Word: resulted
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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Dean Craven Laycock of Dartmouth College has announced that Dartmouth will open as usual on September 20 with the customary schedule of courses and that voluntary military training will probably be continued during the college year. This course of action has been announced as a result of the statement by the faculty that all students under military age can best serve the country by continuing their college work in combination with a collegiate military course to prepare them for future service...
...will be permitted to take into the examination any book or paper of any description. Examination books must be handed in immediately after the close of each examination. All examinations must be written in ink. A report of the result of the examination will be sent some time during the summer vacation to each student to the home address given in the Catalogue. Students desiring their reports sent to addresses other than those in the Catalogue must give written notice on cards for this purpose which may be obtained at the Delivery Desk. No reports are sent to third-year...
...called on now to render the second and the lesser duty, in person and by influence to entrust their savings to the government for its uses, that our nation, in making war may lack gold no more than men. We can believe that the response will be generous, the result inspiring...
...certain insidious form of silent pressure is brought to bear on such men to follow the crowd and enlist somewhere, somehow. A few men are anxious to enlist in order to avoid conscription. This attitude is in many ways reprehensible. It unjustly discredits conscription which, in reality ought to result in saving every man from the charge of being a slacker...
...direct result of the informal conferences of the French Commission with the War Department, the American Government has determined to take over in easy instalments a large part of the motor ambulance and transport service of the French army, thus relieving many hundred French and at the same time training a large and indispensable corps of men for service with the American army when it arrives at the front. About one hundred sections of 36 men each--a total of 3,600 men--are to be sent to France as soon as they can be trained, equipped and transported...