Word: airs
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Lieutenant Robert Henry Coleman, Law '17, Air Service, died of pneumonia at Base Hospital No. 33 in France on Oct. 9, 1918. He left the Law School to enter the U. S. N. R. F., but was later transferred to the Air Service. While crossing to France in September he was taken ill with influenza, from the effects of which he died...
Professor Albert Sauveur of the Metalurgical Department has just returned from France, where he has been engaged in war work during the past year. While stationed in Paris, he was in charge of the section of Metallurgy in the Technical Division of the United States Air service, the purpose of which was to solve metallurgical problems connected with aviation motors. Professor Sauveur will resume his work at the University next...
...civilian dress, and their numbers have doubled, trebled, and even quadrupled in some instances. The once magic words "military duties" have lost their previously infallible power to calm instructors who wax wroth at sins of ommission and commission. There is also a growing spirit of optimism in the air, due to the replacement of the uncertain future of war times by the more discernable future in days of peace...
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...
Second Lieutenant Osric Mills Watkins '19, of Indianapolis, Ind., a pursuit pilot in the air service of the A. E. F., died of pneumonia on October...