Word: basses
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...four soloists, Cynthia Sweeney deserves the most credit. She sang the many soprano solos with a remarkable accuracy and beauty that placed her considerably above her three colleagues. Paul Tibbetts, bass, gave an excellent rendition of his brief solo, and Marion Hawkes and Robert Gartside sang well enough, though Miss Hawkes seemed not entirely familiar with her part...
...soloists will be--Soprano: Cynthia Sweeney, Radcliffe '50; Alto: Marion Hawkes, New England Conservatory; Tenor; Robert Gartside, Harvard '50; and Bass: Paul Tibbetts, Harvard...
...losing Pitney Club members--oral advocates Ralph D. Buck, Jr., and Gurdon W. Wattles '42 and counsels John H. Bass '43; Charles B. Gates, Jr, '43; Philip P. Green, Jr.; Robert U. Holden '44; and Richard J. Jennings '40 --win a total...
...oral advocates for the Pitney Club will be Ralph D. Buck, Jr., and Gurdon W. Wattlos '42. Their counsels on the brief are John H. Bass '42, Charles B. Gates, Jr. '43, Philip P. Green, Jr., Robert U. Holden '44, and Richard J. Jennings...
Throughout the evening, each Club tried to out-do the other and make very clear who had the noblest tenor, the most resounding bass. Like the teams that followed them Saturday, the singers were "up" for this performance, and as one group finished their stint and marched off the stage, their rivals would do them one better and attack the first song with just a little more bravado and spirit. This successive trumping went on until the home club sang "Fair Harvard"; Yale had no more alma maters left and the concert was over...