Word: states
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...hoped that in these last two days of the drive everyone will co-operate give all they can to help the Brooks House widen the scope of its service in spite of the disorganized and unsettled state of conditions. Last year's total amount contributed was over forty-five hundred dollars, and unless quick response from its friends old and new, is forthcoming this year's drive may fail to reach one-half of that amount...
What is undoubtedly the most momentous week in the history of American universities closed last Tuesday with the exercises held in nearly 500 colleges to commemorate the induction into the army of the United States, of more than 150,000 men. As a result of the grippe epidemic in Massachusetts it was deemed inadvisable by the army authorities to hold inductions in the local colleges, but many thousand men in this state will enter the S. A. T. C. on October...
...June 1918 1918 U. S. Army, 4805 4644 U. S. Navy, 1104 945 Foreign Allied Armies, 165 136 British, 83 Canadian, 38 Australian, 1 French, 40 Russian, 2 Belgian, 1 Died in Service, 124 78 Total, 6198 5803 Sept. 21 June 1918 1918 Auxiliary Service, 2583 2146 (Including State Guard, Volunteer Ambulance Service, Red Cross and Y. M. C. A. at home and abroad, and Relief Service). Died in Service, 21 20 Total...
...Colonel Williams. The actual instruction of the members of the company, however, will be distinct from that of the S. A. T. C. The students will be under different instructors, and during the fall, at least, will not train with the senior corps. Two officers of the Massachusetts State Guard, Captain W. H. Rand '88 and Major De Mille are now acting as instructors, and it is probable that two more officers from the same organization will soon be assigned to teach the students under 18 years of age. Major Joseph Warren '97 and Captain F. W. Rogers...
With the growth of American participation in the greatest of all conflicts, has come ever increasing casualty lists. Every section of the country, every state is included. Each time the supreme sacrifice seems to have been made by someone nearer home. Friends have fallen at Chateau Thierry, at Soissons, along the Vesle, and even in the camps of this country. The University has lost many sons; not only graduates, but classmates, students whom we have lived and worked with, comrades whom we have contested and competed with, men whom we now mourn with mingled feelings of sorrow and admiration. They...