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...service what they could be taught in an R. O. T. C. during the next five months. For most of the others the training would be at best a repetition. And if there was difficulty in maintaining discipline in the S. A. T. C. under war time conditions the problem would this year be doubled...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AN ECLIPSE OF MARS | 1/2/1919 | See Source »

...Burns, exalted ruler of the Cambridge Elks will preside. On Sunday, Dr. Glenn Frank, associate editor of The Century Magazine, will speak on "The League of Nations;" Dr. Raymond Calkins, D.D., will preside. On Monday, Dr. Abram Rihbany, of the Church of the Disciples, Boston, will speak on "The Problem of the Near Eastern Provinces;" Rev. S. M. Crothers will preside. On Tuesday, December 17, Dr. H. M. Kallen, late of the University, and now of the University of Wisconsin, will speak on "Russia and the League of Nations;" J. G. Brooks will preside. On Wednesday, December...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Many University Men Will Speak | 12/13/1918 | See Source »

...Slatersville, R. I., as super-personnel director of a group of cotton mills. He is in charge of the employment bureau of the Slatersville Finishing Company, under Mr. Henry P. Kendall of Boston. Besides his duties as director of personnal, Mr. Beane also has under his supervision the problem of housing. He will remain in his present position until the end of the war. He was Social Service Secretary during his last two years in College, and since then, as Graduate Secretary, has developed Phillips--Brooks House into the social and religious centre of the University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Beane to Return After War | 11/8/1918 | See Source »

...arrangements for the Barre Camp which was to be the culmination of three months' intensive training had to be carried through Captain James A. Shannon, 11th Cavalry, U. S. A., took up the work as commanding officer and carried the difficult task to a most successful conclusion. The problem was not a simple one, even for an efficient army officer. The men were not enlisted, but were voluntarily present for instruction. Discipline depended largely on their good will, and instruction had to combine the old fundamentals of the training of an American soldier and the new lessons of the western...

Author: By James A. Shannon., | Title: Communication | 10/25/1918 | See Source »

...securing officers for our army. The system of irregular training schools held only when conditions demanded has been replaced by a plan involving a series of camps, which will begin every month and which will largely depend, for enrolment, upon members of the S. A. T. C. The problem of officering our rapidly increasing military forces has long been a grave one; the extension of the draft ages has made it all the more serious. The new system offers a definite method of solving the problem, and as such deserves the strong support of the entire student body...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ON TRIAL. | 9/27/1918 | See Source »