Word: success
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...financial campaign to support the work of Phillips Brooks House has so far been attended by only partial success. Only a few of those who know the Brooks House well and have been among its loyal friends in the past are back in Cambridge this fall. These men have responded to the call, but the need is greater than they realize. So it is to the new men, Harvard Freshmen and men of the S. A. T. C. not vitally connected with the University that the canvassers are forced to look...
...following days and weeks, the S. A. T. C. will be on trial. Whether or not it meets the test depends squarely on the members of the Corps. Success can be realized only through the support of all its constituent parts; it is up to Harvard men, both new and old, to demonstrate that the University is adaptable to every change, and that it stands ready to successfully aid the government in any and all moves deemed necessary for the prosecution...
...then up to the lower classes to make Class Day a success. From the Juniors fifty ushers are needed for duty in the Yard, from the Sophomores and Freshmen must come the crowd to fill the Sever stands. It is not much that the Seniors, are asking of us and it is the least we can do to make their departure from College as pleasant as possible. Many of us many never have a chance to see their own class graduate, some of us will never graduate at all, but everyone should make use of the opportunity to see this...
...grievance, I feel that my close association with the work of the Corps during the past two years makes it incumbent upon me to voice my dissent. No one who has followed the work as closely as I have can fail to realize in how great a measure its success is due to the untiring devotion of the volunteer instructors who have taken up the task which many of them would have been glad to avoid, and carried it forward with conspicuously good results. They have given unsparingly of their time and strength, and it is highly unfortunate that...
...central authority which was not strong enough. The abolition of the former and the strengthening of the latter by the appointments of such men as Major Lane to the position of Regimental Adjutant and of Lieutenant Morize to that of Assistant to the Commandant has assured the complete success of the Corps for the remainder of the year...