Word: well
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Regimental Band of the 301st Field Artillery from Camp Devens will give a concert in the Paine Concert Hall of the Music Building tomorrow evening at 7.45. They will be assisted by Miss Calista Rogers, a well-known Boston soprano, who will sing French, Irish and Scotch folk songs with piano accompaniment. She will be accompanied by the band in singing the "Marseillaise" and the "Battle Hymn of the Republic." The concert is open to the public; members of the Naval Radio and Cadet Schools are especially invited...
...support 14 men, and in consequence the postponed Lampoon-CRIMSON hockey game (sic) will take place thereon next Monday afternoon. Both septets have taken advantage of the additional time to perfect themselves in the Bayonet Exercises and the Loading Drills, and will probably be in good condition and well loaded when the handkerchief is dropped day after tomorrow. The contest is to be open to the public, who may join on either side...
...Photograph Committee, which is composed of C. Blum, Jr., '18, chairman, B. W. Sayer '18 and A. L. Whitman '18, is sparing no pains in its effort to make the 1918 Class Album the most unique as well as the most complete volume of the sort ever published. It will include several new and pleasing features, among which will be the "service" photographs of those...
...Sciences announced late yesterday afternoon that Colonel Lawrence's lecture would be indefinitely postponed. He is still in Boston, however, and is expected to make an address before the Boston Harvard Club tonight. Colonel Lawrence, who has been delivering a series of war lectures in this country, is well acquainted with his subject, since he has been in active war service since 1914, and was for a time commissioner for Lord Kitchener in France...
...revolution against England. Its decisive battle, Saratoga, had been planned and fought by other generals, while Washington won, scarcely a single victory in seven years' campaigning. Although present at the Convention, he had played no decisive part in the formation of the Constitution. In spite of this, Washington well deserves the affectionate title bestowed on him. He possessed an extraordinary power of leadership through the moral qualities of integrity and devotion, rather than through intellectual genius. The people admired the philosophical mind of Franklin, the political idealism of Jefferson, the fiery eloquence of Patrick Henry. Many lesser men claimed their...