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15 B-School Men Win Baker Prizes

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Fifteen second year Business School students have been awarded Baker Scholarships, it was announced yesterday.

The Baker Scholarships, the school's highest scholastic prizes, are awarded to the top five percent of each class on the basis of first year work. Every scholar gets a pin, and the awards carry a financial value if a student needs assistance.

They are named after George F. Baker, wealthy banker, who helped found the Business School.

The fifteen students are:

Arnold W. Bloom of Rhode Island State and Riverdale, N.J.; Jerry W. Brougher of the University of Texas and Calvert, Texas; Charles J. Christenson of Cornell and Chicago; Jerome H. Clark, of Amherst and Darien, Conn.; Arthur P. Contas '52 of Chestnut Hill; William J. Dickson, of the University of Arkansas and Rogers, Ark.; James A. Fowler, of Oxford and Cambridge, and Hempstead Heights, England.

Also named were Donald R. Gant, of the University of Pennsylvania, and Neptune, N.J.; Frank S. Gibbs, of Kings College, and Bockenham, Kent, England; Vincent M. Jolivet, of McGill, and Shawiningan Falls, Canada; Kenneth Kriegel, of Columbia and Englewood, N.J.; George H. Martin, of Williams, and Gleucoe, Ill.; Sidney R. Knafel '52 of Mount Vernon, N.Y.; Walter J. Salmon of The College of the City of New York and Manhattan; John P. Williamson, of the University of Toronto, and Toronto.

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