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...raiding attracts general attention. When, as at present, the famous shock troops are being used persistently, we may be sure that it is not for the ordinary daily attrition. Raids have been made almost continuously, and with a remarkable intensity of artillery fire and fierceness of attack. The High Command is evidently feeling out the weak spot for the great attack. They cannot hope to wear out the Allied armies by these minor tactics, they are only a prelude to greater events. A raid of one or two companies on a short front will show up the weaknesses that probably...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: INTENSIVE RAIDING | 3/4/1918 | See Source »

...control of the air over the American lines is evidently not in our hands. When an official bulletin states that large numbers of German planes constantly penetrate behind our lines and yet make no mention of combats with our patrols, it is certain that we have not the requisite command of the air. The lack of planes is the only explanation of these facts, as we have many good aviators in France, among them the aces of the Lafayette Escadrille, who are now with our army...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LIBERTY PLANES EN ROUTE | 2/23/1918 | See Source »

Lieutenant De Fourmestraux, of the French Army, visited the University on Wednesday, before proceeding on his journey to Princeton, where he will take command of the advanced training of the R. O. T. C. unit. "I am very pleasantly impressed with what little I have seen of the Harvard Corps," he said, when interviewed by a CRIMSON reporter. "I am sorry that I can not stay longer, but I shall return again to visit in the spring. I have heard much about the Harvard Training Corps while in France, and am anxious to see the men at drill...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PRINCETON'S NEW FRENCH LIEUTENANT LAUDED CORPS | 2/23/1918 | See Source »

...most amazing social change which the war has brought about is the transformation of our army from a small command of miscellaneous volunteers into a gigantic union of the fighting citizens of the Nation. More than a million men, selected for their youth, their courage, and their virility, are to present America to Europe in the guise of warriors, and in all the pictures which we have been permitted to see of them they are so unmistakably of the New World that only a glance is needed to distinguish them from a group of French or British soldiers, fine, upstanding...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMMENT | 2/20/1918 | See Source »

...skilled labor to fill the needs of these trades. Unskilled men must be trained and of these the college man is best fitted on account of his education to acquire quickly the necessary ability. But a partly finished college education is no "Open Sesame" to a position of command. College men who can be employed but a few months must face the dirty, disagreeable tasks of production along with their less favored brothers. Incidentally, there is no better clarifier of the college man's theories about capital and labor than a few months' hard work at the bottom...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: SUMMER WAR SERVICE | 2/14/1918 | See Source »

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