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...Junior Dance Committee has sent special tickets and dance cards to the members of 1915 whose ladies have accepted invitations to the dance. The others will be sent out today. Anyone not receiving them will please leave a note to that effect for H. A. Murrary '15, at the Harvard Union. Attention is also called to the following notices concerning arrangements...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DANCE TICKET AND CARD SENT | 2/10/1914 | See Source »

There are still a number of copies of this year's Register left at the two Cooperative stores. There seems to be an erroneous impression current to the effect that the volume has grown much smaller and yet the price raised. The Student Council deemed it expedient to raise the price from 75 cents to $1.00, in an attempt to make the book more nearly pay for itself. The real reason for the volume appearing less thick than last year is due to a much thinner quality of paper being used, although leaving out the College Directory did, of course...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REGISTERS STILL OBTAINABLE | 2/10/1914 | See Source »

...appointments of the Corporation, made last spring and fall will take effect next term. Professor Atwood formerly of the University of Chicago, will begin duties here as Professor of Geology and Geography. He will give courses A, (Physiography); 6, (Physiography of the United States); and 20a (Research). Professor Atwood is one of the foremost geologists and physiographers of the country, having been the geologist of the New Jersey and Illinois survey and, since 1909, of the United States Geological Survey. He has taken active part in the proceedings of a large number of the geological and geographical associations...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEW PROFESSORS BEGIN DUTIES | 1/31/1914 | See Source »

Individualism has increased at Princeton since the introduction of the preceptorial system, and has not been retarded by the formation of Freshman and Sophomore Commons. The fraternity life of the smaller New England colleges has divided men "laterally" rather than "horizontally," but with little effect upon the degree of the individualism. The individualism of Harvard has been due to the encouragement of scholarship in its faculty, to the freedom of discussion, to the liveliness, tolerance and diversity of its intellectual life. The Freshman dormitories may well be made to afford a means by which these influences shall be made more...

Author: By R.b. Perry., | Title: PROF. PERRY REVIEWS MONTHLY | 1/31/1914 | See Source »

...proper attitude of the Freshmen toward the upper classes and toward the college. The opponents of the system maintained that the rushes and Freshman restrictions, not horsing, unify the class, that the prominent men escape horsing while the friendless Freshmen bear the brunt of it, with a resulting effect away from democracy instead of toward it; and that whatever doubtful good it may do in opening the eyes of the Freshmen to their own unimportance is more than neutralized in Sophomore year. Its enemies maintain further that it is childish and in every way out of accord with Princeton spirit...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON OPPOSES HORSING | 1/27/1914 | See Source »

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