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Princeton University Library Chronicle, 65, no. 1 (Autumn 2003), 79–82. Charles Ryskamp, 1928–2010, with Bruce Redford, Verlyn Klinkenborg, and John Bidwell. New York: Ink, Inc., 2011. A Few Incidents from My Life among the Indians on the Princeton Campus. Princeton University Library Chronicle 78, no. 1 (Autumn–Winter 2020), 105–24.
Royce N. Flippin, Jr. (May 4, 1934 – July 31, 2021) was an American college football player and athletics administrator. He served as the athletic director at Princeton University from 1972 to 1979 and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) from 1980 to 1992.
William Park Armstrong was born in Selma, Alabama, the son of William Park and Alice (née Isbell) Armstrong and studied at Princeton University, earning his bachelor's degree at the age of 20. [1] He would later earn his M.A. from Princeton and a B.D. from Princeton Theological Seminary before studying in Europe. He studied at the German ...
The Princeton Clarion is a newspaper circulating Tuesday and Friday mornings, two days a week in Princeton and Gibson County, Indiana, United States. The newspaper was founded in 1846 as a weekly edition, and is considered the oldest continuously operating business in Gibson County. It is one of two newspapers in Gibson County.
Samuel Hugh Moffett (April 7, 1916 – February 9, 2015) (Korean: 마삼락(馬三樂) 또는 마포삼락(馬布三樂), [1] Chinese: 莫菲特) was an American Christian missionary and academic who latterly served as professor emeritus at the Princeton Theological Seminary. [2]
Laura Wooten (December 19, 1920 - March 24, 2019) was the longest-serving poll worker in Mercer County and the state of New Jersey.She was also believed to be the longest-serving poll worker in the United States with a record of 79 continuous years of volunteering at the polls on Election Day.
A post office was established in Princeton as early as 1816. The local newspaper, the Princeton Daily Clarion, was first published in 1846. Lyles Station, a small community just west of Princeton, was founded by freed Tennessee slave Joshua Lyles in 1849. It served as a haven for runaway slaves who braved the Ohio River on a northern trek ...
Kenneth Jay Levy was born on February 26, 1927, in New York, New York. [2] After service in World War II, Levy attended Queens College, City University of New York, and received a Bachelor of Arts in 1947, having studied music history under Curt Sachs and music theory under the composer Karol Rathaus.