Word: nassau
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Happy to oblige their little colleagues, the CRIMSON this week dispatched two editors to Nassau where they assisted the Prince's staff in making up the parody. In the picture at bottom-right, the two are shown with Princetonian staffer Burt Adams '55 setting up the makeup for the paper. At right one Crimed supervises sports man Bill Garret '55 as he writes the sports page of the parody. In the third picture, the Prince's two printers are shown putting the parody...
...Nassau street merchants speak glowingly of the discrimination and good taste that students show in buying. Chief of Princeton's police, Edward Mahan, is benign when describing the minor peccadilloes that come to his attention. "They are good boys," he says, and points out that rarely is he forced to look up a Princeton for disorderly conduct...
...reasons for this amnity are many. First, the town is centered about the university, working in and for it, and sharing much of its cultural advantages. Also since Princeton is essentially a residential town--and a dull one at that--few students penetrate beyond the merchant's domain of Nassau Street. But the biggest reason for continued good relationships is a crew of seven men called proctors...
...Nassau's strong emphasis on the humanities over the sciences is much to the liking of Massachusetts Hall. Appealing also is the primary attention Princeton devotes to the College, often at the expense of its graduate schools. And through its history, Princeton has held some vestiges of the religious observance which Harvard has shucked so thoroughly...
...affair was arranged by the Orange Key, Nassau hospitality-plus organization. The girls are part of their plus service...