Word: awarders
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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Aspiring tenors and sopranoswho would like a free trip to Italy and back, together with $1,200 for a year's expenses, may apply for the annual award now offered for the first time by the Caruso Association Memorial Foundation. The successul applicant myst be an American citizen or citizeness, must be between 20 and 27 years of age, must be able to sing the complete roles of at least three full-length opera, must have general education, dramatic ability, a serious attitude, must need financial assistance, must pass a voice trial. The Foundation already has a capital...
With the close of the spring track season, announcement was made last night of the award of two silver cups to the leading pole vaulters in the University and Freshman squads. The cup for the University vaulter, the Haydock cup, was awarded for one year to Montgomery Meigs Atwater '26, of Basin, Montana. The Freshman cup, a cup offered for the first time this year by R. W. Harwood '20, pole vault coach and former Harvard vaulter, to the Freshman showing the greatest improvement and the best spirit during the season, has been awarded to Robert Soutter...
...addition to the endowment of the School of Journalism of Columbia University, the late Joseph Pulitzer provided for the establishment of a number of prizes. Under the provisions of the bequest three prizes, one of $1000 and two of $500 will be awarded for the best history of the services rendered to the public by the American press during the year 1924, provided always that the essays received are deemed of sufficient merit to justify an award. Manuscripts sent in for competition must reach the hands of the Secretary of Columbia University not later than February...
Ruhr miners, locked out by their employers (TIME, June 2), accepted the award of Dr. Syrup, arbitrator of the German Ministry of Labor, for a 5% increase hi wages, a special overtime agreement valid until Nov. 30. The miners returned to work...
...polemics, occasioned by the award in 1923 of the John Armstrong Chaloner Paris Art Prize to Miss Erna Lange (Elizabeth, N.J.), reËchoed last week when her belated confession of plagiarism was made public. A year ago Miss Lange's painting, Lament, was alleged to tie strikingly like one called The Lament, by James Williams, English artist, although at the time Miss Lange stoutly maintained that she had never even seen the alleged original. She seems meanwhile to have recalled that she did see it, and upon her admission Mr. Chaloner has magnanimously come forward with the announcement that...