Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...military mass meeting held in the Union last night was the serious and sober manner in which the eleven hundred undergraduates who crowded the Living Room received the sound advice of Dean Yeomans and President Lowell. In their two strong speeches the reasons for the University's action in regard to the R. O. T. C. in the present crisis was explained and the men were urged to vindicate that action by steady work through the special examination period as well as by cool and deliberate service after...
...since the memorable meeting in Sanders Theatre at the end of the enrolment campaign for the R. O. T. C. have we heard from President Lowell in regard to the University's official course. Now that this country is actually at war undergraduates are considering the question of their own futures more seriously than ever before in their lives. For this reason the sound advice and new light that President Lowell will surely give is to be eagerly anticipated. From the very day that complications between Germany and the United States arose, President Lowell has worked ceaselessly to give Harvard...
...decision to hold this meeting came as a result of a conference of the Law School Faculty held in the Colonial Club yesterday afternoon, at which the entire question was thoroughly discussed and certain announcements formulated. The position of the Law School in regard to allowing men to leave for military service is more complicated than that of the College or of other graduate departments of the University, for practically the entire work of the students is rated by the final examinations held the latter part of May and the first two weeks of June. This is particularly true...
...Union tomorrow evening at 7.30 o'clock, at which President Lowell and Dean Yeomans will speak. The purpose of the meeting is to set before the members of the University the exact details of the military situation as it affects the College and the various Graduate Schools, especially in regard to the Reserve Officers' Training Corps...
...colleges have been turned into training schools and military hospitals. All the students have gone to the front and many have sacrificed their lives for their country. None have remained, not even the theological students, whom the church will not accept if they are fit for military service. In regard to compulsory service in England, we have had to come to it, there being no other alternative, and have had it for about a year...