Word: bound
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...will be $1 for each machine. Traffic officers will be present and will give directions necessary to minimize the confusion in getting out after the game. The quickest and most reliable routes for motorists in reaching the Bowl or the centre of the city are as follows: automobiles east bound via the Milford Turnpike or Campbell avenue desiring to go direct to the Bowl use Forrest street and Derby avenue from the junction of Milford Turnpike and Campbell avenue; automobile desiring to reach the corner of College and Chapel streets from the above mentioned point come in Congress avenue...
Forty-one new books have been added to the Union Library since the last announcement in May. Of these ten have been written by University graduates. In addition to these books, the library has also received a bound volume of Raemaeker's cartoons of the present war. Members of the Union may see this book by applying at the attendant's desk...
...Hughes) says he will protect American property abroad. Will he? Will he collect a usurious loan forced on a bankrupt government? If not, why not? If an American bribes a Latin American official and secures title to some enormous concession, will Mr. Hughes regard that as a right forever bound up with the honor of the United States?" What America wants is not the mere reiteration from Mr. Hughes that he will protects "rights"--but the statement of a policy. Does the fact that Mexico is struggling for self-government and freedom from capitalistic and aristocratic oppression, convey anything...
...Cuthbert Wright contributes under the title "The Gospel According to George Moore," a brief discussion of the novelist's daring "The Brook Kerith." The world is probably divided into two groups: the people who are bound to be shocked by the book and the people who are naturally disposed to be deeply interested by it. Mr. Wright is of the latter group. His praise is nevertheless discriminating, and he deals sympathetically with the qualities in the author that enable him to see ancient Syria through modern eyes...
...front at once, he changed to the Newfoundland Regiment, being a native of that province. In July, 1914, he was transferred to the Record Office at London to take charge of his battalion records. He tired of this inactivity quickly and stowed away on the steamer "Megantic," bound for Gallipoli, carrying the First Newfoundland Regiment...