Word: success
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...secret of success in track lies in getting Freshmen interested in the work. With 13 events to choose from, every man can find an event suited to his particular qualifications. To play football a man must have strength above the ordinary, to play baseball he must have a good eye, in track work he must merely be sound physically. Slight men as a rule make the best distance runners and it has been demonstrated time and again that any man who will train for four years can make good time in the mile or two-mile...
...Freshman Red Book Board will hold a banquet at 6 o'clock this evening at the Hotel Thorndike. On account of the financial success achieved by the Red Book last spring, this is expected to be the largest dinner ever held by any Red Book Board. After dinner the meeting will adjourn to the Colonial Theatre, where the business manager has succeeded in getting the entire first two rows of the orchestra for the performance of Ziegfeld's Follies. Those who have not yet secured their tickets may do so at Westmorly 46 from H. H. Silliman...
...sign up and report for practice for the Haughton Cup scrub football series. Three new men reported at the field yesterday, and one full team was put through signal practice. It is necessary, however, that enough men for three teams report if the series is to be a success as it was last year. Contrary to the prevailing opinion, no experience whatever is necessary...
...blue-books at Leavitt & Peirce's so far, and not all of these have reported for practice. Obviously, unless more interest is taken, the series will be a failure. One team has already been formed from members of the second squad, but in order to make the series a success there must be at least three teams in the contest. Last year there were three teams which played a series of fifteen games...
...success of the Bureau's important work is well illustrated by the fact that the Chicago Credit Mans Association recently voted to adopt the Harvard system of accounts for retail grocers, as embodied in a former publication of the Bureau, and is now sending names of retailers to whom copies of the accounting system are to be sent. This accounting system has worked so well for retail grocers that the National Wholesale Grocers Association wishes to have the Bureau co-operate with its committee in creating a uniform accounting system for all wholesale grocers...