIES 160,494,410 SURPLUS | $26,681 ,906 INCOME $39,139,558 *New Business 121,564,087 paid for in 1896 904,987 826,816,648 * No policy or sum of insurance is included in this statement of new business or insurance jn force, except where the first premium therefor, as provided in the contract, has been paid to the Com- pany in cash. Joun A. MCCALL, President. HENRY TUCK, Vice-Pres.