Word: virginia
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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After April 1 the privilege of attending the classes of instruction on the battleships Virginia and Georgia at the Charlestown Navy Yard, will be confined to men enrolled in one of the classes of the United States Naval Reserve...
...schedule for this season has been announced, but dual meets with Yale and Virginia are practically assured...
...have joined the Volunteer Naval Reserve for Civilians, 137 are undergraduates or graduates of the University. These men are training two evenings a week on the battleships Georgia and Virginia, now lying in the Charlestown Navy Yard. The instruction is given by the regular line officers of the navy. Owing to the small number of officers who are able to devote time to this training and the limited space which can be utilized, there is already a waiting list of men ready to go into training as soon as vacancies occur...
...Talcott, chairman, and Miss Harriet Amory, T. L. Storer and Miss Virginia Baker, T. Mackie and Miss Susan Lee, F. DeVeau and Miss Lydia Storer, F. Knauth and Miss Margot Amory, P. Squibb and Miss Agnes Grew, G. Johnson and Miss Elizabeth Zerrahn, L. K. Moorehead and Miss Elsie Nichols, L. Poor and Miss Frances Thomas...
...weekly class in naval instruction to be begun next Monday at the Navy Yard on board the Virginia offers an unusual opportunity for men to train themselves. If words mean what they say, then Harvard men are desirous of doing their utmost part in the defence of the country. No greater need, and no greater occasion, may arise. Such training involves slight sacrifice. On the contrary, it will give each man keen and intensely interesting knowledge of that great beast of war, the battleship of the first fleet...