Word: war
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...ambulance drivers on reaching Italy were assigned to three sections. Section 1 had its headquarters at Bassoon a town in the mountain district of the middle western Italian front. In this section, Eliot and Droppers were the only men to receive the War Cross. It is the only section of the three which is equipped with other than Ford cars and has several Flats in service...
Whether or not intercollegiate athletics of an informal character can be carried on at the University this fall has not yet been decided. Dean Briggs, chairman of the Athletic Committee, told a CRIMSON editor he has received no word from the War Department as to their desires in the matter. He added; however, that with the present plans for intensive military training it was highly improbable that the S. A. T. C. candidates would have time for intercollegiate contests...
...Adjutant-General of the Army has announced that applications for admittance into the Central Officers' Training Camps are again open to civilians from. 18 to 45 years of age. Application blanks may now be had at the S. A. T. C. Headquarters in Apthorp House. The War Department has not yet advised whether or not men who enter the S. A. T. C. and also apply for admittance into an officers' training camp will be transferred to the O. T. C. as soon as their applications are accepted...
Copies of the CRIMSON are now on sale at Leavitt & Peirce's, Amee's the Co-operative Branch, and the CRIMSON Building. The subscription price for delivery by mail is 75 cents for 12 weeks. In accordance with the rulings of the War Industries Board for the conservation of paper, no free or exchange copies of the CRIMSON may be given this year Except for the two issues appearing this week the CRIMSON will be publihed only once a week on Friday...
...Fearing died suddenly while attending a Red Cross meeting in Newport on May 26. Always a man of great vigor aur vitality, he plunged with a will into all forms of war relief work. His most distinguishing characteristic was his active interest in life, an interest indicated by his public offices in Newport and in Rhode Island, by his unrivalled collections of books, and by the long list of clubs with which he was connected. Prominent among the latter was the Crolier Club of New York, of which he was one of the earliest members and a constant and most...