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Word: concerned (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...importance of the class elections today is a matter which should concern every Sophomore, Junior, and Senior in the University. Last year not one half of the members of either the Sophomore or Junior classes were interested enough to vote at their class elections. May the election returns tonight show that the days of little interest in class affairs have passed, and that every man concerned has done his duty of intrinsic importance--that of casting the ballot...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INDIFFERENCE AND ELECTIONS. | 10/15/1914 | See Source »

...Freshman class, falsely intensifying social consciousness, and splitting the class up into the elect and the non-elect. Fortunately a guarantee of democracy, liberalism and tolerance has existed here, the realization by the majority that the clubs at Harvard are purely social and it is therefore of little concern what some clubs do or who belongs to them. That guarantee of democracy has always existed, but it has always been weakest among Freshmen. To make it absolute, the agreement provides that "no club shall elect as a member any undergraduate before the fourth Monday after the opening of College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CLUBS' AGREEMENT. | 9/28/1914 | See Source »

...standards generally attainable because already attained by an efficient group large enough to be significant. It is in the providing of standards that the Bureau performs its greatest service, excellent as may be the accounting system it has constructed. Any good accounting system will tell a business concern where it stands, but only through a central agency like the Bureau, adjusting comparing, and tabulating, can the concern be told where it ought to stand. A second edition of Bulletin No. 1 was required in October, 1913. Data at that time collected from 655 stores did not affect materially the figures...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 9/26/1914 | See Source »

...University itself. In this connection the recent proposal of the Technology Alumni Council for the establishment of a "bureau for furnishing without substantial expense such technical information and advice as the State and the public may require" is of the greatest interest. Not only is the plan of great concern to Harvard through the pending growth of the "joint faculty" with Technology, but it is a suggestion thought with illimitable possibilities for Harvard herself...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: UNIVERSITY AND STATE. | 6/8/1914 | See Source »

This plan will do much to establish probation as a disciplinary institution to be feared and to be avoided. As the CRIMSON pointed out recently, one can now get on probation too easily to cause much concern to the man or to attach much disgrace to the condition. While the man who stands well, or even high in his studies, but who fails the orals is just as much no probation as the man who is guilty of a really serious breach of college discipline, or the man whose standing in his regular work in really a disgrace, probation will...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROBATION AND THE ORALS. | 5/23/1914 | See Source »

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