In the undergraduate department there are 40 university scholarships and about 4I) en dowed scholarships, ranging in stipends from $100 to $500. The endowment plans of the uni versity include the founding of over 100 schol arships in memory of Princeton men fallen in the service of the country in the recent Euro pean War. The university also offers re mission of part of the tuition charge to under graduates of small means and good scholar ship, but no student may hold a scholarship and remission of tuition at the same time. In the Graduate School there are the Jacobus Fellowship and 10 Proctor fellowships with a stipend of $1,000 each, and in addition about 35 fellowships paying $600 to $700, of which 16 are wholly or partly endowed. There are also a number of graduate scholarships paying $250 and $100 respectively.
A feature of the Graduate School is the Graduate College of residence, where the grad uate students may live amid surroundings which tend to emphasize the proper academic and social life of a community of young scholars. The Graduate College buildings were com pleted in 1912. In connection with this group of buildings is the Cleveland Memorial Tower, erected in memory of President Grover Cleve land.
The present University Library consists of the Chancellor. Green Library, built in 1872-73, and the Pyne Library (1896-97), which are united by a delivery room, 50 by 20 feet. The library collection in 1760, when the first cata logue was printed, consisted of 1,300 volumes. It now numbers about 410,000 volumes besides Nmphlets. This includes several special col lections and seminary libraries. The Garrett collection of Oriental manuscripts, the Garrett collection of coins, the Hutton collection of death masks and the Meirs collection of Cruikshankiana are also located in the library. There are six departmental libraries: art, as tronomy, biology, geology and palmontology, engineering and physics, each selected from the general collection and kept in the Art Museum and the several laboratories. These depart
mental libraries number over 31,000 volumes. The Princeton Theological Seminary Library of over 100,000 volumes is also open to students of the university.
The university campus contains about 700 acres. Besides Nassau Hall, the library and the Graduate College already mentioned, among the buildings are 16 dormitories, some of them of unusual architectural beauty; Dickinson and McCosh Halls, for classroom work; the Hal sted Observatory, the Infirmary, the Marquand Chapel, Alexander Hall; the John C. Green School of Science, used chiefly by the depart ment of civil engineering, the Chemical Labo ratory, Palmer Laboratory, for physics and electrical engineering, Guyot Hall, the labo ratory of the departments of geology and bi ology and Madison Hall, containing the uni versity dining halls.
The athletic equipment consists of the Pal mer Memorial Stadium, for intercollegiate foot ball, and track; University Field, for baseball; the Gymnasium; Lake Carnegie for rowing; the Brokaw swimming tank; Brokaw, Poe and Goldie fields, providing several baseball dia monds and soccer fields; and 28 tennis courts. Under the direction of the department of hy giene and physical education all freshmen are required to take regular exercise and members of the other classes are. encouraged to do so. At least three-fourths of all the undergraduates take part in some form of intercollegiate ath letics.
There are no secret societies at Princeton, but there are two literary societies, the Clio sophic and the American Whig, founded prior to the Revolution. Most of the upper class men are members of eating clubs. All fresh men and sophomores are required to board at the university dining halls.
The productive funds, according to the latest report, amount to $6,565,000. The annual income from all sources averages $839,300. The yearly attendance of students is about 1,600, and the faculty numbers about 200.