Word: ensigns
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...before next fall. Nothing definite concerning the headquarters of the Bursar next year has been determined. Until the end of this college year he will remain in the Varsity Club, where the offices of the Economies Department, formerly in Dane Hall, are also located. Captain Parker, commandant of the Ensign School of the First Naval District, who was forced to move on account of the fire, will continue to occupy his present offices in Wadsworth House until the end of the second session, of the Ensign School...
...Hall, will be in the Varsity Club for the remainder of the year unless the Corporation takes special action. Other rooms in the Varsity Club are being used by the Economics Department, which was also located in Dane until the fire last February. Captain Parker, commandant of the University Ensign School, who was also forced to change his office because of the fire, will continue to have his headquarters in Wadsworth House...
Leaves of absence were also granted to E. V. Brewer, instructor in German, who left the University to enter the present Ensign School, and to C. G. Smith, assistant in Physics, who has left for Washington to do special experimental work in that field. The Corporation voted to allow Assistant Professor Robert Matteson Johnston, of the History Department, a sabbatical year...
Many of the men have left to enter training camps, or have gone to the Ensign School, while a few have been drafted. The Third Reserve Officers' Training Camp took 51 men, and the two terms of the Ensign School have drawn 38 students into...
...Hague '04, died of pneumonia in France, January, 1918, while a lieutenant in the Corps of Engineers, A. E. F. Wainwright Merrill uC '16, died from wounds received in action in France, November 6, 1917. Phillips W. Page '09, drowned off coast of England, December 17, 1917, while an ensign in the U. S. N. R. F. Henry B. Palmer '10, died of pneumonia, November 13, 1917, while in the French Aviation Service. Philip C. Starr '14, killed in action, February, 1918, while a lieutenant in the Royal Engineers of the British Army