Word: successful
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Possible future bombings to crack American morale will meet with little success, if last night's statewide blackout is any criterion. Judging from the activities in an around Harvard Square, the enemy's time and bombs will merely be wasted...
...suggestion has been made to all S-I's that they take advantage of the next war Sunday to stage a bicycle trip into the country-side around Cambridge. Last Sunday, such a jaunt was taken by several members of the School and pronounced a grand success...
Heartened by the success of their collaboration in the production of "Mashenka" last fall, the Harvard Dramatic Club and Radcliffe Idler will again unite in putting on any plays to be given by the groups during the spring term, Charles R. Dean 3rd '46 and Betsy Norton, respective heads of the two groups, announced yesterday...
Another experiment in airplane mass production, the success or failure of the Marietta plant revolves around a dynamic man in a dynamic industry-Lawrence Dale Bell, 48, founder, inspiration and chief owner of Buffalo's fabulous Bell Aircraft Corp. Just as the Army had three big reasons for building the new plant in Georgia (power, labor supply and airport facilities), so did they have bedrock reasons for choosing Larry Bell...
Bell Aircraft's first break came in 1937 when it proudly announced the Airacuda, a freakish-looking, poor-flying bomber-fighter which got a burst of publicity but little else. Then came Bell's first success: the Airacobra, a flashy, 400-m.p.h., single-place fighter which has a cannon in its nose and climbs like an express elevator...