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...complete attendance this week of the voluntary classes in Reading and Speaking is especially desirable. Men who think of joining any of these sections for the first time may consult me in Sever 29, at half-past two or at half-past three, Tuesday. Wednesday and Friday afternoons. The hour from half-past two to half-past three Wednesday is reserved for the Law School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NOTICE. | 2/14/1893 | See Source »

...perhaps had been induced to enter a university for a short season in order to take part in some sport in which he was proficient. The tendency to confound the use of the term professional with the idea of skilful through long years of practice has led many to think of a graduate player as a professional player. The man whom we wish to keep out of college athletics is not the skillful man, but the man who barters his skill for pecuniary gain, whether in the shape of actual cash in hand paid or of financial aid extended indirectly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Walter Camp on College Sports. | 2/10/1893 | See Source »

...there be two teams in such universities as can support them, one including professional school men and the other drawn exclusively from the college department; but let the teams that meet each other be on substantially the same footing if there is to be any comparison. I do not think that Wesleyan will be at all likely to recede a particle from the position already taken by the intercollegiate association...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Wesleyan's Suggestion. | 2/6/1893 | See Source »

...question of method is now receiving careful consideration, but whatever method be finally agreed upon, we think now, as both the Yale and Harvard representatives thought at the Dual League in 1890, that a change of so radical a nature ought not to go into effect at once, with the result of disqualifying students now at the University and eligible as members of athletic teams under the existing rules...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard's Reply to Yale. | 2/1/1893 | See Source »

...full sympathy with the recent action of the Intercollegiate Foot Ball Association, and Harvard is ready to cooperate with Yale in an attempt to exclude the perpetual and the imported athlete, But many of our men think that these evils may be removed by another method, which is not open to the objection of disqualifying entire departments of the University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard's Reply to Yale. | 2/1/1893 | See Source »