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Word: concernedly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...will start next week. "I consider it," he said, "the best practical business experience which a man can possibly have while at college. Anyone who has graduated from college and been in business since, will admit that, unless a man is working his way through college in some business concern, the CRIMSON is the best possible thing in this line that the University has to offer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BUSINESS ASPIRANTS COMPETE FOR CRIMSON | 4/30/1926 | See Source »

Modern knowledge has placed at the historian's command a host of new tools, the sciences of psychology, economics, geography, sociology, and the employment of these tends always in the direction of adding importance and significance to a study which formerly was the concern mainly of the antiquarian and the propagandist of patriotism. It is a question whether the faculty at Harvard has made the fullest possible use of these tools. Certainly eminent although some of its individual names undoubtedly are, there is at the University no thriving school of modern investigators, and most of its great achievements have been...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN RECEIVE FINAL TIPS FROM UPPER CLASSMEN ON THE VARIOUS FIELDS OF CONCENTRATION OFFERED BY THE FACULTY | 4/15/1926 | See Source »

...provincial as the intra-collegiate mentality of college students. As a newspaper, it is the Time's business to follow and to influence politics and political progress. National affairs are integral in the world of the metropolitan press. Even so college is very properly the college student's primary concern. An neither the collegiate nor the political field is co-extant with cosmos...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THESE STUDENT REFORMERS | 4/15/1926 | See Source »

...Significance. Only U. S. Senate reservation No. 5 is of extreme concern to the Court-adherent nations. That reservation demands, as a condition of U. S. adherence, that the Court shall not render any advisory opinion affecting any question in which the U. S. has an interest unless the U. S. consents. "What does that mean?" cry European diplomats. "What authority is to decide whether a given question is one in which the U. S. has an interest? Does the U. S. claim the right to make this decision herself? If so, what question can possibly come up in which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS: Invitation | 4/12/1926 | See Source »

...summary of the report of the Committee on Education appointed last fall by the Student Council appears today. The questions raised therein concern familiar problems of University organization: the problem of securing the freest possible development of the individual within the bulky structure of a great university; the problem of adapting the same educational machinery to students both of modest and of extraordinary capacities; the problem of Freshman acclimatization, of effective operation of the plan of distribution, and many others hardly less significant. The recommendations embodied in the report represent the product of five months' work by the first student...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE REPORT ON EDUCATION | 4/6/1926 | See Source »

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