Word: help
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Material and coaches we have, and when we back our teams with a determination to help them in every possible way, instead of a spirit of over-confidence and indifference, we may have good grounds to hope that we will come through a very difficult season with the best of possible results...
...Winsor '13, a member of the Executive Committee of the Young Republicans of Massachusetts, explained how the Young Republicans were formed and what their work has been during the last few years. He asked any Republican supporters in Harvard who wanted to, to help them in Boston in getting all eligible voters registered. He also said that anyone who wishes to make political speeches in small towns or city wards would be welcomed...
...asks that students using the library be more careful where they throw cigarette stubs and refrain from throwing ink on the marble floors. The Widener Library is considered the finest college library in America, and the easiest way undergraduates can show their appreciation of this magnificent gift is to help preserve its beauties instead of trying to deface the interior decorations. In many German cities the scattering of papers or other refuse in public parks is punishable by a fine and even imprisonment. Such measures are obviously not necessary to impress upon the gentlemanly undergraduates of Harvard the untidy result...
...through you the many users of the Widener Library, to help us keep the building in good condition. For example--almost two thousand persons pass in and out of the north door and up and down the broad steps every day. It is natural that some should drop matches or cigarette stubs or scraps of paper as they go. But if everyone would use the receptacle at the top of the steps, placed there to hold such odds and ends, it would greatly improve the approach to the building. Moreover, tobacco, when wet by rain, makes an ugly stain...
...rest, the photographs are uniformly excellent and provide a competent pictorial review of University activities during the summer and early fall. The editorials are adequate, but one cannot help feeling sorry for the unfulfilled prophecy that "Harvard will continue to lead in preparedness." Take it all in all, the Illustrated bids fair to fulfill its prospectus as "an illustrated diary of the college year...