Word: barnard
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Graduate students who are candidates for the higher degrees. 2. Students who have spent two years in Columbia College, or Barnard College, or in some other college of equivalent rank, and are candidates for the Degree of Bachelor of Science. 3. Graduates of high schools who have completed in the Department of Extension Teaching work equivalent to that offered by Columbia College or Barnard College in the first two years. 4. Students over twenty-one years of age, actively in business, and qualified to undertake certain courses, who may be admitted as special students but not as candidates...
...Executive committee, and a few invited guests will have supper at the Rand School, 140 East 19th street. A small reception for members of the New York Chapter will follow the supper. On Wednesday sessions will be held at Columbia University, by invitation of the Columbia and Barnard Chapters. Further discussion of chapter affairs will fill the morning, while after luncheon, in the university Commons, the Question Box session will take place, conducted by Miss Jessie W. Hughan, Questions should be submitted in writing beforehand...
D.M.D. -- Maxwell Leon Aronson, of Johannesburg, S. Africa; Cleophas Paul Bonin, of N. Grosvenordale, Conn.; Cyrus King Briggs, of Portland, Me.; Thomas Dalton Brown, Ph.B (Brown Univ.) 1903, of Boston; Arthur Benedict McCormick, A.B. 1909, of Waltham; Edward Russell Murphy, of Winchester; Herman Ashton Osgood, A.B. 1911, of Roxbury; Barnard Sagall, of Boston; Samuel Saul Sharfman, Hartford, Conn.; Barnet Maurice Wein, of Roxbury...
...from travel stories to text-books on economics. Among the most important of these are "Works," by Charles C. Grafton LL.B. '53; "Christian Life in the Modern World," by Francis G. Peabody '69; "Democracy of the Constitution," by Henry Cabot Lodge '71; "Paris War Days," by Charles Inman Barnard '74; Within Prison Walls," by Thomas Scott Osborne '84; "The Boston Symphony Orchestra," by M. A. DeWolfe Howe '87; "Clark's Field," by Robert Merrick '90; "The Judicial Veto," by Horace A Davis '91; "Boys of Eastmarsh," by Fisher Ames, Jr., '92; "The College Course and Preparation for Life," by Albert...
...York, before February 1, 1914, have just been announced. The author of the play accepted will be awarded a prize of $500, and the play will be produced at the Princess Theatre on. West 39th street. All undergraduates of the following eleven universities are eligible for the competition: Annapolis, Barnard, Bryn Mawr, Columbia, Cornell, Harvard, Pennsylvania, Princeton, Yale, Vassar, and West Point...