Word: listed
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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PRINCETON, N.J., Feb. 5- Approximately 30 sophomores were still without first-list bids for an eating club last night, as Princeton's annual Bicker period went into its eleventh and last...
Members of the sophomore Bicker Committee revealed that about 10 or 11 men have received no bids at all, while another 20 have only second-list bids. These sophomores might be able to get into a club if their friends with first-list bids can exert enough pressure on the club Bicker committees. For these men, and for those who are helping them, the last two days have constituted a period of frantic negotiations...
...more people without bids may be worked into various clubs through the system of "preferentials." Men with solid, "first-line" bids to more than one club may notify a club that they will not join unless some of their friends with "second-list" bids or no bids at all are accepted...
Until this maneuvering is completed, it is difficult to tell exactly how each club "section" will take shape and how many men will be "hundred per centers." A hundred per center is defined this year as a sophomore who has not received a first-list bid or joined Prospect Club--a cooperative organization holding an open Bicker--by 10 p.m. tomorrow night, Open House Night...
...determining each section list, Riesman strove to achieve variety and balance regarding fields of concentration, career considerations, and geographical background. It was heartening to him that many humanities and natural science concentrators applied...