Word: awarders
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...spellbinder before juries, he won the celebrated alienation-of-affection suit known as Woodhouse v. Woodhouse. For his client, a lowly soap salesman's daughter wooed and won, then spurned, by the son of one of Vermont's wealthiest, haughtiest families, Austin wangled a record jury award: $465,000, a high price for affection-especially in Vermont. (The judge cut it down...
First prize of $7,500 (and a $750 regional award) went to 27-year-old Bruce Walker, Navy veteran and Harvard architecture student. Second, third and fourth prizes went to Ralph Rapson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology architecture professor ($5,750), Minneapolis' Wallace S. Steele ($3,250), and North Carolinian George Matsumoto...
...Brattle, Theatre Company handles this comedy admirably, living up to the reputation which it has earned since its origin as an undergraduate organization four years ago. For the title role it has imported Sam Jaffe, winner of the International Film Festival Award for the best male performance of 1950. Mr. Jaffe's talents are evident; his Tartuffe reeks with the hypocritical piety with which the role is endowed. Yet the Brattle Company's caliber is such that Jaffe outshines no other player...
Bruce M. Walker 1D won the first prize of $7,500 with a home designed for living in the Northwest. Honorable mentions and awards of $500 went to two alumni and two graduates of the School of Design. They were Harold E. Blewett 2D, Richard H. Wheeler 3D, and Robert L. MacKintosh '50 1D (who received their award as a team), and Ernest Wright...
From now on every scholarship applicant will be considered automatically for a job, if he wants to work and his financial problems are not solved by a scholarship award. Or it he doesn't want a job, he can get a loan--all on the strength of one application to the single office...