Word: jersey
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...making Princeton a "National University." Under the head of "Princeton National University' he proposes important changes to submerge the "tendencies toward sectionalism and separation in education," which he feels are too prevalent in American colleges. Although about 80 percent of Princeton's students come from states other than New Jersey, President Hibben believes the enrolment should be more representative of the entire nation. To this end he plans countrywide competitive scholarships which will also provide for the increased traveling expenses for those coming from distant parts of the country...
...Cambridge, Daniel A. Buckley; Isaac Henry Kutz '19, of Syracuse N. Y., Henry Bromfield Rogers; Rodney Long '22, of Cambridge, Daniel A. Buckley; Jorge Valentine Manach '21, of Cambridge, Dana of the Class of 1852; Thomas Levine Parsonnet '22, of Newark, N. J., Harvard Club of New Jersey; Wallace Horton Pease '22, of Glastonbury, Conn., William Whiting; Correl Delos Pinney, Jr., '20, of Ripley, N. Y., Browne; Manuel Prenner '21, of Rochester, N. Y., Bowditch; Elwood Goodrich Ratcliffe '22, of Chicago, Ill., Harvard Club of Chicago; Leon Arthur Salmon '22, of New York City, Harvard Club of Long Island; William...
...students in the University have succumbed to the second wave of influenza now sweeping over this section of the country. Herbert A. Janzlik '20, of Trenton, New Jersey, died last Saturday night at the Stillman Infirmary. The following day Walter W. Jacobs, a special student in English 12, died at the Cambridge Hospital after a week's illness. Mr. Jacobs was 28 years old and attended Syracuse two years ago. He leaves a wife and a six a months old child, who live in Cambridge...
Lieutenant DeGroot was born in Morristown, New Jersey, 38 years ago. In 1898 he enlisted in the army, was assigned to the 18th Infantry, and immediately sent to the Philippine Islands, where he remained until after the capture of Manila and the cessation of hostilities. After the war Lieutenant De Groot remained in the army, and was commissioned second lieutenant in the 28th Infantry in May, 1917. He was promoted to his present rank in August, 1917, but whether he was in France at that time or not is not yet known, because the date of sailing of his unit...
...past ten years he has been a member of the faculty at the latter University, instructing in English and in Military Science and Tactics. After the establishment of the R. O. T. C. at Princeton he was an instructor in that organization, and was also adjutant of the New Jersey summer camp...