Word: princeton
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Candidate Smith was praised on the East coast by President John Grier Hibben of Princeton University, who called him a "high type." Candidate Smith was praised on the West coast by Novelist Gertrude Atherton, great grandniece of Benjamin Franklin, who, addressing her fellow Californians before the crucial May Day primary, said: "Smith is the only man who has any human appeal. . . . He is a man. He is open-minded and openhanded. He stirs the affections. He is honest and direct. He is no humbug professing all things and practicing nothing. Vote the humbugs down. Women want real men to represent...
Other courses being presented by visiting professors are "English History since 1688" and "The Expansion of Europe," by Professor R.G. Albion of Princeton; "Social Problems and Social Policy," by Professor G.W. Allport '19 of Dartmouth; "Money in Banking" and "Corporations," by Professor M.M. Bober, of Lawrence College, Appleton, Wisconsin; "German Composition and Conversation," by Professor A.W. Boesche of Cornell; "Principals of Educational Psychology," by Professor Laurence Carmichael of Brown; "Chancer" and "American Literature in the Nineteenth Century," by Professor E.D. Snyder of Haverford; "Musical Appreciation" and "Romantic Period in Music," by Professor R.D. Welch of Smith. "Relations of China...
...time trial scheduled for today or tomorrow. Coach c. S. Heard '25, who has been ill the past few days, plans to hold time trials regularly twice a week from now on in order to have his charges in top-form for their regatta with Yale and Princeton at Derby, Connecticut...
...Harvard of each year have a certain piquance of their own, as they spring from the minds of Emerich Edward Dalberg, Baron Acton, who visited the University in the year of the great New York Exhibition, and John A. Benn, young Englishman who studied a year at Princeton before writing his study of the American college curriculum, "Columbus Undergraduate...
...America and her educational methods. The competence of the Englishman to judge a national problem of education that has neither parallel nor similarity throughout the world, is seriously to be questioned. It is fortuitously true in the present instance that an English student who spent a year at Princeton has signified faith in an achieved progress that seventy-five years before could only be hoped for by another Englishman who was, to say the least, conservative in his hopes...