Word: bickering
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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PRINCETON, N.J., Feb. 5--Bicker entered its final, most hectic stage tonight, as Princeton's 16 undergraduate eating clubs issued bids to their selected groups of sophomores...
...last to open its bidding, starting only last night. Of the rest, some have issued all their bids, while the others are in various stages of the process. No exact statistics are being released on the number of sophomores still without bids, but sources on the sophomore Bicker Committee indicate that it may be more than five per cent of the class...
Last year, on Open House night, the last stage of Bicker, 23 sophomores did not receive bids, and refused to join Prospect Club, a co-operative organization that accepted any interested student. Of the 23, fifteen were Jewish, and several sources charged religious discrimination. Most of these "hundred percenters" have since joined either Prospect or the Wilson Lodge...
Prospect is again holding an open, non-selective Bicker, but new members must sign the club's book before 9:15 p.m. on Open House night. According to the Interclub Committee's definition, a "hundred percenter" this year will be any sophomore who has not received a bid and has not joined Prospect by 10 p.m. next Saturday, Open House night...
President Robert F. Goheen, in an open letter to The Daily Princetonian last Thursday, said that the "club elections...are only a fraction of life at Princeton." Observers in Princeton hope that this official endorsement de-emphasizing Bicker, plus the emergence of Wilson Lodge as an attractive alternative to the club system, will promote a more successful Bicker. There are, however "too many variables" inherent in the process, they note, to predict what will happen later this week...