Word: account
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...tank, there being no shifts except in University B, where J. H. Volkmann '16 was placed at 4, and K. P. Culbert '17 was moved from 4 to 6 to take the place of H. S. Middendorf '16, who will be out for the next few days on account of illness. The running after practice is being continued, every man doing a quarter-mile stretch along the river...
...modesty of the University students who worked last year in the French ambulance service, a full account of their activities abroad has not been given by the CRIMSON. D. Rice '12, H. Suckley '10, E. J. Curley '04, S. Galatti '10, J. M. Mellen '17, and T. Putnam '16, captain of the University fencing team last year, all received Croix de Guerre from the French Government. Rice, Suckley, and Curley were cited to the army division, while Galatti, Mellen, and Putnam received citation to the Service de Sante de la Division. The service for which they were each given...
...hands. Through the American Medical Association a publicity campaign was undertaken, which drove the incomplete school out of existence and raised the standard of the profession to its modern status. The Association required at first that medical students should have a college degree; but this was unsatisfactory, on account of the varied significance of degrees from different colleges. Under the revised requirements they demand two years of previous academic training, with high scholarship, and one year of work in medical science. Consequently the number of medical graduates per year has been cut down by one-third; and doctors are fewer...
Hereafter, excuses for absence from drill and lectures will be considered according to the military standard. Only illness, college engagements, and authorized absences on account of athletic practice will justify failure to attend...
...Regiment, as in any organized body, punctuality is requisite to efficiency. On account of the large number of late-comers, the military lectures and drill have been forced consistently to start late. In this regard Captain Cordier wants it known that tardiness hereafter will not be countenanced; that the Regiment will be reduced to those who can attend punctually. He requests that no one attend the lectures in future who cannot stay until...