Word: actually
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Last year's party consisted of fourteen men who, during the first three weeks of their work, made a geological survey of an area of nearly 200 square miles. During that time they were organized as a Government party doing actual geological work in an unsurveyed region. After visiting a number of the important mines and milling plants in the district, the party, with a light equipment, went with a pack train through the mountains. Detailed work, followed by the trip through the mountains, made it possible for the men to not only become familiar with a large number...
...first actual step in the organization of the Harvard Regiment in the form of a military mass meeting has been postponed from this evening until Monday afternoon in the New Lecture Hall at 5 o'clock. On account of an unavoidable delay, President Lowell who was to have been one of the principal speakers cannot be present this evening as planned. The other speakers on Monday will be Adjutant General C. H. Cole, of the Massachusetts Militia, Percy D. Haughton '99, and Wells Blanchard...
...records. These are valuable chiefly for their bearing on events leading up to the war and, with the exception of certain documents which the British government has issued from time to time on such subjects as the submarine menace, the death of Miss Cavell, etc., do not relate to actual progress of the conflict...
...experience as that of Plattsburg expect to attain to any large degree of military preparedness in the necessarily limited time which can be given to the drill and instruction of the large group of men now signed up. In fact I am convinced that for many of us the actual military knowledge which we expect to acquire is of minor significance. The all-important features of the whole movement are these: that at last there has been some definite step taken by Harvard University students to show not only by words but by action the widespread realization of the responsibility...
...formation of the Battalion at Harvard may not have much military value. It is, however, all that many men are able to contribute. The significance of the undertaking is wider and more fundamental than the actual material profit that can be expected; it is the public expression of the patriotism and responsibility which one thousand educated men at Harvard University feel for their country. As such the Harvard Battalion deserves the support not only of every man in the University but of every patriotic American. WESTMORE WILLCOX...