YALE-PRINCETON SEATS.
Instructions as to How Subscribers
May Secure Application Blanks,
All the subscribers to the WEEKLY
who desire seats at the Yale-Princeton
game at New Haven, November 20, may
secure special YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
subscribers’ application blanks, by
sending name and address and two
cents in postage to this office on or be-
fore October 30. This is the latest date
at which it is possible to secure these
blanks.
Send first here for your blank and
when you receive it, you will learn,
from the instructions printed on it,
just how to fill out your order, and
forward to the Football Association.
-The only thing mecessary to say
about these blanks is, that they are ex-
clusively for Yale graduates who are
subscribers to the WEEKLY; that each
subscriber is entitled to one applica-
tion, and that not more than three seats
can be obtained on an application.
The fate of the application after it
reaches the Yale University Football
Association cannot be in any way pre-
dicted by us. All that can be said is
that the Association’s officers will do
all that is possible to give WEEKLY
subscribers good seats.
The Football Association will send
out the tickets on November 16.
—_—_—_—__»@—______.
VYale-Carlisle Game,
The game between the University
eleven and the Carlisle Indians will be
played in New York City at the Polo
Grounds, 157th st. and 8th av., at 3 P. M.
on Saturday, Oct. 23. Admission is
$1.00 and grand stand seats $1.50; tick-
ets to be had at all New York hotels.
———__0o—___—
Fall Regatta.
Last Saturday afternoon the annual
Fall Regatta was held at Lake Whit-
ney, between the various Class and
scrub crews. The course was seven-
eights of a mile and the finish was at
the bridge. The races all went off
smoothly with the exception of the last,
which was prevented from taking place
by the breaking of an oar lock in the
Sophomore boat.
The first race was between 1900 and
1900 S., and was won by the Academic
Crew by about one and a half lengths.
The second race was between the
Junior and Sophomore Academic
Crews. The Sophomore Crew led at
the finish by about a boat’s length.
The third race proved a very close
one. It was rowed between a scrub
crew from the Senior Academic Class
and the 1900 S. crew, the ‘loser of the
first race, and was won by the latter by
a boat’s length.
The crews were composed of the fol-
lowing men:
CLASS CREWS.
’*o99—8, T. D. Hewitt; 7, H. Park-
hurst, Capt.; 6,°F. H. Brooke; 5, W, -F.
YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY
$50,000
TO
$500
Whitehouse; 4, G. P. Baker; 3, W. M.
Wheeler; 2, A. Cheney; 1, A. F. Way;
Coxswain, G: L.--Ward. -
1900—8, W. B. Williams; 7, J. H.
Niedecken; 6, J. C. Greenleaf;.5, J. W.
Cross; 4; Fi, PP. Wickes: 3. J. P. Broek,
Capt.3 2. Co AS ayorcen 7, .R. M.-Pat-
terson; Coxswain, J. McL.- Walton.
1901—8, R. P. Tyler, Capt.; 7, H. W.
Healy.;6; Li) M.sThomas ; is cH... Bab-
cock; .4,::A.--Cameron,;: Jin. 3.) As
Phelps: 2, A.’ B. “Berger? 3° ti: He
Christian; Coxswain, H. C. Neal.
1900 5.+—8,: J.’ D: Ireland, . Capt.; 7,
BS, BLOWN: Gyre wey Be ee
Clevett; <q)Rv DioiRanies i900.) C,
Glenny; 2, J. W, > Meteys: To hook
Merriam; Coxswain, E. M. Walker.
SCRUB CREWS.
From ’98—8, L. Hitchcock, Capt.; 7,
H. A. Curran: 6 Noo: Cowdtey os.
wo P-Fitch, Jny eon, ci. bette! 3 aA
Sctratitons 2, Hy Sillcocls<* 1,
Ives; Coxswain, H. K. Smith.
The referee was J. T. Whittelsey, ’67
S.; timekeeper, George A. Adee, 67;
starter, D. F. Rogers, ’98. The judges
of the finish were: for ’98, V. M. Tyler,
’98; for ’99 Ord Preston, ’99; for 1900,
J. C. Greenway, 1900; for 1901, H. B.
myaICOK, 06}. tor: £000 S., J. Co ies
Lauchlan, ’o8.
AN EXCITING RACE.
The final race of the Fall Regatta,
postponed from Saturday, was rowed
Monday afternoon at Lake Whitney.
It proved one of the best and most
interesting races ever rowed on the
Lake, the crews keeping close together
for the whole distance—seven-eighths
of a mile—and the finish was close and
exciting. A strong breeze blew up the
Lake against the crews, but in other
respects the weather was perfect. J. W.
Cross of the Sophomore crew was un-
able to row and this necessitated sev-
eral changes in the boat. J. S. Camp-
bell was put in the bow, while-the other
positions were shifted about.
With their handicap of two boat
lengths the Freshmen kept their lead
until after passing the stake boat, about
the middle point of the course. From
this time the Sophomores gradually
crept up until they were almost a length
in the lead. They held these positions
for a quarter of a mile, both crews
slightly quickening their stroke. As
they were nearing the finish, the Fresh-
men by a final spurt cut down the dis-
tance so that 1900 crossed the line
scarcely three feet ahead, with the
Freshmen constantly gaining on «them.
Those looking on from the shore and
the bridge could not tell which had
won, so nearly together were the boats.
e—_—_—_>0@—_____...
1901, 12; Worcester High, 0.
The Freshman football team defeated
‘the Worcester High School eleven at
the Field on Saturday by a score of 12
to o. The game was rather loosely
played and marred by considerable
fumbling. The end interference of the
Igor team was of a high order and
showed the result of careful coaching,
DeGolyer, Wallace and Richardson did
the best work for the Freshmen.
INDUSTRIAL POLICIES, $15 UP.
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YALE CLUB OPENING.
Representative Gathering of Gradu-
ates at the New Club House,
Several hundred graduates, old and
young, presented themselves at the
formal opening of the Yale Club of
New York on Friday evening last, and
if the enthusiasm manifested on that
occasion counts for anything the club
need have no fears for the future.
Long before the time set for the meét-
ing the house, 17 Madison Square,
north, commenced to fill up, and when
President Thomas Thacher, ’71, called
the assembly to order not only was
every seat on the main floor occupied
but numbers of Yale men, both mem-
bers and non-members who had been
especially asked to attend this meet-
ing, unable to find even standing place
below, overflowed into the rooms on
the second floor. 7
After President Thacher had formally
opened the meeting he delivered: a brief
address on the conception and subse-
quent realization of the idea of the Yale
Club of New York, in the course of
which he declared that while there had
been some opposition to the scheme
among. certain of the Alumni at the
start, the majority of those who had
formerly opposed had now been con-
verted into strong supportefs of the
new organization. In proof of this
assertion he said that the club already
had a membership of some 525, with
enough names on the waiting list to
swell the total to 600 in a few weeks.
He also reported that within a week
after opening its doors the club was
in perfect running order and had served
250 of the modest priced dinners which
are to be a feature of the institution.
As to elections, President Thacher
said that it had been proposed that the
same gentlemen who had voluntarily
~ served on the Council and the Commit-
tee on Admissions should now be
formally elected by the Club. It was
then moved and.enthusiastically voted
that the Secretary cast a single ballot
for these gentlemen. The following
ticket was then declared elected:
For Members of the Council—Bray-
ton Ives, ’61; Henry Holt, ’62; William
W. Skiddy, ’65 S.; Edmund Coffin,
Jun., 66; George C. Holt, ’66; Robert
W. De Forest, ’70; Thomas Thacher,
"71; Edwin D. Worcester, Jun., ’76;
Julian W. Curtiss, ’79; Henry W. Taft,
.*80; Philip G. Bartlett, ’81; William P.
Eno, °82; Alexander Lambert, ’84;
Richard M. Hurd, ’88; Charles H.
Sherrill, *789;'. Herbert’ Parsons, ’90;
Ashbel. Green, Jun., ’91; Augustus F.
Kountze, ’91 S.; Alfred H. Swayne, ’o2;
John H. Hammond, ’92 S.; Noah H.
Swayne, 2d, ’93.
For Members of the Committee on
Admissions — Payson Merrill, 66;
Charles W. Gould, .’70;. Charles C.
Deming, 772; Thomas Hunt, ’76; Samuel
W. Lambert, ’80; William H. Parsons,
Jun., 82; William B. Goodwin, ’86;
J. Metcalfe Thomas, ’86 S.; Hector W.
Thomas, ’88; Cyrus F. Judson, ’88 S.;
Gifford Pinchot, ’89; Thomas Denny,
furnishing of the house.
PREMIUMS PAYABLE WEEKLY.
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JOHN F. DRYDEN, PRESIDENT.
Jain,; ’ 925.3 Charles: 2. Hickox): Jute,
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David Stuart, ’96.
After these: elections the President
introduced’ Col. Norris G. Osborn, ’8o,
who had: been “especially imported
irom New Haven,” he said, “to lend
a little local color to the occasion.”
Colonel Osborn replied in one of his
characteristic speeches and after retail-
ing several. anecdotes expressed it as
his belief that the new club was des-
tined to become an important factor in
Yale lie.
Hart’. Lyman, .’79, the only. other
speaker of the evening, announced that
he was one of the “converts” alluded to
by President Thacher. His reason:for
holding off, he remarked, had been his
uncertainty as to the choice of a suita-
ble guardian for the club buffet, but
that having sampled the productions of
the individual selected he had made
haste to join and now predicted the
unqualified success of the enterprise.
President Thacher closed the meet-
ing with an appeal to Yale men for
memorabilia for the more attractive
After this the
evening was given over to an informal
reception, Yale songs were sung and a
light supper served.
a
Athletic Calendar.
Saturday,
New York.
Saturday, October 30.—West Point at
West Point. .
Saturday, October 30.—Fall Athletic
games at -Yale Field.
Saturday, November 6.—Chicago A.
A. at New Haven.
Saturday, November 13.—Harvard at
‘Cambridge.
Saturday, November 20.—Princeton
at New Haven.
The New.
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October 23.—Carlisle at
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the Home Office.