Word: pennock
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...Enoch Freeman Bradford '69, William Mitchell Kendall '76, Henry Osborn Taylor '78, Owen Wister '82, Henry Bromfield Cabot '83, John Downer Pennock '83, Robert Patterson Perkins '84, Lawrence Eugene Sexton '84, Egerton Leigh Winthrop '85, Herbert Lincoln Clark '87, Julian William Mack '87, Franklin Remington '87, Henry Pennypacker '86, James Madison Morton '91, Thomas William Lamont '92, Ellery Sedgwick '94, Howard Coonley '99, Grenville Clark '03, Benjamin...
...study of chemistry will benefit by the Stanley Bagg Pennock scholarship. Any senior specializing in this science with intent to make it his life work is eligible. He must show conscientious work and good grades. Unlike many awards, it is for no particular branch of the subject. This is encouragement for the steady, hard-working undergraduate, rather than for the man who is brilliant on tests, but unreliable in daily work. The reward is for efforts in college courses only, not for labor on a special outside subject...
That the scholarship should be offered to students of this sort is most desirable. They are the backbone of the University's scholastic reputation. It is the consistent workers who keep up the high standard. Pennock was just such a student. If the scholarship given in memory of him will develop men of his type, it will be most beneficial...
...given to that indigent senior student in college who, specializing in Chemistry and intending to follow a Chemical career, is judged by the Chemical faculty to be worthy of it through conscientious effort and reasonably high standing." The scholarship is to be known as "The Stanley Bagg Pennock Scholarship" and is given in memory of S. B. Pennock '15 by his father, John D. Pennock...
...Pennock is a well-known name to all graduates and undergraduates of the University. He entered college in the autumn of 1911 from the Hackley School. During his first year in college he played on the Freshman football team and for the remaining three years on the University eleven. For the years 1913 and 1914, he achieved a place on the All-America team. Pennock graduated in 1915, receiving his degree "cum laude" in Chemistry. For the six months following his graduation he was engaged in chemical research, working on a new process for chlorinating. He met his death...