Reciprocal Clubs 2018

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Reciprocal Clubs 2018 University and Whist Club Reciprocal Clubs 2018 United States Club Phone Amenities Alaska Anchorage Petroleum Club of Anchorage 907-563-5090 Arizona Phoenix University Club of Phoenix 602-254-5408 Tempe Arizona State University Club 480-965-0700 California Bakersfield The Petroleum Club of Bakersfield 661-324-6561 Berkeley University of California Berkeley - Faculty Club 510-540-5678 Berkeley University of California Berkeley – Women’s 510-642-4175 Faculty Club La Jolla University of California San Diego Faculty Club 858-534-0876 Los Angeles Los Angeles Athletic Club 213-625-2211 Los Angeles University of California - UCLA Faculty Center 310-825-0877 Los Angeles University of Southern California - University 213-740-2030 Club Newport Beach The Balboa Bay Club 949-645-5000 Northridge California State University Northridge - 818-677-2076 University Club Oakland The Bellevue Club 510-451-1000 Pasadena California Institute of Technology - The 626-395-8200 Athenaeum San Diego San Diego State University Faculty Club 619-594-5178 San Diego University Club San Diego atop Symphony 619-234-5200 Towers San Francisco Concordia-Argonaut Club 415-673-9522 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 San Francisco Marine's Memorial Club 415-673-6672 San Francisco University Club of San Francisco 415-781-0900 Santa Barbara The University Club of Santa Barbara 805-966-0853 Santa Barbara University of California Santa Barbara Faculty 805-893-3096 Club Santa Clara Santa Clara University - Adobe Lodge Faculty 408-554-4059 Club Stanford Stanford University Faculty Club 650-723-9313 Colorado Fort Collins Colorado State University - University Club 970-491-5587 Connecticut Stamford The Soundview Club 203-359-9333 Delaware Georgetown Sussex Pines Country Club & Golf 302-856-6283 Newark Newark Country Club 302-731-4251 Wyoming Wild Quail Golf & Country Club 302-697-4660 D.C. Washington City Tavern Club 202-337-8770 Washington The Cosmos Club 202-387-7783 Washington The Georgetown Club 202-333-9330 Washington The University Club of Washington 202-862-8800 Washington The National Democratic Club 202-543-2035 Florida Fort Lauderdale Lauderdale Yacht Club 954-524-5500 Jacksonville River Club 904-354-1111 Jacksonville Epping Forest Yacht Club 904-739-7200 Miami The Surf Club 305-866-2481 Orlando The University Club of Orlando 407-425-2514 2 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 Palm Beach Eastpointe Country Club 561-626-6860 Sarasota Sarasota Yacht Club 941-365-4191 Tallahassee Florida State University Center Club 850-644-8528 Tallahassee Governors Club 850-224-0650 Tampa The Tampa Club 813-229-6028 Winter Park Interlachen Country Club 407-657-0850 Georgia Atlanta Georgia Institute of Technology University Club 404-894-2536 Atlanta The Commerce Club 404-525-1661 Atlanta The Georgian Club 770-952-6000 Duluth Atlanta Athletic Club* 770-448-2166 Duluth Standard Club* 770-497-0055 Duluth TPC at Sugarloaf* 770-418-1113 Macon The City Club of Macon 478-738-9000 Hawaii Honolulu The Pacific Club 808-533-6710 Illinois Chicago Union League Club of Chicago 312-427-7800 Chicago University Club of Chicago 312-726-2840 Chicago University of Chicago - The Quadangle Club 773-493-8601 Chicago The Standard Club 312-427-9100 Decatur The Decatur Club 217-429-4200 Loves Park Forest Hills Country Club 815-877-5733 Oakbrook 630-691-1300 Millhurst Charhouse and Banquets Terrace Rockford University Club of Rockford 815-962-1730 Wilmette Michigan Shores Club 847-251-4100 Indiana Bloomington Indiana University Club 812-855-1325 Indianapolis The Columbia Club 317-767-1361 3 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 Iowa Des Moines Embassy Club 515-244-2582 Kansas Wichita Petroleum Club 316-262-6471 Wichita The Wichita Club 316-634-2882 Kentucky Covington Metropolitan Club 859-491-2400 Lexington University of Kentucky - Spindletop Hall 859-255-2777 Louisville University of Louisville - University Club 502-852-6996 Louisville Pendennis Club 502-584-4311 Richmond Eastern Kentucky University - Arlington 859-622-2200 Association Louisiana Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Faculty Club 225-578-2355 New Orleans The Plimsoll Club 504-529-1601 Maryland Baltimore John Hopkins Club - John Hopkins University 410-235-3435 Baltimore Mount Vernon Club 410-837-3240 Baltimore The Center Club 410-727-7788 Baltimore The Engineers Club 410-539-6914 Massachusetts Amherst University of Massachusetts - The University 413-545-2551 Club Boston The Algonquin Club 617-266-2400 Boston The College Club of Boston 617-536-9510 Boston The Harvard Club of Boston 617-536-1260 Boston The University Club of Boston 617-266-5600 Cambridge The Harvard Faculty Club 617-495-5758 New Bedford Wamsutta Club 508-997-7431 4 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 Northhampton Smith College Club 413-585-2304 South Hadley Mount Holyoke College - Willits-Hallowell 413-538-2217 Center Wellesley Wellesley Club 781-283-2700 Williamstown Williams College Faculty Club 413-597-2451 Worcester Worcester Club 508-755-8611 Michigan Allendale Grand Valley State University Club 616-331-3592 Bloomfield Hills Forest Lake Country Club 248-332-8300 Calumet The Miscowaubik Club 906-337-0603 East Lansing Michigan State University - University Club 517-353-5111 Kalamazoo The Beacon Club 269-343-9000 Minnesota Minneapolis Minneapolis Lifetime Athletic Club 612-752-7000 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Campus Club 612-625-9696 Minneapolis The Minneapolis Club 612-332-2292 St. Paul University Club of St. Paul 651-222-1751 Mississippi Gulfport The Great Southern Club 228-865-0200 Jackson Capital Club 601-969-7101 Missouri Columbia University of Missouri - University Club 573-882-2586 Laude The Racquet Club Ladue 314-993-2880 St. Louis St. Louis Club 314-726-1964 Montana Helena The Montana Club 406-442-5980 New Hampshire Portsmouth The Hundred Club of New Hampshire 603-766-4100 New Jersey Florham Park Park Avenue Club 973-301-8233 5 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 New Brunswick Rutgers University - The Rutgers Club 732-932-7139 Princeton Princeton University - Prospect House 609-258-3455 Princeton The Nassau Club 609-924-0580 New York Albany The University Club of Albany 518-463-1151 Binghamton The Binghamton Club 607-722-2329 Elmira The Elmira City Club 607-733-6506 Hempsted Hofstra University Club 516-463-6648 New York Columbia University Faculty House 212-854-4298 New York New York University - The Torch Club 212-998-6724 New York The Cornell Club 212-986-0300 New York The Down Town Association 212-422-1982 New York The India House Club 212-269-2323 New York The Lotos Club 212-737-7100 New York The Midtown Executive Club 212-626-9300 New York The Penn Club of New York 212-764-3550 New York The Terrace Club 212-626-9373 Rochester Genesee Valley Club 585-271-1010 Syracuse The Century Club 315-422-6161 Utica The Fort Schuyler Club 315-797-0170 North Carolina Chapel Hill Carolina Club 919-962-101 Charlotte Charlotte City Club 704-334-4738 Charlotte Raintree Country Club 704-542-8150 Durham The University Club 919-493-8099 Wilmington City Club at de Rosset 910-343-1880 Ohio Cincinnati Cincinnati Athletic Club 513-241-0096 Cincinnati The University Club of Cincinnati 513-721-2600 6 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 Cincinnati University of Cincinnati Faculty Club 513-556-4154 Cleveland Case Western Reserve University Case Club 216-231-7373 Cleveland The Union Club 216-621-4230 Columbus Ohio State University Faculty Club 614-292-2262 Columbus The Athletic Club of Columbus 614-221-3344 Toledo The Toledo Club 419-243-2200 Oregon Portland The University Club of Portland 503-223-6237 Pennsylvania Easton The Pomfret Club 610-258-7641 Essington Corinthian Yacht Club 610-521-4705 Lancaster The Hamilton Club 717-397-6297 Malvern The Radnor Hunt Club 610-644-4439 Philadelphia Temple University - The Diamond Club 215-204-6622 Philadelphia The Racquet Club 215-735-1525 Philadelphia Thomas Jefferson University - Faculty Club 215-955-8616 Philadelphia Union League of Philadelphia 215-563-6500 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania - The Penn Club 212-764-3550 Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania - University Club at 215-898-4618 Penn Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Athletic Club 412-621-2400 Pittsburgh Allegheny HYP Club 412-281-5858 Scranton The Scranton Club 570-344-6871 State College The Pennsylvania State University - Nittany Lion 814-865-8500 Inn West Chester West Chester Golf & Country Club 610-696-0150 Wilkes-Barre Westmoreland Club 570-822-6141 York Lafayette Club 717-848-2896 Rhode Island Providence Brown University Faculty Club 401-863-3023 7 Dining Fitness Overnight Golf www.universityandwhistclub.com | 805 N. Broom St., Wilmington, DE, 19806 | 302-658-5125 Providence The University Club 401-331-3230 South Carolina Aiken Green Boundary Club 803-649-2549 Beaufort Dataw Island Country Club 843-838-8282 Blythewood University of South Carolina - University Club 803-754-6415 Charlestown College of Charlestown Faculty House 843-953-6519 Columbia The Palmetto Club 803-771-8767 Hilton Head South Carolina Yacht Club 843-681-4844 Tennessee Knoxville University of Tennessee - University Club 865-523-7348 Memphis The Racquet Club of Memphis 901-765-4443 Nashville Vanderbilt University - The University Club of 615-322-8564 Nashville Texas Amarillo Amarillo Club 806-373-4361 Austin University of Texas Campus Club 512-471-8611 College Station Texas A&M University - University Club 979-845-2582 Dallas Park City Club 214-373-0756 Dallas Southern Methodist University Faculty Club 214-768-2368 Ft.
Recommended publications
  • Regulating Sports Gaming Data
    REGULATING SPORTS GAMING DATA Ryan M. Rodenberg* I. INTRODUCTION “Congress can regulate sports gambling directly, but if it elects not to do so, each State is free to act on its own,” concluded the U.S. Supreme Court in Gov. Murphy v. NCAA.1 In the two years since the Supreme Court declared the partial federal sports betting ban in the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act (“PASPA”)2 unconstitutional and, in turn, opened up the legalization of sports betting nationwide, there has been one topic that has garnered considerable attention—sports gaming data. ‘Data’—a generic word that includes news and information about sports gaming—has become one of the most-discussed contemporary topics in sports gaming regulation globally.3 Indeed, since the Supreme Court case, the regulatory treatment of sports betting news, information, and data has taken a prominent role in dozens of legislative bodies, at numerous industry conferences, and in a prominent lawsuit recently filed in the United Kingdom. Industry * Associate Professor, Florida State University. This paper was completed in conjunction with a non-resident research fellowship granted by the International Center for Gaming Regulation (“ICGR”) at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The ICGR is an academic institute dedicated to the study of gaming regulation and policy development. The author would like to thank the ICGR for its research support and Christopher Perrigan for excellent research assistance. 1 Murphy v. Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n, 138 S. Ct. 1461, 1484–85 (2018). As of June 20, 2020, there remains a spin-off legal proceeding in the court system that is unrelated to the foci here.
    [Show full text]
  • Landmarks Preservation Commission November 22, 2016, Designation List 490 LP-2579
    Landmarks Preservation Commission November 22, 2016, Designation List 490 LP-2579 YALE CLUB OF NEW YORK CITY 50 Vanderbilt Avenue (aka 49-55 East 44th Street), Manhattan Built 1913-15; architect, James Gamble Rogers Landmark site: Borough of Manhattan Tax Map Block 1279, Lot 28 On September 13, 2016, the Landmarks Preservation Commission held a public hearing on the proposed designation of the Yale Club of New York City and the proposed designation of the related Landmark Site. The hearing had been duly advertised in accordance with provisions of law. Six people spoke in support of designation, including representatives of the Yale Club of New York City, Manhattan Borough President Gale A. Brewer, Historic Districts Council, New York Landmarks Conservancy, and the Municipal Art Society of New York. The Real Estate Board of New York submitted written testimony in opposition to designation. State Senator Brad Hoylman submitted written testimony in support of designation. Summary The Yale Club of New York City is a Renaissance Revival-style skyscraper at the northwest corner of Vanderbilt Avenue and East 44th Street. For more than a century it has played an important role in East Midtown, serving the Yale community and providing a handsome and complementary backdrop to Grand Central Terminal. Constructed on property that was once owned by the New York Central Railroad, it stands directly above two levels of train tracks and platforms. This was the ideal location to build the Yale Club, opposite the new terminal, which serves New Haven, where Yale University is located, and at the east end of “clubhouse row.” The architect was James Gamble Rogers, who graduated from Yale College in 1889 and attended the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris during the 1890s.
    [Show full text]
  • Historic Murray Hill Walking Tour
    AN ARCHITECTURAL WALKING TOUR OF MURRAY HILL HE TOUR BEGINS on the south side of the intersection of an iron fence on the 35th Street side. The 1864 brownstone struc- 23. 149 East 36th Street. A distinctive Georgian style house with TPark Avenue and 37th Street. See #1 on map to begin tour. ture is distinguished by the high arched bays and arched entrance circular-headed multi-paned windows on the parlor floor. An asterisk ( ) next to the number indicates that the building is a porch. The spire was added in 1896. The church interior features 24. 131 East 36th Street. A brownstone converted into a Parisian New York City* Landmark; the year of designation is also included. stained-glass windows by William Morris, Edward Burne-Jones, townhouse by the famous owner/architect William Adams Delano. 1. “Belmont,” Robert Murray House Site. The two-story stone Louis Comfort Tiffany and John La Farge; the oak communion It is characterized by the tall French doors on the second floor and house stood until a fire in 1835, facing east on the present intersec- rail was carved by Daniel Chester the rusticated faux stone at the ground floor. French. tion of Park Avenue and 37th Street. Verandas ran around three 25. 125 East 36th Street. This well preserved narrow brownstone 11. sides of the Georgian-style building and from a roof deck one could * The Collectors Club, 22 East was the first home of newlyweds Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt, see a magnificent view of Manhattan. The grounds were sur- 35th Street (New York City who moved in following their European honeymoon in 1905.
    [Show full text]
  • Report of the Undergraduate Student Government on Eating Club Demographic Collection, Transparency, and Inclusivity
    REPORT OF THE UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT GOVERNMENT ON EATING CLUB DEMOGRAPHIC COLLECTION, TRANSPARENCY, AND INCLUSIVITY PREPARED IN RESPONSE TO WINTER 2016 REFERENDUM ON EATING CLUB DEMOGRAPHIC COLLECTION April 2017 Referendum Response Team Members: U-Councilor Olivia Grah ‘19i ​ Senator Andrew Ma ‘19 Senator Eli Schechner ‘18 Public Relations Chair Maya Wesby ‘18 i Chair​ Contents Sec. I. Executive Summary 2 Sec. II. Background 5 § A. Eating Clubs and the University 5 § B. Research on Peer Institutions: Final Clubs, Secret Societies, and Greek Life 6 § C. The Winter 2016 Referendum 8 Sec. III. Arguments 13 § A. In Favor of the Referendum 13 § B. In Opposition to the Referendum 14 § C. Proposed Alternatives to the Referendum 16 Sec. IV. Recommendations 18 Sec. V. Acknowledgments 19 1 Sec. I. Executive Summary Princeton University’s eating clubs boast membership from two-thirds of the Princeton upperclass student body. The eating clubs are private entities, and information regarding demographic information of eating club members is primarily limited to that collected in the University’s senior survey and the USG-sponsored voluntary COMBO survey. The Task Force on the Relationships between the University and the Eating Clubs published a report in 2010 investigating the role of eating clubs on campus, recommending the removal of barriers to inclusion and diversity and the addition of eating club programming for prospective students and University-sponsored alternative social programming. Demographic collection for exclusive groups is not the norm at Ivy League institutions. Harvard’s student newspaper issued an online survey in 2013 to collect information about final club membership, reporting on ethnicity, sexuality, varsity athletic status, and legacy status.
    [Show full text]
  • Global Wharton Awards Community Dinner Honorees Letter from the President Executive Committee
    WHARTON ALUMNI CLUB OF NEW YORK | FALL 2014 START- UPS WHARTON STYLE TEACHING A +JOSEPH GLOBAL WHARTON AWARDS COMMUNITY DINNER HONOREES LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President Fall 2014 Kenneth Beck, WG’87, P’16 enjamin Franklin and Joseph Wharton CEO Connection were both pioneering entrepreneurs. [email protected] They would be pleased to see the growing number of alumni transforming Executive Vice President themselves into the newest generation George Bradt, WG’85 of entrepreneurs WCNY knows that the startup PrimeGenesis Executive Onboarding B . journey is an arduous one and supports that journey [email protected] in the New York region. This Fall issue showcases the enthusiastic vision and successes of six local Vice President, Finance thriving entrepreneurs, and one working to break into Rosemarie Bonelli, WG’99 the market. Four of the founders interviewed participate in the WCNY affinity group American International Group, Inc. , Wharton Entrepreneurs-Education and Resource Network (WE-EARN): Joe Meyer, [email protected] WG’97, of ExecThread; Rajeev Jeyakumar, WG’13, of SkillBridge; Melissa Shin Mash, WG’12, of Dagne Dover, and Mark Hirsch, W’88, of Creative Worx. WE-EARN, led by Vice President, Ross Klenoff, W’94, C94, offers educational, networking, and brainstorming events. Marketing & Communications Jake Schwartz, WG’08, co-founder of the rapidly growing teaching company, General Peter Hildick-Smith, C’76, WG’81, P’13 Assembly, matches their training to companies’ needs. Broadway producer and co- Codex-Group LLC founder of Musicians on Call, Vivek Tiwary, W’95, spoke at a Club Speaker Series on [email protected] “Can’t Buy Me Love: The Business of the Beatles”.
    [Show full text]
  • Yoram (Jerry) Wind
    YORAM (JERRY) WIND Academic Positions: Jerry Wind is The Lauder Professor and Emeritus Professor of Marketing at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Wind joined the Wharton faculty in January 1967, upon receipt of his doctorate from Stanford University, and was granted Emeritus status in July 2017. Program Development: Dr. Wind was the founder and academic director of The Wharton Fellows program from 2000 to 2018. From 1983 to 1988, he was the founding director of The Joseph H. Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies, and from 1980 to 1983 the founding director of The Wharton Center for International Management Studies. Dr. Wind chaired the Wharton committees that designed The Wharton Executive MBA Program (1974), the new MBA curriculum (1991), the School’s globalization strategy (1995- 1997), and the MBA’s cross-functional integration efforts (2002-04). He also started The Wharton International Forum (1987) and served as the chairman of its faculty council until 1998. He was instrumental in establishing the Alfred West, Jr. Learning Lab and served as a member of its first advisory board (2001-05). Dr. Wind was also the founding director of the Wharton "think tank,” The SEI Center for Advanced Studies in Management. The Center's mission was to assure, through research and development, the quality, relevance, and impact of management research, education, and practice (1988-2018). Publications: Dr. Wind is one of the most cited authors in marketing. His regular contributions to professional marketing literature include over 25 books and over 300 papers, articles, and monographs encompassing the areas of marketing strategy, marketing research, new product and market development, consumer and industrial buying behavior, and global marketing.
    [Show full text]
  • An Analysis of the American Outdoor Sport Facility: Developing an Ideal Type on the Evolution of Professional Baseball and Football Structures
    AN ANALYSIS OF THE AMERICAN OUTDOOR SPORT FACILITY: DEVELOPING AN IDEAL TYPE ON THE EVOLUTION OF PROFESSIONAL BASEBALL AND FOOTBALL STRUCTURES DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Chad S. Seifried, B.S., M.Ed. * * * * * The Ohio State University 2005 Dissertation Committee: Approved by Professor Donna Pastore, Advisor Professor Melvin Adelman _________________________________ Professor Janet Fink Advisor College of Education Copyright by Chad Seifried 2005 ABSTRACT The purpose of this study is to analyze the physical layout of the American baseball and football professional sport facility from 1850 to present and design an ideal-type appropriate for its evolution. Specifically, this study attempts to establish a logical expansion and adaptation of Bale’s Four-Stage Ideal-type on the Evolution of the Modern English Soccer Stadium appropriate for the history of professional baseball and football and that predicts future changes in American sport facilities. In essence, it is the author’s intention to provide a more coherent and comprehensive account of the evolving professional baseball and football sport facility and where it appears to be headed. This investigation concludes eight stages exist concerning the evolution of the professional baseball and football sport facility. Stages one through four primarily appeared before the beginning of the 20th century and existed as temporary structures which were small and cheaply built. Stages five and six materialize as the first permanent professional baseball and football facilities. Stage seven surfaces as a multi-purpose facility which attempted to accommodate both professional football and baseball equally.
    [Show full text]
  • Honored for Building World’S First Social Stock Exchange
    WHARTON ALUMNI CLUB OF NEW YORK | WINTER 2014 PIONEERING WHARTON ALUM HONORED FOR BUILDING WORLD’S FIRST SOCIAL STOCK EXCHANGE LEGENDARY+ CEO WHO TURNED THE WORLD INTO FREQUENT FLYERS LETTER FROM THE PRESIDENT EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Winter 2014 harton is forever. Getting a degree President Kenneth Beck, WG’87, P’16 from the top business school in the CEO Connection world is only the beginning. If you [email protected] do not take full advantage of this amazing community for the rest of Executive Vice President Wyour lives, you’re not maximizing the return on the George Bradt, WG’85 investment you made, to get that degree. Wharton PrimeGenesis Executive Onboarding stays in our bios forever and as such we have a [email protected] responsibly to each other and to the school to protect the brand... it is in our enlightened self-interest to do so. Vice President, Finance Rosemarie Bonelli, WG’99 I was reminded of all this at our recent Joseph Wharton [email protected] Awards Dinner, which continues to amaze me. Terry McGraw, WG’76, the Joseph Wharton Leadership Award recipient in 2006, and this year’s Event Chair, spoke about Vice President, Marketing & the passion that Wharton alumni possess. The new dean, Geoffrey Garrett, marveled Communications at the two anvils in his office, which belonged to Joseph Wharton. He said they Jeff Greenhouse, WG’99 reminded him that Wharton alumni “do not rest on their laurels”. Scripps Networks Interactive [email protected] Our five honored alumni honored this year, never gave resting a thought.Robert Crandall, WG’60, Former Chairman, American Airlines, who received the Joseph Vice President, General Counsel Wharton Award for Lifetime Achievement, encouraged all to get involved and join the Blair Duncan, WG’85 public dialogue by which we settle the great issues of our time.
    [Show full text]
  • OCR Document
    THE COFFIN CORNER: Vol. 2, Annual (1980) Latrobe LATROBE, PA.: CRADLE OF PRO FOOTBALL By Robert B. Van Atta John Kinport Brallier, who was to become nationally acknowledged as one of the first professional football players, was born at Cherry Tree, Pa., north of Indiana, Pa., Dec. 27, 1876, the son of Dr. Emanuel Brallier, a physician, and his wife, Lucy M. Kinport Brallier. His grandparents were from Alsace-Lorraine in Europe, accounting for the French-sounding name. As a boy, Brallier remembered having worked in a glass factory. His first recollection of football was in 1890, at the age of 13, when he played for the West Indiana Public School team. By 1892, he was captain and right halfback on the high school team as a sophomore, just before his 16th birthday. The year of 1893 saw the youthful athlete, while still attending the public high school, also “matriculating at Indiana Normal so I could play on the team.” The team won three of four games played that year, and among Brallier’s teammates was left guard Alex Stewart, future father of movie star Jimmy Stewart. Brallier quarterbacked the Normal team in both 1893 and 1894. His second year on the team found it winning only two of five games, but against much tougher opposition provided by college teams and teams of former college players. The fourth game that year was a 28-0 loss to Washington and Jefferson, but Brallier’s outstanding play was to have a major effect on his future. E. Gard Edwards, coach of the Wash-Jeff team, wrote from Pittsburgh to John Brallier, Dec.
    [Show full text]
  • The Nfl Indoor Championship
    115 YEARS AGO: “PUDGE” HEFFELFINGER BECOMES FIRST FOOTBALL PRO When one thinks of legendary professional football players, names like JOE NAMATH, JIM BROWN, DICK BUTKUS, JOE MONTANA or JOE GREENE probably spring to mind. Few, however, would name WILLIAM “PUDGE” HEFFELFINGER among those legends. Yet Heffelfinger was the player who preceded all of these superstars. On November 12, 1892 – 115 years go – at Recreation Park on Pittsburgh’s North Side, “Pudge” Heffelfinger became the first- ever professional football player. The Allegheny Athletic Association and the Pittsburgh Athletic Club were fierce intra-city rivals. The two teams had played to a previous 6-6 tie in front of 3,000 fans on Columbus Day in 1892. Heffelfinger had been an All-American at Yale from 1889-91 and was the most revered football player in the nation at the time. For that reason, the Allegheny Athletic Association decided to pay Heffelfinger $25 in expenses and a cash bonus of $500 to play for its squad in the rematch against the PAC. Before a crowd of 5,000, Heffelfinger led the AAA team to a 4-0 victory over the PAC team. In the first half, the ex-Yale hero, playing guard, forced a fumble, recovered it and returned it for the game’s only touchdown. On that day, “Pudge” Heffelfinger and the Allegheny Athletic Association began 115 years of professional football. A breakdown of “Pudge” Heffelfinger: Position Height Weight High School College Guard 6-3 195 Central HS (Minneapolis, MN) Yale University • Was a member of the first three All-America teams (1889-91).
    [Show full text]
  • Meet Our Highlighted Annual Sponsor Tune in to Our Members Attend
    TMA New York City | www.ny.turnaround.org Friday ­ November 4, 2016 QUICK LINKS TMA NYC Calendar of Events Meet Our Highlighted Annual Sponsor Join TMA NYC Today Member Benefits NRC Realty & Capital Advisors, LLC is a national leader in the structured sale of commercial & Join TMA NYC residential real estate, and has assisted its clients in Linkedin Group realizing their financial goals in the sale of over 10,000 properties throughout North America. NRC provides "cradle to grave" real estate and financial advisory services in a single source, thereby helping its clients reach their business goals better, smarter and faster. NRC's clients include Archive | Weekly Friday Emails trustees, franchisors, traditional institutional & mezzanine lenders, oil & restaurant companies, as well as governmental 2016 ANNUAL agencies & GSEs. SPONSORS Click to learn more about NRC Realty & Capital Advisors, LLC a TMA NYC Silver Annual Sponsor. TITANIUM SPONSOR Tune In To Our Members Welcoming New Members: PLATINUM SPONSORS Jason Feintuch, Houlihan Lokey Alexandra Mahnken, J­W Infinity Joel Melendez, MoloLamken LLP Click To View the TMA Member Directory Click To Join TMA NYC Email Us To Share Your Organization's News Attend Our Events Novemberfest 2016 Hosted by TMA NYC NextGen Division LAST CALL | Online Registration Closes at Noon Today Monday ­ November 7, 2016 6:30pm ­ 9:30pm Hofbrau Bierhaus NYC New York City, NY Click for Event Details and/or to Register Today 2016 Holiday Reception Honoring the Bankruptcy Judges Hosted by TMA NYC and NYIC Registration
    [Show full text]
  • Happenningsjuly | August 2012 the PENN CLUB of NEW YORK Better Than Bordeaux? a California Wine Tasting | Tuesday, July 24Th, 7:30 P.M
    hapPENNingsJuly | August 2012 THE PENN CLUB OF NEW YORK Better than Bordeaux? A California Wine Tasting | Tuesday, July 24th, 7:30 p.m. distinguish each. From rookie to expert, this event is This summer, holiday in the designed for those who know a little about wine but Golden State without ever would like to expand their foundation knowledge. leaving the Big Apple! Sip This is also for those who are well-versed in vino but on wine at the clubhouse as want to learn more about wines from California. Marc Nasser, District Manager of Don Sebastiani $50 per person plus tax and service charge for parties & Sons, guides us on an appellation tasting. Come of 2 or more. $60 per member plus tax and service prepared to gain an in-depth knowledge of the charge if you attend without a guest. $65++ per mem- In This various Californian wine regions by tasting a range ber and $75++ per guest for reservations made after of varietals and expect to cover locales like Napa, Tuesday, July 17th. This program includes wine tasting 2 General Manager’sIssue Corner Paso Robles, and Sonoma. Also, learn about the with cheese and crudités. viniculture, flavors and winemaking techniques that Seth Weinberg, Program Committee 3 In-House Events 4 Out-of-Club Entertainment Summer Happy Hours | Scentfully Yours: An 5 Reciprocal Clubs July 12th, 19th, 26th and August 2nd Exploration of Fragrance | 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m. 6 Intra Clubs Tuesday, July 10th, 7:00 p.m. Sue Phillips, fragrance Please join us in the Grill Room expert and founder of Scenterprises, 7 Dining Specials to welcome Undergraduate and will take you on a perfume-filled Graduate Summer Interns (aged journey to learn about the magic and HapPENNings Calendar 21+) to NYC.
    [Show full text]