Word: englanders
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...What are the reasons for such a sudden change of public sentiment? It does not appear to have any intimate connection with politics, although the anti-suffragists make much or the fact that they are defeated in good company, for the movement has been steadily gaining ground both in England and the United States since the out-break of the war. Rather, it must be considered as a direct result of the war, an appreciation, on the part of the electorate, of the ability and patriotism that the women have shown since April last. In all matters of war relief...
Major Beith has had many experiences in the war and has watched its progress carefully since the beginning. In the summer of 1914 he enlisted in the Tenth Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, and spent six months of that fall and winter training at Aldershot, England. Soon afterwards, his regiment was sent to France, where they went into action among "the first hundred thousand...
...first two acts were rather pretty, but the last one was pretty near the line. Censoring may redeem it, but it will take broad sweeps of the blue pencil. For the story is of Ann, a seminary girl of a century ago in Bath, England, who marries an absorbed astronomer and finds herself running a poor second to the constellations, even before her honeymoon is over. She sets about to bring her husband from lethargy to loving in that third act, and her methods caused nobody to ask how old was Ann. They all knew she was extremely wise...
...reputed to have a strong group of runners. D. F. O'Connell '21, captain of the Freshman team is favored to win individual honors because of his good showing last Saturday, when he was the first man from the University to cross the finish line in the New England Athletic Union championships. Several other members of the Freshman team should do well over the Belmont course, among them B. W. Boyden and J. E. Nally...
After a brief description of personal experiences in London where he saw the first Zeppelin brought to earth "white hot and bigger than an ocean liner," and in the training camps of England and France, where men told him of "periods of thirty days they had spent soaked to the skin in rain and mud," Mr. Eddy went on to a description of the Y. M. C. A. hut work...