Word: particularizes
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...remaining chapters are devoted to a comprehensive discussion of the effects of the Versailles Treaty; the cupidity of France in particular and the Allies in general; the inefficacy of the League of Nations, which he terms " nothing more than a servile instrument of the victors "; the futile endeavors of the endless chain of conferences that followed the armistice in their efforts to reconstruct a war-stricken Europe. Germany is represented as having been dispossessed of intrinsic possessions-territory that had belonged to her for hundreds of years. He says that her economic life has been deliberately ruined...
...course of his semi-continuous lecture tour brought Glenn Frank, active editor of the Century maga- zine, to New Orleans. Abandoning the general for the particular, Mr. Frank said he wanted Mr. William G. McAdoo to be our next President. " I know by personal observation and research that Mr. McAdoo is well qualified...
...result of a postal ballot, are J. G. Cushman '25, C. M. Hastings '25. R. G. Allen '26, and N. S. Howe '26. This group, along with the Governing Board of the Union, which is headed by Mr. George Wigglesworth '74, controls the various activities and in particular brines these into harmony with the desires and opinions of the student body. One of the committee's most important functions is the reception and entertainment of visiting athletic teams...
...clock tonight in the large lecture room of the Jefferson Physical Laboratory, Dr. E. C. Kemble, G. '14, will give the second of a series of three lectures on Physics, taking for his subject, "Atomic Explosions". This particular phase of Physics has been chosen on account of the wide interest taken by the public in the recent important discoveries which have thrown light on the composition and behavior of the atom. Dr. Kemble is well fitted to discuss the subject, having done much advanced research work in this field...
Once a man has determined on the particular field of music in which he wishes to locate himself, he will find ample opportunity at Harvard for its cultivation; and even if a man aims to be an executant he will find it possible to procure instruction outside college, with sufficient hours for practice while he carries on at the same time his regular college work. In such a case, however, a student would do well to take at least one extra year to complete the work for the A.B. degree...