Word: captaining
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Lieut.-Col. W. P. Chamberlain, Medical Corps, U. S. A., on "Military Sanitation." Captain F. B. Downing, Corps of Engineers, U. S. A., on "Organization and Duties of Engineer Troops." Captain J. F. Osborn, First Corps Cadets, Massachusetts National Guard, on "The Engineering Instruction in the Corps...
...Their names are as follows: Major Azan, infantry, head of the mission; Major de Reviers de Mauny, infantry; Captain Dupont, artillery; Captain de Jarny, artillery; Lieutenant Morize, infantry; Second Lieutenant Giraudoux, infantry...
...Captain Cordier made the statement last night that new enrolments for the Reserve Officers' Training Corps would begin in a few days, based on the vote of the Faculty yesterday afternoon. It is impossible to start the enlistment immediately, for certain necessary arrangements must be made before the work can be started. Due announcement of the opening of the enrolment office will be made through the CRIMSON. New men who come into the Training Corps will follow the schedule of nine hours a week now prescribed until May 7, when the entire time of all the cadets will be devoted...
...Captain Cordier further stated that it was intended to increase the present Corps to 2,000 men. Special provisions are to be made for the enrolment of recent graduates of Harvard University, who, on September 1 next, will be under 32 years of age. No new men under 19 years of age will be accepted. It will be necessary for all new members of the Corps to undergo a strict physical examination by Dr. Lee, and no men who are unfit for service will be allowed to enroll. In addition, these men now in the service who are physically unable...
...situation in the colleges of England before the war broke out was somewhat different from that in your American universities and colleges today," said Captain Ian Hay Beith, in an interview with a CRIMSON reporter just before his lecture in Tremont Temple yesterday afternoon. "You see, we had had our Officers' Training Corps as a regular institution in the life of the British student, which prepared the undergraduates for ordinary military service, the work of the corps being extremely popular and purely voluntary. When a man in training had passed an examination proving his ability as a potential officer...