THE MICHIGAN DAILY -SATUrIRfAY, OCT. 29, 1932 . . ... .. . ... . .............. ....... . ....... .... . ............... .. . . Princeton Oldest Football College In . S. Betty Gow, nursemaid in the home of Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, returned to the United States after a summer in her native Scotlanl. She is shown after arrival in New York being escorted to an automobile which took her to the Morrow home in Englewood, N. J. She will take care of baby John Morrow Lindbergh. IGa me Came Edl 4 II 82( 7I 11cMp~m Congre's'sO[ 1783 By WiL tAM G. FERRIS In an educational sene Princeton University is the fourth oldest college in America. In a strictly football sense it is the oldest. For it was on the Nassau campus that American football originally developed, and it was Princeton, competing against Rutgers, which played the first offi- cially rcognized game of football. Princeton history, romantic, fre- quently sentimental, and sometimes amusing, can hardly be told without mentioning football. And all histories of football must start with Prince- ton. Founded in 1747 Earliest Princeton history centers at Elizabethtown, where the college- then known as the College of New Jersey-opened in 1747. Immediately afterward it moved to Newark, and there, in 1748, with the government of the colony and other luminaries watching,the first class graduated. It contained six members. The college soon moved to Prince- ton, where on the 29th of July, 1754, ground was broken for Nassau Hall, the oldest and most famous of Princeton buildings. It was named Nassau Hall because of "the Honour we retain, in this remote Part of the Globe, to the immortal Memory of the Glorious King William the 3d, who was a Branch of the illustrious House of NASSAU." Life in those Princetonian days was severe and unpretentious; not at all the life of Princeton, or any other American college, today. The college laws strictly forbade the visiting of 'a tavern, beer house, or any place of such kind." A student convicted of "lying, profaneness, drunkenness, theft, uncleanliness, playing at un- lawful games (which included cards) or other immoralities" was admon- ished, whereupon he made a public confession or was expelled. Ate Plain Food Food was plain, with a purposeful avoidance of "luxurious dainties" and "costly delicacies" which "could not be looked for among the viands of ' a college where health and economy are alone consulted i ;the furniture of the table." There was a spirit of protest against such food. Peter Elmendorf wrote home in1782, "We eat rye bread, half dough and as black as it I possibly can be, and oniony butter, and sometimes dry bread and thick coffee for breakfast, a little milk or cider and bread, and sometimes meagre chocolate, for supper, very in- different dinners, such as lean tough boiled fresh beef with dry potatoes; and if this deserves to be called diet for ravenous people let it be so styled, 'and not a table for collegians." And yet not all students criticized the harshness of those early years. Philip Fithian, also writing home, considered them, "exceedingly well formed to check and restrain the vi- cious, and to assist the studious, and to countnance and encourage the vir- Stuous." Outlook Later Mellowed Happily, the years mellowed Fith- ian's outlook, and he later wrote aboit the "foibles" which prevailed at Princeton: "Strowing the entries in the Night with greasy Feathers; freezing the Bell; ringing at late Hours of the Night; Picking from the neighborhood now and then a plumb fat Hen or Turkey for the private en- tertainment of the Club 'instituted for inventing and practising several new kinds of mischief in a secret po- lite Manner'; parading bad Women; burning Curse-John (which was the college out-house); Reconnoitering house In the Town; and ogling Wom- en with a Telescope." In those early colonial days Prince- ton was a hot-bed of sedition and radicalism. Dr. Withersponn, presi- dent of the college, openly advocated a declaration of independence and when the Revolutionary War had fi- nally started he was honored by the good tories of Great Britain, along with General Washington and Gen- eral Lee, by being hanged in effigy. Nassait Hall Wrecked The revolutionary battles centered about New Jersey, and Princeton's exercises of instruction were inter- rupted by the presence first of one and then of the other army. Nassau Hall was wrecked by their clash and occupancy and the library and phil- osophical apparatus were scattered and destroyed. Around and within its walls surged one of the most crit- ical battles of the war. During those early years of the re- public, Princeton, graduating an av- erape annual class of nineteen, gave to the nation's service 20 senators, 23 representatives, 13 governors, three judges of the Supreme Court, one Vice-President (Aaron Burr) and one President. (James Madison). Served As Capitol In 1783 Congress, driven from Phil- adelphia by a mutinous body of troops, sought the seclusion of Princeton, and from June 26th until November 4th held its sessions in Nassau Hall. Thus the famous build- ing actually became for a time the capitol of the nation. Nassau Hall remains today the center of Princeton tradition, of a past proudly famed in the nation's history. It is a symbol of the spirit of the colonies, which made- them see, dimly to be sure, a greater Princeton and a country in the fu- ture. And the Hall's traditions still linger. On its steps, in the warm spring evenings, the custom of Sen- ior singing is continued; here, too, the Seniors gather for their last class photograph; and from the old belfry at nine the curfew still rings out, sounding the hour of rest-in vain. Began Football in 1820 Football, in the form of an English game known as "ballown" came to Princeton as early as 1820. But it was not until 1867 that an All-Col- lege team was formed, and defeated the team of Princeton Seminary. It was not much like present day foot- ball. But, apparently, it was good fun even then, for two years later Prince- ton and Rutgers engaged in the first intercollegiate football game in his- tory. The game was played at Rut- gers, under Rutgers rules, and Rut- gers won. A few days later Rutgers came to Princeton, where the game was played under Princeton rules and Princeton won. The game progressed slowly. Yet in 1871, Princeton, still in the vanguard, organized a football association, drawing up an elaborate set of rules; which was something the early game appears to have needed. In 1873 Princeton, Yale, Columbia and Rutgers met in New York City in order to form a uniform set of rules. During the same autumn Yale and Princeton played for the first time, and Princeton was victorious. There were certain difficulties at- tendant to the game. First, it was delayed an hour and a half before someone found the ball. Then, in the middle of the contest, the ball burst, causing another delay. The spectators went down to Joe's for a couple of beers while the referees and players sewed the ball together. Five All-Americans in 1889 When Walter Camp picked the first All-American team in 1889 Princeton was still at the head of the football peak. Princeton had five men on that team, while Yale and Harvard both had three. Princeton had three All-Americans in 1890, four in 1891, two in 1892, four in 1893, and continued to place from one to four men until 1900. Then, for the first time, she had none. That is the history in back of every Princeton football team. It is a his- tory which has developed for more than 100 years, swelling with anec- dotes, with conquests, with remem- brances, with all of those things which make football, genuine college football, so eminently worthwhile. Princeton is not a mug-hunter. She does not play front page football. With her the game is a sport, not a semi-professional racket instigated to increase the college's fame, enroll- ment, and bankroll. Perhaps that is why so many people not associated with Nassau want to see the tiger regain, as she is now attempting to do, her lost position iu the football jungle. Apart From World The years have brought interna- tional renown to Princeton, but the college still remains somewhat apart from the busy world, lazily resting in the beautiful, rolling New Jersey country. There are few colleges so ideally situated, and few colleges so conscious of their situation. It is the same town of Princeton which once saw the American and British troops war against one another in the fa- mous battle of Princeton. It is the same college which gave so many of its sons to the developing govern- ment. It is the same Nassau Hall which once served as the actual cap- itol of the United States. One can- not walk, a yard in Princeton with- out touching American history. "Lives by Comradeship" "Princeton," Woodrow Wilson once wrote, "lives and grows by comrade- ship and community of thought; that constitutes its charm; binds the spir- its of its sons to it with a devotion at once ideal and touched with passion; takes hold of the imagination even of the casual visitor, if he have the good fortune to see a little way be- neath the surface; dominates its growth and progress; determines its future. The most careless and thoughtless undergraduate breathes and is governed by it. It is the genius of the place." During the fiscal year ending last September 1, Iowa State College ani- mal husbandry experts judged live- stock at 68 county, state and national shows. Davis &cOhlinger PROMPT PRINTERS DIAL 8132 109-111 E. Washington St. Second Floor Methodists In Lead, With. Presbyterian, Catholic, Episcopal Groups Next Methodists, Presbyterians, Cath- olics, and Episcopalians are the lead- ers in student membership, accord- ing to the results of a religious cen- sus made public yesterday. Nearly 2,- 000 students named no preference at all. Methodists led the list with 1,045 members. There were 814 Presbyter- ians, 666 Catholics, 593 Episcopalians, 472 Congregationalists, and 411 Jew- ish members. A total of 29 faiths are represented. Other memberships are: Lutherans, 309; Baptists, 261; Chris- tian Disciples, 108; Reformed, 97; Evangelicals, 75; Christian Scientists, 54; and Orthodox, 31. Twenty members each registered for Protestant and Union Federated churches; while there were 14 Breth- ren, 12 Friends. 9 Mormons, 7 each of Swedenborgians, A.M.E., and Juda- ists; and 2 each of Mohammedan, Moravian, Adventist, Free Methodist, Mennonite and Nazarene. The Presbyterian church takes sec- ond place when preferences are add- ed to the actual members. In this col- umn, the Methodists have 1,362; the Presbyterians, 994; Episcopalians, 732; Catholics, 703; and Jewish, 626. Large prefernces were indicated for the Protestant, Unitarian and Chris- tian Science churches. . r _j r lowing sucn prouctions to continue, Professor Nicoll declared, "and pro- hindered the development of the dra- posed to Parliament an act which ma, permitted Fielding to devote would place all theatrical produc- himself to his novels, and made pos- tions under the supervision of the sible the collection by the govern- lord chamberlain. ment of all plays written during that "This restriction, while it seriously period. t . t ft N FIRST NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST COMPANY Est. 1863 COMMERCIAL - SAVINGS TRUST - SAFE DEPOSIT TRAVELERS' CHECKS Member Federal Reserve System, Under U. S. 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