Word: competitor
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...been awarded to Mr. John Fredrick Ballard, of Nucla, Colo., A.M. 1911, a second year student in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in 1911-12, for a play in four acts entitled "Believe me, Xantippe." By the terms of this prize Mr. Ballard as the successful competitor is awarded $250 and is promised a production of the play within a stated time. In addition the Harvard University Library is given $250 for the purchase of books on the history of the English stage...
...subject approved by this committee, and (2) of such other evidence of scholarship as may be accessible. In special circumstances the committee may, at its discretion, dispense with the requirement of the thesis. In the award no account will be taken of the financial means of the competitor; and no award will be made in case the theses offered are not of sufficient merit. The editors of the Harvard Studies in Classical Philology are to have the right to publish the thesis of the successful candidate...
...prize which Mr. Wilmot has so generously offered, there are two other prizes in dramatic composition available. The John Craig prize is open to undergraduates of Harvard College and of Radcliffe College and, under limitations, to graduates of both. By the terms of the prize the successful competitor is given $250 and is promised a production of the play within a stated time. In addition the Harvard University Library is given $250 for the purchase of books on the history of the English stage...
...done a great deal toward perfecting the material for future University teams. A man does not have to be a preparatory school star in order to make the team; for the work which Freshmen do in preparation for their own team brings out the good qualities of each competitor and gives any man an opportunity to make the University team later...
...MacDowell Resident Fellowship was offered in 1910-11 by the Student Fund Committee of the MacDowell Club of New York City, with a stipend of six hundred dollars. The offer was renewed in 1911-12. The conditions of the fellowship state that the competitor must be a student in English 47, and must be a person whose means will not permit his work at Harvard or Radcliffe without this aid. The purpose of the fellowship is to aid persons who have already done dramatic writing of promise but who need some technical training in order to gain the desired results...