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Word: sirs (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...success of these ventures led to a proposal, fostered by Mr. Robert Bacon, Sir William Osler, and others, that certain American universities send similar units to serve with the British, and Harvard contributed another Unit, under the command of Dr. Cabot, which, since 1915, was stationed at No. 22 General Hospital, Camiers, with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 2ND HOSPITAL UNIT RETURNED | 4/26/1919 | See Source »

...make good our pretense as they often manage to make good theirs, yes, in the very Tace of spring, ours will be a great consummation, a true millenium. The barriers of June will be removed, and we will be in a position to say to our professor: "Verily, sir, the fact that you have so thoughtfully dealt me a C, C plus, B minus, or B, pleases me almost as much as it does...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SPRING-FEVER. | 4/22/1919 | See Source »

Besides the delegation from England a large number of men of letters will be present from Canada. Among them are Mr. Stephen Leacock, the humorist, Mr. Duncan Campbell Scott, the poet, and Sir Robert Alexander Falconer, President of the University of Toronto. The meeting is intended both as a memorial of the birth of James Russell Lowell, and as a celebration of the realization of his hopes for the Anglo-American entente cordiale...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LOWELL EXERCISES OUTLINED | 2/14/1919 | See Source »

...unit was established under Sir Allan Perry of the English Army at Dannes-Camieres near Boulogne in June, 1915. It was one of a large number of hospitals which stretched south for twenty miles along the seashore road from Boulogne. Most of the British supplies were landed and stored in this district which, consequently, drew an almost continual flock of enemy bombing machines...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PARADE OF SURGICAL UNIT TODAY IN BOSTON | 1/30/1919 | See Source »

James Throckmorton Vought '09 died in his father's home in Rochester, N. Y., January 12, 1919, of complications resulting from wounds received in accident last September. He received a bul in the lungs at the action in which 27th and 30th American Divisions, operating with the Army of Sir Douglas Haig captured the defenses of the denburg line between Cambrai and Quentin. After treatment in army capitals in France and England, Corp. Vought was invalided to the Columbia Hospital, New York. He was on rough from there at the time of his with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HARVARD CASUALTIES | 1/24/1919 | See Source »

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