Adam Carman

57%
Flag icon
The more Roosevelt thought about Morgan and Fish, the more he deemed them victims rather than criminals. Here were two students “emphatically engaged in doing work that was of benefit to the whole college,” Roosevelt wrote to Eliot. And how did their university provide support for such work? Had Harvard kept up its end of the ill-defined student-athlete bargain? Not even close.
The Strenuous Life: Theodore Roosevelt and the Making of the American Athlete
Rate this book
Clear rating