Word: successful
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Harvard for many a month. President Lowell's tribute to Dr. Williams' ideals, which are to be carried out at the new Pulitzer School at Columbia, was worth going a long way to hear. We feel particularly proud of Dr. Williams' grateful acknowledgement of the toast drunk to the success of his new school: "Your tribute has moved me more deeply than any I have yet received." The CRIMSON wishes him every success in a venture where the idealism which he possesses will be of the utmost value...
...Garcelon L.'95, Graduate Treasurer of the Athletic Association, J. A. McLaughlin 1G., captain of the team last year, and A. P. Cushing '78. All gave interesting reminiscences of their past experiences in fencing, showed how rapidly the sport is increasing in popularity, and wished the team success for the ensuing year...
...must be able to answer these and at the same time impress upon his employer the necessity of the future growth of the enterprise. Furthermore he must be able to make recommendations, graphic charts, and reports which will convince a board of directors that the project will be a success. In other words, the engineer must have a constructive and administrative mind. It is conceded that 75 per cent. of the successful engineers are those who are combining executive ability with their technical training, and meeting the approval of their employers, the business...
Perhaps it is not an altogether just feeling which pronounces the success or failure of a Harvard athletic season arbitrarily according to the result of the Yale race, game, or meet. But such is undoubtedly the case. Therefore, we must wait until next week before offering unreserved congratulations to the 1912 track team. We can, however, say that the team won a glorious and hard-fought triumph over Dartmouth on Saturday. May the confidence born of that victory, and the now unmistakable feeling that the College is behind the team, combine for form that do-or-die spirit indispensable...
...body expressed his gratitude to the men who had made the new building possible. The undergraduates appreciate it and realize what the club will mean. It will give the men an opportunity to know and to help one another. It is an experiment, but it should prove a great success. Captain Fisher said that he was glad that there would be a permanent monument to Burr, since he was one of the finest men who ever graduated from the University...