Word: consists
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Announcement of prizes to be awarded Freshman debaters this year was made Friday by Asa E. Phillips, Jr. '34, president of the Debating Council. The awards, given by T. Jefferson Coolidge to stimulate undergraduate interest in debating and public speaking, consist of six silver medals and a cash prize of $50, the former to be given to those taking part in the triangular debate with Yale and Princeton, and the latter to be given for the best speech delivered in the tryouts for this meet...
...program of tonight's concert will consist of Beethoven's first three string quartets, Opus 18, Nos. 1, 2, and 3. The remaining concerts of the series will complete a cycle, in chronological order, of all the composer's 17 quartets. These concerts will be given on the following Thursday evenings: November 23, December 14, January 18, February 15, March 15, and April...
...writing on the subject will consist mostly of brief testimonials by various prominent members of the University and others who knew him outside his academic activities. As the list of contributors is not yet complete no names will be released until later. In addition to these comments it is expected that quotations from the president's own works will be printed and a half-tone photograph of him will make the frontispiece...
...election committee will consist of last year's Junior Eight and four elected and three ex-officio graduate members of the Society. The ex-officio members are President Conant, Dean Hanford, and Crane Brinton '19, corresponding secretary of the Harvard chapter. The elected members, who hold the position for only one year, are Mason Hammond '25, instructor and tutor in Ancient Languages, Charles C. Abbott '28, instructor and tutor in Economics, Seth T. Gano '07, graduate treasurer of Phi Beta Kappa, and Richard C. Curtis '16, prominent Boston lawyer...
...Verdun!" Behind Belgium and Luxembourg, whom France trusts, Marshal Foch and General Weygand thought it sufficient to scatter only small forts, backed by what they decided to call '"Flying Fortresses." These, a post-War innovation, consist of trainloads of motorized trench digging and barbed-wire stringing machines of Gargantuan size. In three days each "Flying Fortress" is supposed to turn out a complete system of front line trenches for the sector which it covers and within a week all the "Flying Fortresses" working together can dig France in from the North Sea to the Sarre...