Word: fellowships
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Bennett (Philosophy of Religion) of Auburn Theological Seminary; Director Walter Ludwig of Pioneer Youth of America; Economics Instructor Patrick M. Malin of Swarthmore College; Field Secretary Paul Porter of the League for Industrial Democracy; Graduate Student E. B. Shultz of Union Theological Seminary; Industrial Secretary Charles Webber of the Fellowship of Reconciliation. Its other members: Harold F. Clark, Josephine Little, Lois MacDonald, Mildred I. Morgan, Clara Taylor, Sidnev David Gamble (Ivory Soap family...
...were born in India, sons of a missionary. Both got their educations in the U. S. In 1918, while Robert, the elder, was working on vitamins for the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Roger, while studying for his Ph. D. at the University of Chicago, won a Fleischmann Yeast fellowship. Roger asked Robert what line of research he ought to follow...
...standing order for new compositions from the Library of Congress), he would play on the violin, the organ or the piano. Then he would sing old college ballads, sentimental ditties or long songs for men only. His favorite stories were Elizabethan. He maintained active membership in the Royal & Joyous Fellowship of Elbow-benders. He doted on doggerel. Example...
Morris Ploscowe '25 has been awarded a research fellowship by the Social Science Research Council for the year 1931-32, it was announced recently. Donald Holmes Wallace '24 was given a conditional fellowship in the same group of awards. These men are members of the seventh of a group of research fellows appointed by the Council in carrying out a program begun in 1925 embracing fields in the social sciences such as economics, political science, social psychology, cultural anthropology in addition to related subjects such as geography, law, and education. This year the Council has awarded fellowships valued...
...Press and Powers of Chicago. He had made good on his promise to enter the territory of Alphonse ("Scarface Al") Capone "without gun permit or bodyguard" (TIME, March 2). Sent by a Manhattan organization called the Anti-Gang Rule League he had addressed a Chicago body called the Universal Fellowship Foundation, which sings songs between its dinner courses, including a non-flag-waving version of "The Star Spangled Banner." In a sensational speech, Cartoonist Crosby-short, stocky, jut-jawed-had cried: "Capone . . . has one man right here in Chicago to whom he cannot sell protection nor security at any price...