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  1. In 1902, Woodrow Wilson became Princeton's 13th president. During his term of office (1902–10) plans for building the Graduate College were finalized, and what had been the College of New Jersey began to grow into a full-scale university.

  2. 27 de jun. de 2020 · Wilson College to remove Woodrow Wilson photo from dining hall wall. An enlarged photograph of U.S. President Woodrow Wilson throwing out the first pitch at a baseball game will be removed from the wall of a dining hall at Wilson College, one of the residential colleges at Princeton University.

  3. Princeton: 1890–1910. In 1900, after two years of teaching at Wesleyan University, Woodrow Wilson and family packed their bags and moved to New Jersey, where he accepted a professorship at his alma mater, Princeton University. Although Wilson had been happy in Connecticut, he still felt that he was not achieving his full academic and ...

  4. 1 de ago. de 2020 · Woodrow Wilson was an American politician who served as the 28th President of the United States from 1913 to 1921. Before becoming president, he was the 34th Governor of New Jersey; and prior to that he was a political science professor and the 13th President of Princeton University.

  5. 3 de feb. de 2016 · By Deborah Yaffe. Published in the February 3, 2016 Issue. 2. A century after throwing out the ceremonial first pitch for Game 2 of the 1915 World Series, Woodrow Wilson, baseball in hand, smiles from the wall of the Wilcox dining hall — cheerful, confident, and twice as big as life. A member of the Class of 1879, Wilson spent 24 of his 67 ...

  6. Wilson became a prominent 1912 presidential contender immediately upon his election as Governor of New Jersey in 1910. Already famous as president of Princeton and as a leading intellectual, his political stature soared after he defeated the state's political bosses and emerged as a national leader of the Progressive movement to reform America.

  7. 27 de jun. de 2020 · Originally published in the Washington Post on June 27, 2020. A 2015 photo of the then-Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. (Mel Evans/AP) The Princeton University Board of Trustees voted on Friday to remove Woodrow Wilson’s name from the university’s School of Public and International Affairs. It ac...