Word: detail
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...training of the interdormitory choruses which will form the main feature on the Freshman jubilee program will begin at 7 o'clock tonight, when the whole class will meet in Smith Halls Common Room. Dr. A. T. Davison '06 and the leaders from the various halls will explain in detail the work for the glee clubs...
Professor Sabine, who returned last fall from a long visit to the front, explained in detail during the lecture the organization of the Allied air service. He spoke at length of the three types of machines, the scouting, the battle and the bombing planes, describing their construction and utility. He emphasized particularly the importance of the battle-plane in controlling artillery fire, and of the bombing plane in offensive work. In speaking of the latter, he expressed the hope that America would produce bombers who would have sufficient control and training in the use of bombing-sights to obtain better...
...Athletic Committee will meet this evening to discuss in detail the plans for athletics during the coming spring. According to a statement by Dean LeBaron R. Briggs '75 to a CRIMSON reporter last night, the chief question to be decided this evening is not that of the formality or informality of sport in the University, but rather of the advisability of resuming intercollegiate games in place of the present policy of meeting only cantonment and school teams. The question of intercollegiate games has not, until recently, received the support of the authorities of Yale, Princeton and the University...
...second chance for Sophomores to make the CRIMSON Board will be provided by the annual spring competitions which begin next Monday evening at 7 o'clock. The candidates from the three classes will report at this time in the CRIMSON Building, where the required work will be outlined in detail...
...bill has been introduced in the Senate by Senator Chamberlain, chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs, empowering the President to detail a certain number of commissioned officers, not to exceed 1,000 as professors of military science and tactles at institutions where one or more units of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps are maintained. The bill also provides that the President may detail at such institutions a number of enlisted men, not to exceed 3,000, as he may deem necessary to act as assistants in training the men enrolled in the R. O. T. C. Under this bill...