Word: princetonians
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...clean white uniforms bearing the crimson image of a linotype machine on the left breast, the CRIMSON baseball team will emerge from its winter quarters at 3 o'clock today, Daylight Saving time, to take its first steps in preparation for the second annual diamond--clash with the Princetonian nine at Princeton on Saturday...
Student or senior councils, have suffered a severe loss of prestige and power in more than one college during the last few years: The Princetonian last year reflected student opinion accurately when in its annual parody number it displayed a complete blank under the heading "Activities of the Senior Council." At Harvard skepticism of the value of Student Councils has taken the form of indifference. A steadily diminishing vote for Student Council members reached its low water mark this year when little more than a third of the Junior and Sophomore classes took the trouble to fill out their ballots...
This date has been tentatively set for the return baseball game to be played between the Daily Princetonian and the CRIMSON. On Saturday, May 7 last year the Nassan journalists invaded Soldiers Field and battled the Harvard Fourth Estate to a 4 to 4 tie in a game called for a variety of reasons at the end of the ninth. This year the Princetonians have invited the CRIMSON to try the turf in New Jersey...
...value of the study of Anglo-Saxon, inevitable fate of any man having aspirations toward a Summa Cum Laude in the Department of English in Harvard College, is questioned by the Daily Princetonian in a recent editorial. One gathers that the situation is even more stringent at that University than here at Cambridge. The Princetonian decries the fact that "undergraduates are forced to take this course"' and the Princetonian objects, although conscious that such objections are likely to fall on deaf ears...
...Daily Princetonian, commenting editorially, sees that "a difficulty in ratification is sure to come" over the above provision. And its prophesy while slightly pessimistic is extremely same. The perfection of such a plan as would be instituted by this Constitution would be tested by every new problem that arose. No general dogma could include the variances of student life, since each question obviously must be faced with views as to its immediate causes and consequences. Set limitations could hardly be expected to deal equably with the several and almost innumerable facets of university government...