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Purdue: 14 members of football team were killed in a railroad collision (1903). Northeastern Oklahoma A&M: 5 football players were killed in a head-on highway crash (1966). Marshall: 37 members died in an airplane crash (1970). Wichita State: most of the starting players and coaches, 31 in total, died in an airplane crash (1970).
Center, linebacker, and long snapper for University of Michigan, 1932–1935, assistant varsity football coach for Yale University, 1935–1937, junior varsity head football coach for Yale University, 1938 [1] MI: U.S. Representative: 1949–1973 Republican: Vice President: 1973–1974 President: 1974–1977 Dick Fosbury: Track and Field
He played his last college game against Princeton five days later, on Thanksgiving, with the very same eleven Yale players defeating the Tigers 19–0. He was also a class leader, received the largest number of votes as its most popular member in his senior year, and was a member of the Skull and Bones secret society. [ 1 ]
In his sophomore year, he led the team with 11 tackles for a loss and six sacks. He started all ten games in his junior year and was named second team all-Ivy. In November 2017, Mullen was elected by his teammates to be the captain of "Team 146," Yale's football team for the 2018 season, in what would have been his senior year. [6]
Berkeley College is a residential college at Yale University, opened in 1934. The eighth of Yale's 14 residential colleges, it was named in honor of Bishop George Berkeley (1685–1753), dean of Derry and later bishop of Cloyne , in recognition of the assistance in land and books that he gave to Yale in the 18th century.
Frank Seiler Butterworth (1895), member Connecticut State Senate, All-American football player and coach [36]: 30 Francis Burton Harrison (1895), US Representative from New York, Governor-General of the Philippines [4]: 166 Frank Augustus Hinkey (1895), zinc smelting business, College Football Hall of Fame player and coach [13]: 169–70
Delta Chi – President of Emory University and the University of Texas; Arthur Twining Hadley, Phi – President of Yale University; Ernest Martin Hopkins, Pi – President of Dartmouth College; Martin Kellogg, Phi – President of the University of California at Berkeley; Stanley King, Sigma – President of Amherst College from 1932 to 1946
Starting on December 3, 1969, Yale played Langer in the team's first two games. [13] [18] On December 10, 1969, in reaction, the ECAC executive council censured Yale, a charter member, in what was a rare move, and issued a "cease and desist" order. [13] [24] That night, the Yale team again played Langer in a game. [13]