Word: undergo
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...provisional ensigns and detailed to Annapolis for instruction, there are seventeen men who entered the Reserve last year from the University. These provisional ensigns reported at Annapolis on Wednesday and will begin immediately a term of instruction lasting about three months. At the end of this time they will undergo an examination as to their fitness. If this is passed successfully, they will be made permanent ensigns and assigned to duty...
...provisions are to be made for the enrolment of recent graduates of Harvard University, who, on September 1 next, will be under 32 years of age. No new men under 19 years of age will be accepted. It will be necessary for all new members of the Corps to undergo a strict physical examination by Dr. Lee, and no men who are unfit for service will be allowed to enroll. In addition, these men now in the service who are physically unable to undergo the strenuous intensive training will be honorably discharged on May 7, and they will receive such...
...movement for individual military fitness. All who have hesitated until now from uncertainty or indifference should be there to justify their indifference, or to allay their uncertainty. Those who have already enrolled should be there to obtain a comprehensive knowledge of the work and training they will undergo. Over 800 men expressed themselves by ballot in favor of a plan of universal military training. Surely they did not mean to exclude themselves. The new plan of instruction is the means whereby they may prove the sincerity of their words, and remedy in so far as lies in their power...
Captain Stewart Heintzelman, U. S. A., commander of the Princeton battalion, believes that all educated men should learn the task of leading in war and thinks that the drill the battalion will undergo will be beneficial to the men in preparing them for whatever branch of the service they wish to enter. He made the following statement in the Princetonian...
There can be no question but that Harvard men will fulfill in practice what they have approved in theory. With young men willing to undergo sacrifice for their country, here and in other universities, and among non-University men, the future of our nation cannot be but full of promise...