Word: honored
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Immediately preceding the lecture a small dinner will be given in the Committee Room of the Union in Honor of the lecturer. The following men have been invited: Philip Hale, dramatic critic of the Boston Herald; E. A. Weeks Jr. '22, of the Atlantic Monthly; D. T. W. McCord '22, poet and essayist; Bernard Barnes '30, assistant managing editor of the CRIMSON, A. R. Blackburn '29, president of the Lampoon; L. T. Grimm '29, vice-president of the Union; Theodore Hall '29, secretary of the Advocate; J. H. Sachs '29, dramatic editor of the CRIMSON David Sommers '26, graduate secretary...
...move toward wider, cutting privileges at Yale, recently initiated by the Student Council, culminated yesterday in the granting of unlimited cuts to all honor men in the three upper classes. Harvard students will recognize in this decision the establishment at New Haven of a modified Dean's List...
...sponsors of the Company point to the millions of dollars spend by Americans each year on the musical education of children, and say that after they are educated, these young people have little opportunity to display their talents adequately. For, with few exceptions, the American artist has little honor in his own country. It is desired to establish the fact that American artists are as good as any, and that the United States can provide a training equal to that secured anywhere else...
...fitting, therefore, that when Duquesne Light planned its new development, the company should honor a former official, a famed son of Pittsburgh. Entirely fitting, too, was the invitation to Lawyer Reed's son to speak at the dedication. Smart son of a smart father, and smart namesake of a smart granduncle, David A. Reed, 47, has many a distinction. He is a close friend of Andrew W. Mellon. He is, at the moment, both senior and junior U. S. Senator from Pennsylvania, because Philadelphia's Vare has not yet been admitted to the U. S. Senate...
...President Coolidge awarded Miss Berry the Roosevelt Memorial Association medal "For Distinguished Service" (TIME, May 25, 1925). Last week. Miss Berry received yet another honor and reward. She won the annual prize of $5,000 given by Pictorial Review magazine to the U. S. woman who has made the greatest contribution to art, letters, science or the social sciences. None doubted that Miss Berry would immediately turn the $5,000 to profit for her school...