Word: fosterers
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...such games can be of immense good. Publicity of the right sort does no harm. In the case of colleges more publicity is gained through football than through any other single means. As international sport events have proved their worth in furthering friendship between countries, so intersectional games should foster a finer and more sympathetic understanding among the colleges of the country. Harvard has been slow to take advantage of this. The fact that we shall become acquainted in 1922 with nine teams from nine states gives the new schedule a touch of the unusual that makes it decidedly welcome...
...Jewett had to some little extent got away from the beaten path and induced his actors to play the piece as high comedy, where for the most part it properly belongs. The third act, where Kate "stoops to conquer" was rendered with a most commendable grace and sureness. Percy Foster's "Mr. Hardcastle" was quite free from extravagance; "Tony Lumpkin" (Mr. Clive) and even boisterous "Diggory" (Mr. Johnston) were toned down to the proper key. "Mrs. Hardcastle" was exceptionally well played by Miss Esden. Unfortunately the performance was a long time reaching this level, and some of the earlier scenes...
Maine Anderson, of Dannebrog, Neb.; Paul Austin Chandler, of Hastings, Neb.; Walter Stanley Curtis, of Blackhead, Newfoundland; Frank Lowell Dunn, of Erie, Pa.; Irving Augustine Farrell, of Central Falls, R. I.; Jacob Fine, of Roxbury; Edward Wendell Foster, of Carthage, Mo.; Robert Norton Ganz, of Cambridge; Merrill Selden Frederick Greene, of Athens, Me.; Charles Teague Hunter, of Trenton, S. C.; Warren Johnson, of Boston; Wilfred Grant Jones, of Newark, O.; Frederic William Lathrop, of Carmel, Conn.; Herman Albert Lawson, of Newport, R. I.; Ashley Webster Oughterson, of Hall, N. Y.; Garnet Polydore Smith, of Cupids, Newfoundland; Franklin Chester Southworth...
...competition for the prizes offered by the Pollak Foundation for the best essays on a subject connected with economic problems of today closes December 31, and essays must be mailed on or before that date to Dr. William T. Foster '01, Director, Newton 58, Mass. No manuscripts sent after the above date will be considered. Three prizes, amounting to $2000, are offered. One prize of $500 will be awarded the best essay written by an undergraduate in college or in a school of college grade in the United States, $500 will go to a student in high school...
Manuscripts submitted in the competition for the Pollak Foundation prizes for the best essays on economic problems are due December 31, and must be mailed on or before that date to Dr. William T. Foster '01, Director, Newton 58, Mass. Three prizes, amounting to $2000, are offered. One prize of $500 will be awarded the best essay written by-an undergraduate in a college or in a school of college grade in the United States, $500 will be given to the student in high school or any other school of secondary grade, and $1000 to any student, without restriction, submitting...