Word: successful
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...enough candidates have reported for the Freshman association football team, although practice has been held daily since Monday. If the season is to be a success it is absolutely imperative for more men to come out, whether they have had experience or not. It is not too late for unskilled men to win their numerals, if they will avail themselves of the opportunity offered by the early spring practice. All candidates for the team should report to Captain J. W. Feeney '17 at Soldiers Field this afternoon at 3 o'clock...
...quartets, one vocal and the other instrumental, have been engaged for the evening, and the meeting promises to be a success both in entertainment and in attendance...
...aims to have the teams self supporting; they will depend, not on subscription or subsidy, but on the sale of tickets to the debate against Princeton in Sanders Theatre Friday night. The tickets, which are twenty-five and fifty cents, will go on sale in Memorial Hall today. The success of the teams depends is no small measure on the size of the ticket sale. No man can do his best if he feels that his University is not behind him in his effort; and, conversely, a large audience of undergraduates inspires in the team the confidence that brings victory...
...candidates which filled the track-room and overflowed onto the stairs, heard the plans for the season outlined by Captain W. A. Barron, Jr., '14, and received brief general instructions from Coach Donovan. Captain Barron explained the spirit of enthusiastic determination and harmony which is absolutely necessary to the success of the team, and warned the men against the overconfidence which resulted in the loss of the Yale meet last spring. He urged candidates not to be backward in consulting the coaches about any trouble whatsoever which they feel to be interfering with their work. Coach Donovan brought...
...Hollis studied law for a time at the Harvard Law School, but finished his legal education under private instruction. Upon his admission to the Bar of New Hampshire in 1893, he entered state politics, affiliating himself with the Democratic party. As New Hampshire is a strongly Republican state, his success has been remarkable. He was elected to the United States Senate on the Democratic ticket in 1913, and is now one of the most influential of the younger senators, having served on several important committees...