Word: medal
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...School Of Architecture will exhibit the work of its students at the annual convention of the American Institute of Architects at Washington. Only the leading American Schools exhibit at this convention. Among the designs will be those of Alan McDonald '12, who last year won the medal offered by the American Institute of Architects for the best work done in the architectural course in the University. As these works will be sent on to Washington immediately, they will not be placed upon exhibition at Robinson Hall for a month or more...
...President and Fellows of Harvard College, annbunce the Boylston Medical Prizes, which are open to public competition, for the best dissertation on the results of original research in medicine, the subject to be chosen by the writer. For the year 1915 a prize of $300 and the Boylston Prize Medal is offered, preference being given to dissertations which exhibit original work. If no dissertation is considered worthy of the prize, the award may be withheld...
...President and Mrs. Lowell tonight at 9 o'clock. This year is the first time that the Institute has held its sessions in Boston. The first official meeting will take place tomorrow and will be followed by a dinner at the Harvard Club of Boston. The Institute presents a medal each year to the greatest and most productive American in some one branch of the Fine Arts. Each of the arts is taken in turn in successive years and nine years are thus necessary for the complete cycle. This year the medal will be awarded to the author...
...papers concerning the significance of changing atomic volume. He is a member of the International Commission on Atomic Weights. His many honors include degrees from twelve universities and membership in many of the leading scientific societies of Germany, Sweden, and the United States. He was awarded the Davy Medal by the Royal Society of London in 1910 and the Willard Gibbs Medal by the American chemical Society in 1912. The London Medical Society awarded him the Faraday medal in 1911, and he was probably the first American to be offered a permanent chair in a German university, an offer which...
...Lloyd McKim Garrison Prize, consisting of $100 and a silver medal, for "the best poem on a subject or subjects annually to be chosen and announced by a Committee of the Department of English," will this year be given for a poem suggested by the subject, National Defense. A competitor may interpret this subject as he pleases, for it is not intended to mean only defense of the United States. He is expected to choose his own title under the general topic. Each poem should not exceed 50 lines, should bear an assumed name, and should be accompanied...