Word: enthusiasm
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Common Room this evening at 7 o'clock. Captain E. A. Teschner '17, R. G. Harwood '09, the high-jumper, and W. A. Barron '14, former captain of the University track team and quarter-miler, are to speak. This meeting will be held for the purpose of arousing more enthusiasm in track among the members of 1920. All Freshmen are invited to be present...
...special students. The number drilling next year will probably show some increase over these figures because of the advantages offered by the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, the beginning of intensive work in the advanced course, and the general feeling of unrest throughout the country with its corresponding increase of enthusiasm for military matters in the student body...
...pleased to see how quickly the newcomer like Mr. Lloyd is assimilated to the Harvard environment, and especially pleased to see the eagerness with which he takes up the gauntlet for his new alma mater. As with most converts, unfortunately, his enthusiasm has lead him far afield...
...opinion that in case of war the members of the R. O. T. C. who are physically fit will probably receive commissions," General Leonard Wood, M.D. '84, stated yesterday to a CRIMSON reporter. "The enthusiasm and interest in the Reserve Officers' Training Corps is spreading and growing in a way that is fine to see. A great many applications for admittance are constantly pouring in. The number now coming in from Bowdoin, Wesleyan, Hamilton, and Union colleges is especially noteworthy. At Princeton the total enrolment has reached 863; and the students of the college have just petitioned for universal military...
Messrs. Roger Amory 10 and R. P. Danner '13 write respectively on "Enthusiasm in Flying" and "Harvard Men Help Tommy in Mesopotamia." Though Mr. Amory gives us a satisfactory treatise, it is marred by occasional crudities in composition. It fails to arouse live interest in the reader. Mr. Danner does better, though he too is occasionally careless in his writing. Also, why does he call it "Harvard Men--"? There is absolutely no mention of a University organization or even of individual Harvard men. However, despite the article's shortcomings it is full of genuine interest and holds the attention...