Word: landed
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...University has recently acquired all the land in the square bounded by Dunster street, Mt. Auburn street, Plympton street, Mill street and South street, including the property of the Institute of 1770 and Speakers' Club, and excepting the property owned by other private clubs and the lot at 34 Holyoke street. In addition all the lots facing on Plympton street from Mill street to Mt. Auburn street, as well as the property at 42-50 Mt. Auburn street have become part of the property of the University...
Likewise the College has become the owner of Dunster Hall, Dunster Swimming Pool and the land adjoining, the Little Block and the Shepard's Block. No plans have been announced as to the immediate disposal of the newly acquired territory...
...fast becoming clogged with unmelted material and dross. For a number of years and enormous tide of immigration has been pouring into America. With woefully inadequate restrictions, all comers have been accepted without questioning there inherent fitness for citizenship or even their purpose in seeking a new land. Once the immigrant has been received into the country, we have trusted assiduously but blindly in the faith the some mysterious alchemy of the melting pot would eventually create a simon pure American out of a "foreigner," without any assistance or supervision on our part. The results of this system are seen...
When the full history of the great World War is written geography will be understood as one of the fundamental causes. When white people migrated into Europe from west central Europe they found a land divided by mountain ranges and arms of the sea into small geographic provinces. This led to the growth of numerous small countries. Physical geography, by isolating peoples, leads to national strength and often to international animosity...
...great American citizen. Theodore Roosevelt possessed a spirit unique among men. His spirit is essentially that which imbued Napoleon. He possessed courage which never flinched, an energy that knew no bounds and which in itself inspired all who felt it, and he was a patriot whose loyalty to his land his critics never ventured to assail. His fall sends a shudder through the world. A beacon light has gone out. A towering oak, a landmark age-old has fallen. Yale bows its head in silent tribute to this great American. YALE NEWS...