behavior. The Executive Committee informed the Trustees in December 1893 that the students on the athletic field “have conducted themselves in a manner which has reflected credit upon our institution, and the interest in athletics has helped the general tone of college life.”
Many Colgate supporters regarded achievements in sports as especially valuable for enhancing the University’s reputation.
Other enterprises for making Colgate more widely known enlisted considerable faculty and student support. Professor Thomas was particularly active in several. He aided students in 1892 in organizing a Press Club to supply newspapers with stories on all phases of campus life and, incidentally, to give the undergraduates journalistic experience. He took the lead in establishing the Department of University Extension (1892-96) as a part of the New York State educational system to provide neighboring communities with lecture courses taught by the faculty. With Professors Thurber, Taylor, and a Norwich printer, he formed the Colgate University Press in 1894 which in its less than two-year existence published the Salmagundi and Colgate Catalogues, among other items. Professor Brigham initiated a series of