Word: works
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...which will be given by Major Miller and Captain Dick will be entirely free. There will be no liability for future enrolment in the R. O. T. C. nor will the instruction be offered as part of a college course. Attendance at the Summer School is required. The entire work will be of an informal character and the only requirements will be that men keep their appointments for riding and ride as they are instructed...
This type of summer work has been dictated for the most part by the impulse to see and feel the great facts of life in their largest, roughest, and most elemental form, and to broaden in view-point accordingly, which was aroused but not satisfied for them in time of war. The jobs they have selected are those which involve heavy manual work, among men who work honestly from day to day with their hands, and see things from the laboring man's point of view...
This morning at 8.30, nineteen members of the University nine will leave for Brooklyn, where the third game of the Princeton series is scheduled to be played on Ebbett's Field. The team will reach New York this afternoon, and will be put through a short work-out in order to accustom the players to the Brooklyn National League diamond. The game will begin at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon...
...Allen '12, has arrived at Cambridge to take up his duties as secretary to the Corporation. Mr. Allen will be the second secretary, as F. W. Hunnewell '02, will also continue to act as secretary. In this position, to which he was appointed in May, Mr. Allen's work will be to direct the distribution of University news, to study the whole problem of the public relations of Harvard, and to devise means of interpreting to the public the plans and policies of the University. His office at present is at University...
When interviewed by a representative of the CRIMSON yesterday, Mr. Allen said he expects to spend the month of June in a preliminary study of the situation as regards University news and publications. In September he plans to begin work actively. He will attempt to help the newspapers and magazines to secure accurate news of the University with a minimum of inconvenience and delay, and he will also make other arrangements for keeping Harvard graduates and the public in general in closer touch with the University...