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

...best points in this special number do not concern the radio men particularly. "Summe Olde Stuffe" is within range of being a classic. Written in imitation of Chaucer (on a guess), it has the sprightly and clever versification that only F. P. Adams or a few other latter day wits could give it. And its apt illustration is an artful...

Author: By N. R. Ohara sg., | Title: The Current Lampoon | 3/26/1918 | See Source »

...condition of the Advocate and on the CRIMSON'S own course in holding the Freshman class up to the reprobation of the College. Though I have declined to print these communications in the Bulletin, on the ground that they did not deal with matters of alumni interest and concern, I believe it would be unfortunate if any members of the University should be permitted to entertain a just resentment against the College daily for closing its columns to reasonable expressions of opinion on College matters. In the present instance I would not undertake to distinguish between just and unjust resentment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 3/21/1918 | See Source »

...little remaining time which he must spend at college as a period in which he need exert no effort. The other is the student who, safe within his college walls, finds life but a daily round of routine and petty pleasure. He reads morning headlines as of passing concern. The evolutions of the day are a kind of motion picture, seen from the comfortable chair of self-complacency. Both these men are equally self-centered; both are provincials...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PROVINCIALISM REVISED | 3/14/1918 | See Source »

...undergraduate seems to have experienced a change of heart upon several matters. He has even discovered, much more generally than he had four years ago, a feeling of interest in questions of broad public moment. In subjects touching his personal future he has found certain issues of more vital concern than the mastery of the latest step in the fox-trot. It is easy to trace the sequence of cause and effect which has been at work here: The boys in our colleges have seen hundreds of their fellows go forth to an active share in the war. Most...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Colleges "Finding the Range." | 1/8/1918 | See Source »

...appears to be under the impression that voluntary enrollments in the Naval Reserve Force ceased on December 15th, and that, after that date, all men of draft age, not previously enrolled in the Naval Reserve Force are ineligible. This belief has caused the naval authorities of this district considerable concern in view of the fact that the Second Naval District is in need of at least 1,500 additional men for its Naval Reserve Force. If, therefore, you would be willing to publish an article in your columns correcting this general impression, you would not only be doing a service...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Reserve Still Open to men of Draft Age | 1/3/1918 | See Source »

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