Word: concerning
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...subject of the discourse has not been announced, but it will concern modern problems and the relation which Christian Science beliefs bear to them. The meeting is only one of a number to be held at regular intervals during the remainder of the year...
...Captain Amann was educated at the University of Paris, first in the Lycee Montaign and later in the Lycee Louis le Grand. Leaving the University at the age of 16, he entered the leather business and became connected with the Paris branch of an American leather concern. He began his two years military service in 1905, in which he rose to the rank of sergeant. In 1910, he passed examinations for a commission and was made a reserve 2nd lieutenant...
Dominating as the interests of war are bound to be in the immediate future, it would be a great pity if they should produce a total eclipse of those other interests of the University which are its perpetual and not its passing concern. The students who have entered or returned to college to carfy forward their intellectual training are still students, or potential scholars, and not merely soldiers and sailors in the making. Before coming to Harvard, as to all the other colleges, for this year of study, they must have heard a great deal of sage counsel, finally warranted...
...been decided by the 1917 Class Day Committee to allow free admittance to the Yard on Class Day to all members of the University Reserve Officers' Training Corps who are in uniform. This ruling will concern all members of the first two battalions, as well as seniors, in as much as arrangements are being made to excuse these men from formations that afternoon. Definite announcement of these plans will be announced by the military office tomorrow...
...just or, if not wise and just, then inevitable, or if not inevitable, then at least much the lesser of two great evils (and this ought to include every man who cannot honestly say that the outcome of the war in Europe is a matter of no importance or concern to him, because a dishonest neutrality is morally more reprehensible than war) in such men the desire to serve the nation devotedly and intelligently is very great. It is to the latter then, but not to those who harbor any sentimental illusions about the thing called war, that the following...