Word: fellowships
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Sketches for the Julia Amory Appleton Fellowship in Architecture are to be made in Walter Hastings Hall today. The final drawings in the competition are due on April 7. This fellowship was established in 1906 by Mr. Charles F. McKim, of New York, through a gift of $20,000 as the permanent foundation for a travelling fellowship in architecture, to be called in memory of his wife the Julia Amory Appleton Fellowship, with an annual stipend...
...three plays are "Transfer of Property," by Mark W. Reed; "The Little Cards," by John Redhead Froome, holder this year of the McDowell Fellowship which is awarded for the best play submitted in English 47, and "The Reunion," by Eleanor Holmes Hinkley, a special student at Radcliffe. All three plays were written by members of English...
...three plays that have been chosen are "Transfer of Property," by Mark W. Reed; "The Little Cards," by John Redhead Froome, holder this year of the MacDowell Fellowship which is awarded for the best play submitted in English 47; and "The Reunion," by Eleanor Holmes Hinkley, a special student at Radcliffe. All three plays are serious in subject and mode of treatment. "Transfer of Property" deals with Christian Science and New England life in general. The second of the three plays, "The Little Cards," concerns the life of an immigrant on Ellis Island. Its plot reveals the famous Black Hand...
...constructive solution has been advanced. One policy alone seems fairly definite in the minds of the reformers, that the clubs as self-electing close corporations shall be abolished, and a thoroughly democratic system substituted in their place. In this way they hope to establish a wider basis for fellowship, where all men will meet on an equal basis, regardless of their social position and personal characteristics and build up a more wholesome social structure...
...outsider it seems unfortunate that such a radical course should be necessary. The experience of American universities has been that clubs are inevitable, that the natural tendency of individuals is to consolidate into small, close-knit groups. When the nature of these groups destroys the possibility of fellowship, they should be modified, but to end their existence entirely opposes the dictates of normal human instincts If possible, it seems far healthier that the small club groups should continue to exist side by side with the broader opportunities for common fellowship...