A proposed system of salaried football could put Harvard in the Big Ten, Boston Globe sports writer Harold Kaese figured out yesterday. He referred to an Ohio State University report suggesting that colleges openly hire their teams.
Kaese imagined Harvard, the nation's richest University, as a football giant, with the best players and coaches in its hire. Team members could atempt to get an education on the side, of course. But ideally, studies would not be allowed to interfere with the main object: producing the best of all possible football teams.
Read more in News
Championship Links to the PastRecommended Articles
-
Tenure Process Works WellTo the editors: Recent articles in The Crimson have focused on the failures of the Harvard University tenure process and,
-
Sizer Denies Racial SlantIn an effort to get the School of Education to hire a Negro professor for its new. Chair in Urban
-
HBS Is No. 1--Or Is It No. 3?Harvard Business School is the best business school in the country, right? How about asking the people who actually hire
-
Women's Studies Committee Calls For More CoursesThe Committee for Women's Studies met yesterday to discuss its plans for the spring semester and to acquaint new members
-
350thTo the Editors of The Crimson: According to press reports, Derek Bok, during his address to the final convocation of
-
Cavalier Bus Contract Is Just Good BusinessI think you were overly critical of HUPD's Lieutenant Lawrence Murphy in your editorial "VIP Treatment" (October 6, 1993). Harvard--along