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

...serving as advisory members of the Peace Conference, where their services are hardly to be dispensed with, but many more are still engaged in work at Washington and may not return for many months. While deeply conscious of the invaluable services which they have performed during the war we feel that their continued absence from Cambridge is possibly an unnecessary drain on the effectiveness of University Administration. Would it not be possible to recall some of them from positions at present less important to fill the places of those who, like Professor Haskins, cannot be spared over there...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SOUND THE RECALL. | 4/5/1919 | See Source »

...Policies may not be increased, but may be reduced at any time, in case you feel that the premium is more than you can afford to pay. However, I strongly advise all men to keep up their full insurance policies. If you have made no payments since your discharge from the army, send in your back payments at once, before it is too late. Remember that you will surely want to be insured sooner or later, and do not let this opportunity which the Government is giving to every discharged soldier and sail or slip through your fingers. Full details...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVISES RETENTION OF WAR INSURANCE POLICIES | 4/2/1919 | See Source »

...heartily favor the establishment of a Field Artillery Training Unit at Harvard next year, and feel that an infantry unit should also have a place there." said Major-General Clarence R. Edwards in a recent interview with a CRIMSON reporter. "To be a successful infantry officer requires just as much training as to be a good artillery officer. In the artillery you deal with material, in the infantry with men, and to handle men well requires more training and experience than to fire a field piece or compute a range. I believe that the training of an infantry officer might...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GEN. EDWARDS FAVORS FIELD ARTILLERY UNIT | 3/29/1919 | See Source »

...great war has taught us a lesson which we cannot afford to forget, and the only way we can profit by what we have learned is to have universal military training. Military service has awakened in our young men a great feeling of patriotism and service. It has given them confidence in themselves, and made them straight-forward, virile, and honest. I feel sure that the decrease in crime resulting from universal military service would more than cover the cost of training. If all our young men could have a year in the army, I believe that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: GEN. EDWARDS FAVORS FIELD ARTILLERY UNIT | 3/29/1919 | See Source »

...voice of the son, though we see no body; the way in which the voice moves about the room,--we are convinced by it all until the voice begins to tell how he died and mentions life after death. In that instant the picture is man made; we feel it to be mere speculation and we are disappointed. But somehow Barrie wins us back; henceforth we do not believe that death is like this, yet before the play is over we are as interested as before...

Author: By J. U. N. ., | Title: THE THEATRE IN BOSTON | 3/19/1919 | See Source »

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