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YALE DEFEATED PRINCETON AT ST. NICHOLAS RINK; $11,000,000 ENDOWMENT NEEDED AT PRINCETON

President Hibben in Annual Report Shows Necessity of Fund to Meet Increase in Salaries of Professors, Scholarships and Buildings.--Dinner at Copley for Brown Alumni.

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

With the score of the Yale-Princeton hockey match at the St. Nicholas Rink, New York, Saturday evening, a 1 to 1 tie at the end of the first half, Van Nostrand of Yale carried the puck down the rink alone and slipped it into the Princeton goal for the winning score, 30 seconds after resuming play in the second half. Van Nostrand, who had been playing at rover, went in at centre in the second half. On the face off he stole the puck from Captain Schoen of Princeton and started down the ice. He gathered speed, zigzagged past point and coverpoint, whirled around the cage and shoved the puck between the feet of the goal guard.

The Princeton team outplayed their opponents in the first half. They outskated the Yale players and broke up the forward line every time they swept down the ice. Nearly all the playing in this half was in Yale's territory and a larger score was prevented only by the many excellent stops of York, the Yale goal guard. Hills of Princeton made the first goal 12 minutes after the start of the game and Armour of Yale made a lucky goal three minutes later.

The summary follows: YALE  PRINCETON York, g.  g., Ford Bierwirth, p.  p., Scully Murray, c.p.  c.p., Comey Van Nostrand, r.  r., Humphreys Armour, c.  c., Schoen Griggs, l.w.  l.w., Hills Stanley, r.w.  r.w., Cushman

Goals--(first period) Hills, 12.45; Armour, 15.04; (second period) Van Nostrand, 30s. Penalties--Griggs (2m.) for tripping; Griggs (2m.) for illegal checking; Scully (2m.) for tripping. Referee--Ernest Garron, Hockey Club. Time of periods--20 minutes.

Brown Alumni Dinner at Copley.

Over a thousand Brown alumni are expected to gather at the annual Sons of Brown dinner at the Copley-Plaza on Tuesday, January 23, at 6.30 o'clock. This year, through the co-operation of the several Brown University alumni associations in New England, the event will not be confined to Boston men, but will be open to every alumnus in New England. Charles Evans Hughes has promised to be present and give an address. President W. H. Faunce, of Brown University, will speak in behalf of the university, and Governor Samuel W. McCall is expected to represent the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in an address to the gathering. Judge Arthur L. Brown, of the United States District Court, who filled the chair of toastmaster at the last commencement luncheon, has been invited to speak. An informal gathering will take place at the Copley-Plaza immediately preceding the dinner at 5.30.

Princeton Needs $11,000,000.

An endowment of $11,000,000 for the present and prospective needs of Princeton is included in the plans of President Hibben as set forth in his annual report. A committee of members of the board of trustees and of the graduate council has been appointed to raise $3,000,000 necessary for the immediate need of the university.

This endowment provides for the professorial salaries and the university library. The increase in the salaries of the professors has been $69,515 during the past years, and this will require $2,500,000 to provide sufficient income. The other $500,000 will be devoted to the libraries.

The other needs which President Hibben regards as indispensable total an additional endowment of $7,925,000. This includes $1,000,000 to provide for increase in salaries, $800,000 for an increase in preceptorial instructors, $500,000 for scholarships and $3,000,000 for the engineering department. An addition is planned to McCosh Hall which will require $150,000.

This sum of $11,000,000 is quite within the reach of Princeton as shown by the increase in the incomes of other universities in the past ten years listed in the following table: University  1915  1905 Harvard,  $3,805,428  $2,501,171 Cornell,  3,139,530  1,020,500 Minnesota,  3,033,891  486,853 Columbia,  2,920,031  1,586,309 Pennsylvania,  2,903,162  580,599 Illinois,  2,844,541  858,697 California,  2,784,042  943,837 Wisconsin,  2,758,118  852,901 Michigan,  2,535,260  759,957 Chicago,  2,132,012  1,186,075 Yale,  1,777,134  900,929 Ohio State,  1,466,120  477,610 Missouri,  1,311,364  346,836 Nebraska,  1,309,752  431,250 Leland Stanford, Jr.,  1,235,000  800,000 Iowa State,  986,513  440,406 Northwestern,  953,370  533,394 Purdue,  929,983  329,790 Princeton,  839,316  402,533

Goals--(first period) Hills, 12.45; Armour, 15.04; (second period) Van Nostrand, 30s. Penalties--Griggs (2m.) for tripping; Griggs (2m.) for illegal checking; Scully (2m.) for tripping. Referee--Ernest Garron, Hockey Club. Time of periods--20 minutes.

Brown Alumni Dinner at Copley.

Over a thousand Brown alumni are expected to gather at the annual Sons of Brown dinner at the Copley-Plaza on Tuesday, January 23, at 6.30 o'clock. This year, through the co-operation of the several Brown University alumni associations in New England, the event will not be confined to Boston men, but will be open to every alumnus in New England. Charles Evans Hughes has promised to be present and give an address. President W. H. Faunce, of Brown University, will speak in behalf of the university, and Governor Samuel W. McCall is expected to represent the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in an address to the gathering. Judge Arthur L. Brown, of the United States District Court, who filled the chair of toastmaster at the last commencement luncheon, has been invited to speak. An informal gathering will take place at the Copley-Plaza immediately preceding the dinner at 5.30.

Princeton Needs $11,000,000.

An endowment of $11,000,000 for the present and prospective needs of Princeton is included in the plans of President Hibben as set forth in his annual report. A committee of members of the board of trustees and of the graduate council has been appointed to raise $3,000,000 necessary for the immediate need of the university.

This endowment provides for the professorial salaries and the university library. The increase in the salaries of the professors has been $69,515 during the past years, and this will require $2,500,000 to provide sufficient income. The other $500,000 will be devoted to the libraries.

The other needs which President Hibben regards as indispensable total an additional endowment of $7,925,000. This includes $1,000,000 to provide for increase in salaries, $800,000 for an increase in preceptorial instructors, $500,000 for scholarships and $3,000,000 for the engineering department. An addition is planned to McCosh Hall which will require $150,000.

This sum of $11,000,000 is quite within the reach of Princeton as shown by the increase in the incomes of other universities in the past ten years listed in the following table: University  1915  1905 Harvard,  $3,805,428  $2,501,171 Cornell,  3,139,530  1,020,500 Minnesota,  3,033,891  486,853 Columbia,  2,920,031  1,586,309 Pennsylvania,  2,903,162  580,599 Illinois,  2,844,541  858,697 California,  2,784,042  943,837 Wisconsin,  2,758,118  852,901 Michigan,  2,535,260  759,957 Chicago,  2,132,012  1,186,075 Yale,  1,777,134  900,929 Ohio State,  1,466,120  477,610 Missouri,  1,311,364  346,836 Nebraska,  1,309,752  431,250 Leland Stanford, Jr.,  1,235,000  800,000 Iowa State,  986,513  440,406 Northwestern,  953,370  533,394 Purdue,  929,983  329,790 Princeton,  839,316  402,533

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