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Word: awarded (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...Wagnalls bequest authorized the memorial's six trustees to award scholarships of $100 a semester to every Lithopolis (or Bloom Township) boy & girl who wanted to go to college, no matter what his grades or promise. Last week the first two scholarships had been approved: Marilyn Good, 18, would study the organ at Ohio's Otterbein College, and Donald Speakman, 18, was planning to take up farming at Ohio State. But Lithopolitans were worried. As Mrs. Mabel Stevenson, the memorial's secretary, said: "With all this new money, you can't tell just what kind...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Lithopolis Strikes It Rich | 8/2/1948 | See Source »

...Nobel award is still the world's outstanding literary prize, and the only one of true international importance. Some critics have complained that the awards have concentrated on authors of distinction in small countries and have overemphasized a kind of contemporary fiction purporting to show simple peasants living close to the soil...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bargain | 6/14/1948 | See Source »

...Ibsen, Hardy, Gorky, Chekhov, Conrad, Henry James, Edwin Arlington Robinson, Arnold Bennett, Willa Gather, Swinburne, George Meredith, Zola, Proust, Joyce, H. G. Wells, D. H. Lawrence, Rainer Maria Rilke. Its greatest oversight: although it was established in 1901, and Tolstoy did not die until 1910, it never gave an award to the greatest novelist of them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bargain | 6/14/1948 | See Source »

...regional scholarships, offered jointly by the college and local Radcliffe clubs are also included in the Massachusetts list. Miss Janet Fernald of Hanover received the Old Colony Radcliffe Club award and Miss Cynthia Wales of Marblehead won the North Shore Radcliffe Club scholarship...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Incoming '52 Receives Fifty Scholarships | 6/9/1948 | See Source »

...some pretty substantial new plays, true though it was that many of them (Mister Roberts, Command Decision, The Heiress) had previously been books. And there was, at last, what almost everybody regarded as a substantial young playwright: Tennessee Williams, whose Streetcar Named Desire won both the Critics' Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize-a feat achieved only once before, by William Saroyan's The Time of Your Life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Noble Entrance, Feeble Exit | 6/7/1948 | See Source »

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