Word: classroom
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...faculty has ruled that all members of the R. O. T. C. shall take on three additional hours each week of classroom work in military subjects. In order to meet this requirement, students will be allowed to drop three hours a week of their regular academic work. Those whose rating is below 250, on a scale of 400, will be required to cancel the proportionate amount of academic work...
...faculty has decided that all students who enter the college between now and the conclusion of the war must elect 18 hours a week of military work if they join the university R. O. T. C. These 18 hours may be sub-divided into six hours a week of classroom and six of practical work, three of military science, three of military history and three of French...
...Eastern colleges have decided to terminate the college year much earlier next spring than usual. Pennsylvania State College will close on April 23, with commencement exercises on the 24th, while Brown University will change its calendar entirely, condensing the college year into a much shorter period without losing any classroom or laboratory work. Commencement day for Brown will come on Wednesday, May 29. Pennsylvania State will have no Easter vacations as a result of this arrangement, while that of Brown has been shortened to three days, including Saturday and Sunday; it will last from March...
...applicants, work will begin February 1, the beginning of the second term, and will continue for 15 weeks, coming to a close before the final examinations are started. The amount of work to be required is 28 hours a week. Twenty-four of these will be spent in classroom lectures and laboratory exercises, and the remaining four in signaling work. Professor E. L. Chafee at the Cruft Laboratory will consult with prospective applicants. The step toward the organization of this course was taken upon the request of Major-General Squire, of the U. S. A. Signal Corps...
...University course for ensigns has almost completed two months of work. Its enrolment now numbers about 45, all the cadets being members of the University. The weekly schedule includes, in addition to the two hours of classroom work each day, instruction in the laboratory, visits to the Navy Yard and rowing in the five cutters that have been obtained for this purpose...