Word: success
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...afternoon spent in such a very profitable and pleasurable manner is to us, and we feel must be to the rest of the Regiment, only a source of greater enthusiasm and deeper interest in our military endeavors. Knowing that the success of this march is universally attributed to the unselfish work and interest which you have bestowed upon the Regiment, we wish to indicate our appreciation in some small way of your spirit which has acted, and which we are sure will continue to act, as the highest incentive to our own best efforts. A. H. ONTHANK, Corporal, 2G.B. PRIVATE...
...Junior class will hold its annual banquet in the Union on May 17 at 7 o'clock. The committee has arranged an attractive program which includes speeches and moving pictures, and is particularly desirous that everyone should come and make it a success. Tickets will be on sale in a few days at places to be announced later...
That an insufficient number of teams have enrolled to make the Leiter Cup Series practical intimates that baseball enthusiasts are pre-occupied with new interests, or are still in their winter torpor. Considering the immediate success of the new coaching staff, a baseball system similar to the football system may evolve this year. Under this stimulus aspirants for a hand in future puddings might be expected to practice on the Leiter cups. As efficiency is a desirable asset rather than a requirement, of the scrub teams, the restraint of training never forbids a "Leiter cupper" to enter where joy invites...
Rifle practice and Sunday marches, recent additions to the regimental schedule, fill in gaps in the Harvard organization which several publications have overlooked in their favorable comment. The Sunday marches will perform a valuable function if sufficient numbers take part. But the success of the experiment depends directly upon the proportion of the Regiment which will use this opportunity for practical experience...
...critic, he directed his education to the acquisition of an artist's technique, studying in the Royal Academy School of England, and also in France. It was not until his twenty-first year that he changed his career from painting to the stage. By the success of his debut (1874) in "Mary Stuart" it became evident that the stage was his natural field...