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Scott Fitzgerald's alma mater
Answer for the clue "Scott Fitzgerald's alma mater ", 9 letters:
princeton
Alternative clues for the word princeton
Word definitions for princeton in dictionaries
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Word definitions in Wikipedia
Princeton may refer to:
Gazetteer
Word definitions in Gazetteer
Population (2000): 65 Housing Units (2000): 36 Land area (2000): 0.746293 sq. miles (1.932889 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 0.746293 sq. miles (1.932889 sq. km) FIPS code: 58435 Located within: South ...
Usage examples of princeton.
Stockton and two other new delegates from New Jersey, Francis Hopkinson and the Reverend John Witherspoon, famous Presbyterian preacher and president of the College of New Jersey at Princeton, had come into the chamber an hour or so after Adams had taken the floor and was nearly finished speaking.
Princeton College, whose influence, more New Englandish than New England, directed by a succession of illustrious Yale graduates in full sympathy with the advanced theology of the revival, was counted on to withstand the more cautious orthodoxy of Yale.
Paul has just won the annual essay contest of the Princeton Francophile Society.
I graduated from Princeton, seventy percent of all math grads from major universities applied for jobs at RAND.
If I may refer to an institution, which used to be midway between the North and the South, and which I may speak of without suspicion of bias, an institution where the studies of metaphysics, the philosophy of history, the classics and pure science are as much insisted on as the study of applied sciences, the College of New Jersey at Princeton, the question in regard to a candidate for a professorship or instructorship, is not whether he was born North or South, whether he served in one army or another or in neither, whether he is a Democrat or a Republican or a Mugwump, what religious denomination he belongs to, but is he a scholar and has he a high character?
Soon after, a committee of congress, the governor of Pennsylvania, and a part of his council came into the neighbourhood of Princeton to negociate with the revolters.
Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1962, pages 33ff, for the old- and new-style merchants.
I went to Princeton postgrad with this guy, and he used to get lost in his own dorm.
An Experiment with Time, in which he recorded, verified, and published his precognitive dreams, as well as by remote-viewing research performed at SRI and Princeton University.
It was scored everywhere with canyons, trenches, and crevasses and dotted with volcanic seamounts that he called guyots after an earlier Princeton geologist named Arnold Guyot.
Taylor and Russell Hulse of Princeton University have used this method to test the predictions of General Relativity in a wholly novel way.
English novelist, a French film director who wore clothes so elegantly it made everyone else feel like breadline standbys, a plasma physicist from Princeton who's up for the Nobel this year because of his major breakthrough in magnetic containment fusion.
In 1973, Gross and Frank Wilczek at Princeton, and, independently, David Politzer at Harvard, studied this question and found a surprising answer: The quantum cloud of particle eruptions and annihilations amplifies the strengths of the strong and weak forces.
Behind those walls, and below the ground, things were busier than ever in the history of Princeton.
Als sie sich Princeton näherten, fragte Genelli: »Hat dieses Zeugs eigentlich psychische Auswirkungen auf einen?