YALE ALUMNI WEEKLY ee set of men better in every respect than our opponents. ‘I have been abused in England—imagine my having to use the word—for entertaining the idea of inter- national athletics, simply because the great ocean divides us. J have been abused because I have beeif*told that Oxford had to limit itself to Cambridge, and Cambridge ought to limit itself to Oxford. I have learned this—that you could not have a better experience than the experience of your opponents and your foes, who are your friends and your allies.” Loud cheers greeted Mr. Jack- son’s speech. | Mr. Camp’s Response. Mr. Walter Camp, closing the four- sided response to International Sport, said: “If, as has been remarked, Mr. Choate has absorbed seven-eighths of these four quarters of International Sport, I think after Mr. Wendell and Mr. Jackson the amount left to me must be very limited, but I am nevertheless glad of even a mo- ment in which to thank Mr. Jackson for his very courteous remarks regarding the team. I wish to thank him on behalf of both. Yale nd Harvard teams, and I wish to express to him our feelings of reciprocity in this matter. We be- lieve that international sport is a good thing; we are thoroughly convinced that it is a pleasant thing, and we hope there may be more of it. “Mr. Jackson said that he had been abused; I wish to join him. I never was more abused in my life than I was to-day. I received a letter asking me to be a timer for Yale, and it said ‘no expert knowledge is required.’ Gentle- men, I have timed a great many races, and I have even gone so far as to write treatises on the subject how the personal equation affects timers; and to be asked to act as timekeeper with the proviso that no expert knowledge is required is rather hard. But the letter also said that I would be called upon for a speech, and I suppose there the same corollary applied. “I may be forgiven for advanc- ing some explanation for the defeat of the Americans to-day. When some of our team visited Westminster Abbey, the verger showed them the tombs of the knight templars and explained that the templars were always buried with their legs crossed; and I am afraid some of our men to-day in the commendable spirit of emulating the Englishmen, managed to get their legs crossed before they were buried. At any rate, that is the only explanation I have in my mind at the present moment. A TRIBUTE TO PALMER. “But I do want to say one thing about the contest to-day, and I know that Mr. Workman will forgive me when I speak of it. I must say that every American here was pleased when he saw the mag- nificent pluck with which Mr. Palmer finished in the three-mile race.