Word: one
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...Military Science 2 company has been divided into two sections, one consisting of the first and second platoons, and the other of the third and fourth. The first section will drill from 4 until 5.45 o'clock on Thursdays in the cage, and the second at the same hours in the Municipal Hall...
...editorial competition is the final one of any sort open to Juniors. Probably one or two men who have the ability to write clearly and forcefully will be taken on the Board in this department. The news competition will consist chiefly in the gathering and writing up of news of interest to the University and should be of great value to those who are contemplating journalism as a career. The competition, which requires no previous training, is also of value in that it affords an excellent means of becoming thoroughly acquainted with all the activities of the University...
...idea of physical development for our men in Europe is indeed a worthy one and cannot be overdone. It is a common fallacy that the minute our soldiers reach France they settle down to a life of charging Germans, dodging shells, and eating Y. M. C. A. food. The truth is that the American soldier is off-duty more than on, and decent recreation is essential. Sending extra footballs for the athletic man is a much better Christmas present than a few pounds of chewing gum or similar trench luxuries. Such human gifts are always more appreciated than useless luxuries...
...last night the reports of the University Red Cross Committee showed that almost one thousand members of the University already have the right to wear the celluloid button which designates its owner as a member of the greatest organization in the country. The remaining thousand have only until this evening to do their small part towards a great cause--a cause which is so big that it can make the best possible use of the smallest contribution. One dollar is a small initiation fee for such a society; even with war taxes on railroad fares and Pullman seats...
...loss is one from which we will not easily recover for many reasons. Since he took charge of the Naval Department here in October he installed a plan of instruction for the ensign's examinations which ranks with the cadet school in Holyoke House and with that at Annapolis. He worked untiringly for our advancement, taking pains to include in his program every detail which would make our training as officers more complete. As an instructor and a drill-master he showed a tense interest in every man in his course, working with patient thoroughness and a degree of fairness...