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...Bate Undergraduate Winner...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIVE WINNERS OF ANNUAL BOWDOIN PRIZES SELECTED | 5/23/1939 | See Source »

First undergraduate prize of $500 was won by Walter J. Bate '39 of Richmond, Indiana for a work called "Negative Capability: Keats' Conception of the Poetical Character." Henry D. Oyen '41 took a $200 award for his essay "Irregular War" and the $100 third place award went to Archibald B. Roosevelt '40 for "The Smith in Song and Saga...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FIVE WINNERS OF ANNUAL BOWDOIN PRIZES SELECTED | 5/23/1939 | See Source »

Richard H. Abernathy, Jr. '41 of Oak Park, Illinois; John D. Adams '39, of West Brattleboro, Vermont; Arthur B. Allen '41, of Charleston, West Virginia; David L. Anderson '41, of Portland, Oregon; Walter J. bate '39, of Richmond, Indiana; David W. Ballard '39, of Peterborough, New Hampshire; Fred Benyamin '41, of Columbia, South Carolina; Robert L. Berg '40, of Spokane, Washington; Charles P. Berger Jr. '41, of Jackson, Michigan; George F. Bogardus '39 of Des Moines, Iowa...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Awarding of 107 Scholarships Is Announced | 11/14/1938 | See Source »

...William R. Eyler, of Toledo, Ohio; Richard B. Finn, of Niagara Falls, New York; Ralph T. Fuller, of Hudson Ohio; Frederick W. Heckel, 3d., of Wrightsville, Pennsylvania; Lawrence M. Levinson, of Chattanooga, Tennessee; Allen E. Puckett, of Chicago Heights, Illinois; Joseph S. Harvin, of Fort Worth, Texas; Walter J. Bate, of Richmond, Indiana; Richard R. Beatty, Jr., of Kansas City, Missouri, Clayton J. Clawson, of Madera, California; Edger L. Haff, Jr., of Fort Edward, New York; Martin Lichterman, of Brooklyn, New York; William W. Minton, of Middletrow, Ohio; Walter P. Neumann, of New Britain, Connecticut; John Nevins, of New York...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FORTY-TWO STUDENTS ARE AWARDED PRIZES | 3/25/1936 | See Source »

...apple is a most mysterious fruit, agreed the British Association of Refrigeration when their President Sir William Bate Hardy told them, during their convention in London fortnight ago: "A stream of air which has passed over an apple . . . contains some subtle emanations which profoundly influence other vegetable forms. Potatoes placed in the stream either do not sprout or, if they do. the sprouts are misshapen dwarfs, more like warts than anything else. Bananas are excited to a much more rapid ripening than ordinarily. It is only elderly apples which pour out these emanations, and the effect on young unripe apples...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Elderly Apples | 11/21/1932 | See Source »

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