enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Quadrangle Club - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadrangle_Club

    With some funding from the Princeton Undergraduate Student Government, the Quadrangle Club has hosted to some of the biggest concerts on Princeton's campus, including Barenaked Ladies in 1993, Lifehouse in 2003, Maroon 5 in 2004, Rihanna in 2006, and T-Pain in 2013. These concerts have been documented as having drawn more than half of the ...

  3. 1896 Princeton Tigers football team - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1896_Princeton_Tigers...

    The 1896 Princeton Tigers football team was an American football team that represented Princeton University as an independent during the 1896 college football season. The team finished with a 10–0–1 record, shut out 10 of 12 opponents, and outscored all opponents by a total of 266 to 5. [ 1 ]

  4. University Field (Princeton) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_Field_(Princeton)

    University Field was a stadium in Princeton, New Jersey which opened in 1876 through a gift by William Libbey, then a student at the College of New Jersey (renamed Princeton University in 1896). [1] It hosted the Princeton University Tigers football team until they moved to Palmer Stadium in 1914. [ 2 ]

  5. 1896 college football season - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1896_college_football_season

    Both teams had signature wins: Lafayette defeated Penn 6–4, giving the Quakers their only loss of the season, while Princeton defeated previously unbeaten Yale, 24–6, on Thanksgiving Day in the last game of the season. Princeton was retroactively named the 1896 national champions by the Billingsley Report, the Helms Athletic Foundation, the ...

  6. Princeton–Yale football rivalry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princeton–Yale_football...

    Souvenir of the game played at Manhattan Field, November 21, 1896. The rivalry is one of the oldest continuous rivalries in American sports, the oldest continuing rivalry in the history of American football, and is constituent to the Big Three academic, athletic and social rivalry among alumni and students associated with Harvard, Yale and Princeton universities.

  7. Princeton University eating clubs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princeton_University...

    Quadrangle Club Terrace Club. The primary function of the eating clubs is to serve as dining halls for the majority of third- and fourth-year students. Unlike fraternities and sororities, to which the clubs are sometimes compared, all of the clubs admit both male and female members, and members (with the exception of some of the undergraduate officers) do not live in the mansion.

  8. Princeton–Rutgers rivalry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princeton–Rutgers_rivalry

    The Princeton–Rutgers rivalry is a college rivalry in athletics between the Tigers of Princeton University and Scarlet Knights of Rutgers University – New Brunswick, both of which are located in New Jersey. [1] The rivalry dates back to the first college football game in history in 1869. Although the football series ended in 1980 due to the ...

  9. List of Princeton Tigers football seasons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Princeton_Tigers...

    This is a list of seasons completed by the Princeton Tigers football team of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS). Since the team's creation in 1869 and competition in the first college football game , Princeton has played more than 1,200 officially sanctioned games, holding an ...