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Requirements for concentration ordinarily include the intention of becoming a professional in architecture, landscape architecture, or regional planning, a certain amount of natural appreciation for form and color and the ability to visualize space, and third-year mathematics and elementary physics...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Architectural Sciences | 4/18/1947 | See Source »

...ranks of the ASTP unit as well as the College will be increased by the return of about 50 former members of the third-year ROTC who have just finished basic training and are awaiting vacancies in OCS. These men will take Military Science under First Lieutenant Thomas G. Burke, FA, and College courses from a list which the Army considers valuable, and will also have administrative duties...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 160 Men Graduate as Summer Term Ends | 10/22/1943 | See Source »

...Stanford is no ordinary naval expert. He has been a seadog since the age of two, knows naval history backward and forward, is no mean amateur expert. He has not yet been on a ship bigger than a destroyer, but he knows the sea, "which is more important." A third-year student at Manhattan's progressive Lincoln School, he will be 16 years old come January...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Army & Navy - Tactically Logical Cruiser | 1/11/1943 | See Source »

...Robert Fletcher Rogers Prizes of $35 (first prize) and $15 (second prize), for the best papers presented before the Mathematical Club during the academic year 1941-42, were awarded respectively to George H. Handelman, first-year graduate student, of Pittsburgh, Pa., and Frank M. Stewart, third-year graduate student, of Auburn...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES PRIZE AWARDS | 6/25/1942 | See Source »

...Walter J. Bate (Proctor), of Richmond, Ind., for an essay "A Rejection of Intensity: The Prosodic Development of Keats from May to September, 1819"; $300 to Stephen E. Whicher (Teaching Fellow), of Amherst, Mass., for an essay entitled "Emerson and the Divinity School Address"; $300 to John E. Sawyer, third-year graduate student, of Worcester, Mass., for an essay "Pierre Laval: The Diplomacy of Disaster 1934-1936"; $300 to Edwin Hewitt (Teaching Fellow), of Chicago, III., for an essay "On a Novel Type of Topological Space"; $500 to Monroe Engel '42, of Mt. Vernon, N. Y., for an essay "Gerhard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY ANNOUNCES PRIZE AWARDS | 6/25/1942 | See Source »

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