Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The club was founded as the Princeton Alumni Association of New York in 1866. In 1886, it reorganized as the Princeton Club of New York, incorporating as a club under New York laws on December 12, 1899. [6] [7] Unlike other alumni clubs on Clubhouse Row, the organization had no financial relation to Princeton University. [4] [8]
Princeton AlumniCorps is an American nonprofit organization that promotes civic leadership and the development of solutions to problems that affect the public interest. It was established in 1989 as Princeton Project 55. Its membership includes alumni and current students at Princeton University as well as others. AlumniCorps activities include:
A Princeton Companion [1] places the advent of Princeton reunions shortly after the end of the Civil War.The 1890s (especially the University's 150th anniversary in 1896) saw increasing interest, although it was not until the 1950s that Reunions took on today's level of organization, particularly with respect to on-campus housing for returning alums.
The club is described by F. Scott Fitzgerald in This Side of Paradise (1920) as "detached and breathlessly aristocratic". [4] A more recent account described Ivy as the "most patrician eating club at Princeton University" where members "eat at long tables covered with crisp white linens and set with 19th-century Sheffield silver candelabra, which are lighted even when daylight streams into the ...
Cloister Inn is one of the undergraduate eating clubs at Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1912, Cloister occupies a neo-Gothic building on Prospect Avenue, between Cap and Gown Club and Charter Club. Cloister closed temporarily in 1972, becoming open to all Princeton alumni, before reopening as an ...
Tiger Inn (or "T.I." as it is colloquially known) is one of the eleven active eating clubs at Princeton University in Princeton, New Jersey. [2] Tiger Inn [3] was founded in 1890 and is one of the "Big Four" eating clubs at Princeton (the others are The Ivy Club, University Cottage Club, and Cap and Gown Club), the four oldest and most prestigious on campus. [4]
Burton Crane, 1922 – The New York Times foreign correspondent and financial author; Bosley Crowther, A.B. 1928 – film critic at The New York Times; Frank Deford, A.B. 1962 – writer for Sports Illustrated; broadcaster on U.S. radio and television [236] James D. Ewing, 1938 – newspaper publisher, government reform advocate and ...
George Washington occupied Maclean House in January 1777, during the Battle of Princeton and in 1783 while Congress met in Nassau Hall. [3] It now serves as the home of the Alumni Association of Princeton University and houses over 20 staff, hosts many alumni functions and showcases Princeton memorabilia and a library of Princetoniana. [5]