Word: manual
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...month of April. The new additions, which were secured through the Simes Fund, are as follows: "Iceland's Literary Renaissance," by Ernest A. Boyd; "Further Pages of My Life," by W. Boyd Carpenter; "Regiment of Women," by Clarence Dane; "Chiefly Contemporary Dramatists," by Thomas H. Dickinson; "The Plattsburg Manual," by O. O. Ellis and E. B. Gary; "Twenty-Five Years of Massachusetts Politics," by Michael E. Hennessy; "The Issue," by J. W. Headlam; "Why Men Fight," by Bertrand Russell; "The Middle Years," by Katharine Tynan; "Masters of Space," by Walter K. Torvers; "Poems of Heinrick Heine," by Louis Untermeyer...
...considerable amount of work which the men now enrolled have already covered, Captain Cordier stated last night that they would find it to their advantage to do certain text-book assignments during the vacation. The work should cover the "Infantry Drill Regulations" through paragraph 231, the "Small Arms Firing Manual" through page 59, and the first four problems of Captain Bjornstad's "Small Problems for Infantry." The Drill Regulation assignment, which covers the School of the Soldier, the School of the Squad, and the School of the Soldier through extended order should be studied carefully, and the substance of each...
...work of the cadet corps in the fall consists mainly in thorough instruction in close order drill and the manual of arms, with tent pitching, bayonet exercises, calisthenic drill and the like. The corps continues out-of-doors drill even through the winter months, except when such work is absolutely impossible. At such times the corps is addressed in assembly by men of authority, or meets by companies for instruction in and discussion of field problems in detail...
Small Arms Firing Manual--U. S. Army, Field Service Regulations--U. S. Army, Manual for Courts Martial--U. S. Army...
...captains and lieutenants) will be accorded the prescribed courtesies when in uniform. Noncommissioned officers (sergeant and corporals) are not saluted except as prescribed in paragraph 172, Infantry Drill Regulations, and when making reports to the sergeant-major or acting sergeant major at ceremonies, such as guard mounting (paragraph 351, Manual of Interior Guard Duty, U. S. Army, 1914), or other formation where the noncommissioned officer receives reports for the officer in charge. All cadets, however, should stand at attention when addressed by, or addressing, a noncommissioned officer...