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...buildings and grounds which are donstdered by many as the finest college grounds in America. Since the year 1878, one hundred and sixty five acres have been added to the campus, making in all two hundred and twenty acres. Nine new buildings have been added: Edwards, University, and Murray Halls, the new President's house, Marquand chapel, the Biological laboratory, the Art museum, the Magnetic observatory, and the dynamo building. Enlargements have been made upon the School of Science and Nassua Hall, and four new buildings are to be built, two of which are now being built...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Growth of Princeton. | 1/6/1890 | See Source »

Professor Murray, of Oxford, England, is only twenty-four years of age and is probably the youngest man ever elected to a first-class chair in any of the great English universities...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 12/20/1889 | See Source »

...faced each other they appeared to be pretty evenly matched. Princeton had the strongest rush line, but before the game was far advanced, she lost one of her best men. George who had his knee cap hurt and the tendons of his ankle broken, was sent to the Murray Hill hotel in an ambulance and Jones substituted in his place. Rhodes of Yale was ruled off for foul tackling...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Princeton, 10; Yale, 0. | 11/29/1889 | See Source »

...commercial advantages that the United States would receive from a union with Canada would be great.- No. Am. Rev. 139, 44; American 2, 213-214; 13. 393, 407-409; 14, 56; Forum, Nov. 1888, 241-256. (a) It would greatly increase trade.- W. H. Murray, "Continental Unity," Boston Herald, Dec. 14, 1888. (b) It would give New England advantages not before possessed.- Boston Herald...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: English 6. | 3/1/1889 | See Source »

...With the hearty co-operation of Professor Charles Eliot Norton of Harvard in the purpose above expressed, Mr. Farley B. Goddard, Ph.D., of Harvard, '81, who has written an admirable paper on 'Researches in the Cyrenaica,' conditionally accepts the position. Drs. Poole, Murray and Head, officials both of the Fund and of the British Museum, will afford every facility for a preliminary study at the museum, and Dr. Maspero, vice-president of the Fund for France, will do the same at the Louvre. A few months of such preparatory study will thus qualify the student to begin work with Naville...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Egyptian Exploration Fund. | 6/12/1888 | See Source »

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