Word: returned
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Lloyd George's and the President's terms of peace are practically the same; they both insist upon the restoration of Belgium and the return of Alsace-Lorraine to France. The one real difference between the desires of the Allies now and last summer comes in the question of the fate of the German government. When we entered the war we were going to destroy the German government and not the German people; we hoped for a German revolution and with it a representative government. Yet our hopes in this direction seem farther and farther from being realized...
...duty in this country on Thursday, January 10, instead of on Tuesday, January 22. Members of the Class of 1918, however, who are still in College, will cast their ballots on the date originally planned, January 22, and the Seniors in service will still have until February 8 to return their ballots. The addresses of the latter are being secured from F. S. Mead '87, editor of the Alumni Bulletin, who is in charge of that publication's war records...
...University Plans for the time and place of the balloting are at present being considered. Ballots are to be sent the first of next week to Seniors in national service on duty in this country and these men will be given until Friday, February 8, in which to return their votes. Because of this time allowed for the men in service to indicate their choice of officers, the final result of the election will not be made known until February...
...election of the Class Day officers will be held within a week after the return from the Christmas vacation, probably on Tuesday, January 8. The question of whether the elections shall be held on one day only for members of the Senior Class now in College, or whether cards shall be sent out to all the members of the class has not been decided...
...that we have not forgotten to say Merry Christmas and good-bye to our friends among the fifty-one fortunates who are leaving us for Yaphank. These men are starting down the path that leads to commissions and France, and many of them may not have a chance to return here before going "over there." This is their Commencement Day; we still have to await our turn. They are going away from Harvard not to come back until the end of the war. Most of them will not re-enter college, for the University will seem a petty school after...