Word: englanders
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...camp is established in Cambridge it will probably be constituted as the 15th of the series of Officers' Training Camps which the Government has founded throughout the country. Men would be admitted from other New England colleges as well as from the University and would be subject to the same rules and regulations as are provided for the admission to the other camps. Although it is probable that the Government age limit of 20 years and nine months would be adhered to, it is possible that some arrangement can be made for men under that age but over 19 whereby...
...every one who wishes to see a spirit of patriotism united with a capacity for effective help. I do not doubt that we shall find in Harvard, Yale and Princeton and the other universities the same inspiring devotion for the cause of the country that the great universities or England, Oxford and Cambridge, showed at the outbreak of the war and have continued to show in all the dark days of gloom that England has had to pass through...
...Your Reserve Officers" Training Corps is certainly on the right track, and a small contingent of United States soldiers sent over to Europe would greatly strengthen the bonds between free countries, and the reception they would get in England and France would be extraordinary. It will be worth while to establish the best kind of relations because perhaps ten years from now it will be a good idea for England and America to be together on the side of democracy...
...loyalty to the United States. The original charter of Porto Rico was granted by Spain because our loyalty had been tested, and it remained unbroken through the many vicissitudes that she had to suffer. We have seen our coasts bombarded and invaded by all her powerful past enemies, England, Holland, France and our country we never allowed to fall under their heels. We welcomed the American flag in 1898 because we believed it, and still believe it, to be a symbol of democracy and justice. It was conceived in that spirit. We want Americans to know the facts...
...Spiritual Interpretation of History." The author seeks in these lectures to determine from actual events whether history has not in itself spiritual forces which may result in "a renewed allegiance to our threatened idealism and a revived confidence in the might of right." "The Religious History of New England" is by J. Winthrop Platner, Andover Professor of Ecclesiastical History; George E. Horr, president of the Newton Theological Institution; George Hodges, Dean of the Episcopal Theological School; William Wallace Fenn '84, Dean of the Faculty of Divinity; William E. Huntington, Dean of the School of Theology in Boston University; Rufus Matthew...