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...Daily Princetonian will advocate this morning the resumption of athletic relations between Harvard and Princeton, While the CRIMSON, in its editorial columns takes a similar stand. Technical obstacles in the path of rapprochement are pointed out by both papers, but both hope that some way may be found by which these may be obviated and sporting agreements renewed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON-NASSAU URGE RENEWAL OF SPORT RELATIONS | 5/7/1930 | See Source »

This mornings's editorial brings to a head a movement which has been going on for several months between the two undergraduate publications, the Daily Princetonian and the CRIMSON, which have been trying to find some means by which the two universities could come together without loss of either pride or principle. Unfounded rumors in the daily press have stated that these plans have been shelved; this is not so, although it has been impossible as yet to discover a bridge around the technical obstacles. The statement that the movement for reconciliation was started by Nelson P. Rose, Chairman...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON-NASSAU URGE RENEWAL OF SPORT RELATIONS | 5/7/1930 | See Source »

...attempt to bridge the above-outlined differences as a step toward smoothing the path of resumption of relations, four editors of the CRIMSON--E. L. Belisle '31, H. A. Briuser '31, R. W. Chasteney, Jr. '31, and David Riesman, Jr. '31-- visited Rose of the Daily Princetonian on February 15. At that time they discussed with him possible solutions of the problem. On March 7, Rose came to Cambridge and talked with Director Bingham in a new move to resolve the difficulties, while in the next month Chasteney and Riesman of the CRIMSON met Chairman Kennedy and outlined...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMSON-NASSAU URGE RENEWAL OF SPORT RELATIONS | 5/7/1930 | See Source »

...while some have looked on the Philadelphian Society with horror, some with amusement, some with complete apathy, almost every Princetonian has regarded it as weak. This judgment was echoed last week by the society itself. President Charles Stevens announced that next year it will lead only a nominal life, while a federation of studentry and faculty carries on its charitarian and other endeavors. Many Princetonians discerned behind this movement the energetic figure of Rev. Robert Russell Wicks, Dean of the University Chapel, who arrived at Princeton two years ago from the Second Church (Congregationalist) of Holyoke, Mass., determined that Princeton...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Privacy at Princeton | 4/28/1930 | See Source »

...student's "field of concentration"--his upperclass department at Princeton--is in the arts or the sciences. With the additional change of setting three or four units of school or college Latin as prerequisite to the arts departments, such a plan would appear desirable at Princeton. --Daily Princetonian...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE PRESS | 4/18/1930 | See Source »

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