Word: equality
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Guernsey's drop-kicking technique against Princeton was in every detail equal to that of Brickley, and his goal of 28 yards against Princeton had enough power in it to have scored at 40 yards. Guernsey also is a long punter. Against Princeton his average through-out the afternoon was 40 yards, and some of his kicks travelled 50 yards...
...Upon the whole, Harvard is slightly superior to Yale, but not enough to classify the outcome of their meeting to a certainly. While Yale does not possess an equal opportunity to win, the Blue does possess a good opportunity, and under the present rules of the game many a game has been won by an eleven with less. The tactical plan of Harvard and Yale against one another it would seem must be a system of plays intended to create an opportunity." P. H. DAVIS, Boston Post
...truly a notable occasion when Equal Suffrage is again to be presented in Harvard halls by a woman lecturer. Militancy, however, will not be in order today as it was two years ago when Mrs. Pankhurst created a storm centre in Brattle Hall. People went to hear Mrs. Pankhurst more from curosity than interest; those who go to hear Miss Todd tonight will reverse these motives. And it is only to be expected that university men will be actively interested in a subject which is appealing to the reason and sentiment of the world as is Woman Suffrage...
Miss Helen Todd, of San Francisco, will lecture ion Emerson D this evening at 8 o'clock. She will speak under the auspices of the Harvard Equal Suffrage League on "How the Women Recalled Judge Weller of San Francisco." Miss Todd, Who is chairman of the Legislative Committee of Western Women Voters and who served for same time as factory inspector in Illinois, is a non-militant supporter of equal suffrage. She deals with the facts which she has gathered by practical experiences. During the Progressive campaign here she assisted in speaking for Woman Suffrage, for which movement the Progressive...
...argument that colleges located in or near large cities offer to their students unlimited cultural advantages; and this argument is really founded on fact, at least in the case of Harvard. There are, surrounding this University, all the opportunities of the opera, museums, libraries, and theatres of Boston, and, equal to any or several of these, the free lecture courses at the Lowell Institute. The course which is particularly worthy of notice at this time is Mr. Noyes's series on "The Sea in English Poetry," which has been so popular as to warrant the scheduling of its repetition. Those...