Word: prized
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Dates: during 1910-1910
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...athletics from professionalism, it might be well to consider professionalism in scholarship. Whereas the athlete after months of faithfulness and perseverance earns the right to wear the University insignia, and looks upon this as sufficient reward, the compensation most known to the public for scholarship here is a money prize. Perhaps this difference in the kind of reward given to athletes and to scholars may in a slight measure account for the difference of esteem in which the two are held by college...
...Lloyd McKim Garrison Prize, consisting of $100 and a silver medal for "the best poem on a subject or subjects to be chosen and announced annually by a committee of the Department of English," will be given this year for a poem on any of the following topics: "Socialism," "William Makepeace Thackeray (born July 18, 1811)" and "Boston, as Seen from Harvard Bridge." No poem may exceed 50 lines: each should bear an assumed name, and should be accompanied by a sealed letter containing the true name and the assumed name of the author. The prize is open only...
...debate for the Pasteur Medal Prize, which has been announced for December 15, will be held in the Fogg Lecture Hall on Wednesday, December 14. The following seven speakers have been retained for the final contest: A. A. Berle '13, A. D. Brigham '12, J. A. Donovan '12, C. B. Randall '12, O. Ryan '11, M. Surawitz '13 and I. A. Wyner...
...Pasteur Medal Prize was founded in 1898 by Baron Pierre de Coubertin and is awarded to the best speaker in an annual debate on a subject drawn from contemporary French politics...
...woman that the club has acted. It is, besides, a piece actually written by a student in the University here and now. It was a part of Miss Stanwood's work in English 47; it was one of the plays submitted in the recent competition for the Craig Prize; and as it was plainly unsuited to such a theatre as the Castle Square, it passed readily and happily to the Dramatic Club...