Word: fides
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...following are bona fide university or graduate students in the college or seminary: W. J. George, '89, regularly entered in a post graduate course with the intention of a three years' course for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy; Hector Cowan, '88, pursuing a graduate course in Princeton college and a full course in Princeton Theological seminary...
...following gentlemen are bona fide undergraduate students of Princeton college on the rolls for the present college year, pursuing courses which require attendance upon fourteen or fifteen lectures or recitations a week in the following manner: For the B. A. degree-K. L. Ames, '90, H. H. Janeway, '90, J. S. Black, '91, P. C. Jones, '91, E. A. Poe, '91, J. S. Riggs, '92; for the B. S. degree-R. Furness, '91; for C. E. degree-R. H. Warren, '93; special students-R. H. Channing, W. S. Cash, B. S. Donnelly...
...years ago a committee of the faculty investigated athletics, and found that the members of the nine were away from Cambridge almost one half of the spring term, playing with professionals. This state of affairs caused the faculty to vote that all members of athletic teams should be bona fide students and that there should be no professional coaches...
...this question is found in the principles which Harvard has maintained tous far this season-that is, the principle that college athletics must be purified at any cost, that any underhanded action shall be discountenanced, that undergraduates as far as they are professionals, and graduates, unless they are bona fide members of the university, shall be prohibited from participating in intercollegiate contests. It is intended at tonight's meeting to offer an opportunity for the free expression of college opinion on the matter under consideration...
...actually is. There is now a genuine and laudable effort making to exclude professionalism from college athletics. As a first step in this movement it has seemed necessary that all the colleges in the league be required to furnish certificates that the members of their athletic teams are bona fide members of their college. In accordance with this rule Harvard has sent to Princeton the certificates of her own players, and at the same time has protested Princeton's men, her object being to obtain return certificates for the men whom Princeton intends to play next Saturday. The demand...