Well, I wait in Leicester Square / with a come-hither look in my eye / Yeah, I'm leaning on Nelson's Column / but all I do is talk to the lions
if one believes it possible that logic will turn out to be empirically revisable, one surely must believe it possible that logic will be empirically revised[…]
On behalf of the Americans of Czech, Slovak and Ukro-Russian descent of Bridgeport, Anthony S. S. Ambrose who was marshal of their unit, No. 14 in the Independence Day parade, sent a message to George Creel, chairman of the Committee on Public Information at Washington, D. C. expressing their most sacred pledge to President [Woodrow] Wilson and the American people to remain steadfast in their determination to work unremittingly for American and Allied victory in this war until the end.
[A]nd gaunt though his figure, and far from elegant though his dressing-robe, there was that about him which spoke undeniably of the grand seigneur— …