Word: awarding
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Dates: during 1910-1910
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These prizes, of $375 each, were founded in 1909 by Mrs. S. C. Sears, in memory of her son, J. M. Sears, Jr., '00, a graduate of the Law School. They are "to be awarded annually to students of the school who shall have done the most brilliant work in classes." The Faculty of the Law School have decided to award them to the four men who have completed their work during the preceding year with the highest standing, and who have not received Langdell Scholarships...
...undergraduates only. Yet, when a man is so far advanced as to take courses of a "graduate" nature, he must expect to be measured by standards not of progress, but of attainment; for real scholarship means knowledge and the power to use knowledge. It would be as reasonable to award an A to a man who has merely made progress in a course as it would to award an "H" to a football player who is promising, but who has not yet made good. And though the value of "outside" interests is today universally recognized, the man of scholastic ambitions...
...submit their plays for the Craig prize, the terms of which were printed in Tuesday's CRIMSON, as well as for the Dramatic Club competition. Plays may be submitted for both; and in the event of one author winning both competitions with the same play, he may accept whichever award he prefers...
...qualifying examinations for the Rhodes Scholarship will be held in Room 207, Administration Building, Harvard Medical School, on October 25 and 26, 1910. The stipend of the scholarship is $1,500 per year for three consecutive years. The final award will probably be made in December, 1910, on the basis of these examinations, and the successful candidate will matriculate at the University of Oxford in October...
...also voted to award H. Guild '10, of Medford, the University track...