Word: success
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...order to insure the success of the Junior dance this year the co-operation of the whole class is needed. Since only Union members will be admitted, it is essential that all Juniors who do not belong to the Union should join at once. Special attention is being given to the selection of food and music, which will be the best obtainable. Every effort is being made to reduce the expense of the dance, and for this reason everyone is requested to refrain from giving flowers to their guests. The date of the dance will be announced later...
...coach of a school or college team, although he did at one time help with the coaching at St. Mark's School, having under him there R. S. Potter '12, captain of the 1912 University baseball team. Last spring he coached the Georgia Military Institute nine with great success...
Four hundred volunteers for the proposed Harvard Battalion must be enlisted by Friday. If the delegates who are going to New York to interview General Wood on Saturday can report that this number has enrolled, the success of the battalion is assured, as General Wood will then endeavor to provide an officer for drill and equipment free of charge...
Only 54 candidates for the interclass football series reported at the Locker Building yesterday afternoon, including 18 Freshmen, 22 Sophomores, 8 Juniors, and 6 Seniors. More men are urged to report from all four classes, but particularly for the 1916 and 1917 teams, in order to insure the success of the series. The candidates yesterday afternoon were given blackboard talks and signal drills, and the same program will be followed today. The two preliminary games, Seniors and Freshmen and Juniors and Sophomores, will be played tomorrow afternoon...
...projected plan will be entirely voluntary, and will depend for its success or failure upon the amount of individual patriotism displayed. The company will have a great advantage over such organizations as Battery A, because it will require men to sign up for only one year instead of three. At Yale a voluntary artillery corps was recently formed, and 486 men enlisted for three years, enough to form a battalion of four batteries. In view of the splendid showing made by Harvard men at the summer camps--a showing better than was made by either Yale or Princeton...