Advertisement

No Headline

(Continued from first page.)

them to make up lost time. (d) Academic standing of players does not fall below the average.

III. Opposition to the game on account of frequency of accidents is not just. (a) Accidents are not more frequent in proportion to men engaged than in other sports. (b) Most of them are slight. (c) They are largely due to (1) lack of proper training, (2) nonobservance of rules, (3) absence of a proper referee and umpire. (d) Mass play is not more dangerous than open play. (e) Inferences from reports of English games are misleading. For Eng. game: Handbook of Sports: Bell, Lond. '92.

Advertisement
Advertisement