Word: actions
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Students who shall have completed at least three-fourths of the requirements for the degree of A.B. or S.B., and who, having to military service, have been unable to complete the entire course will be granted those degrees if the Corporation ratifies the action taken by the Faculty last Tuesday. This means that the men referred to above would be able to graduate after completing a minimum of 12 courses instead of the usual of 16. Whether or not the plan will be carried into effect depends only upon the vote of the Corporation...
Among the questions which will come up for decision, with the resumption of more normal times in the college life, must be that difficult and perplexing problem of the Union; a subject which already has called forth much discussion, much argument, but the minimum of action towards the definite achievement of placing that institution in the position which it should hold in the University...
...writer who was the last vice-president, elected on the eve of war, a possible plan of action presents itself: the formation of a committee of five or six of the most representative undergraduates plus one or two Faculty members, delegated with authority to work out the future policy of the Union and with power to control the operation thereof. Not only would such a body have considerably more effectiveness and weight in executing its projects than the two undergraduates who have been elected annually to the vice-presidency and secretaryship in the past, but it would also have...
Lieutenant Edward Hooper Gardiner '19, of Boston, was killed in action September 12, in the St. Mihiel offensive. He had been previously reported missing from the 50th Air Squadron, Air Service, A. E. F., but official notice of his death has just been received by his parents. Lieutenant Gardiner left College in 1916 and trained at Plattsburg, where he was commissioned in 1917. In September of that year he went overseas and was for a time stationed with his squadron near Pont a Mousson...
Lieutenant Richmond Young '16, of Boston, has died in France of wounds received in action on October 10. He attended the first Plattsburg Camp where he was commissioned a first lieutenant, and was immediately sent overseas with Company B, 304th Regiment, Seventy-sixth Division, but was later transferred to Company K of the Thirty-Eighth Infantry, Third Division...