Word: phase
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Advocate will offer this year a prize of twenty-five dollars for the best short story on some phase of college life written by a student in the University. Graduate and undergraduate students alike may compete, the only limitation being that the story must be written by some one at present a member of the University and must not exceed 5,000 words in length. The competition will be judged by a committee of three members of the Faculty to be announced later and will close in January...
...attack on the Somme may be regarded as the turning point of the war. The period of preparation will now be succeeded by a continued offensive. The evidence is unmistakable that the war is entering upon a final and triumphant phase for the Allies. The long and glorious resistance of the French at Verdun has been relieved. The Germans can no longer press the Russians in the east or the Austrians seriously threaten the Italians in the south. The big push...
...necessary for genuine information concerning various opportunities. What is lone is done in a haphazard manner. If a professor is generous with his time and thought, he can help scores of students every year; but if he is too preoccupied with his own academic duties, he may neglect this phase of his responsibilities altogether...
...service of the Bank in foreign fields. It is proposed to broaden and generalize these opportunities so that ultimately every student will be enabled and expected to do some field work in that particular department of business life in which he is especially interested. In almost every phase of 'big business' in New York today the need is experienced for more expert and thorough training; and it is hoped in the advanced courses of the School to bring about a close co-operation between the corps of instructors on the one hand and the business community on the other...
...memorabilia include dramatic prints and portraits, manuscripts, playbills, magazines, plays and biographies which Mr. Shaw has been collecting ever since his graduation in 1869. The cataloguing and indexing of the mass of material has been so systematic that almost any phase of dramatic activity during the past three centuries may be referred to at an instant's notice. The virtually complete annals of the Boston and New York stages are represented, while the theatrical history of the rest of the United States and of England are exceptionally well shown. France and Germany are not neglected. Especially noteworthy are the dramatic...