Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL)

 - Class of 1943

Page 19 of 188

 

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 19 of 188
Page 19 of 188



Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 18
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Page 19 text:

CHAPTER TWO Training for Leadership The declaration of war gave Knox mil- itary students a clearer idea of the impor- tance of learning their subject well. The Monday drill periods, the assignments, and the discussions in class took on a significance far greater than ever before. Here was a chance to learn things which might mean the difference be- tween life and death for both self and country. Here was a chance for training in leadership. Knox students had recognized the value of R.O.T.C. training before December 7. The military science department had the largest enrollment in its history, 227 men, at the beginning of the school year. More than ninety per cent of the freshman men took the courseg many sophomores who had not taken military their first year enrolled as basic students. There were twenty-two juniors and twenty-two seniors in the ad- vanced course preparing to receive their second lieutenant's commissions at gradu- ation and thus join the army's yearly group of 10,000 new, college-trained officers. Competition for the limited number of vacancies in the advanced course each year ran high among the underclassmen. Among other things, advanced students were not required to register for the draft. The fact that Knox's enrollment drop- ped no more than it did was attributable to the existence of the R.O.T.C. and Civilian Pilot Training courses. The Knox military department is one of the oldest in the Mid- 7lw fb g dle West and the only such infantry unit in the state with the exception of the one at the University of Illinois. The Knox unit has consistently been given the highest possible rating by inspecting officers of the Sixth Corps Area. Actual active service by members of the unit while in school was limited to a short period of airport patrolling Cillustrated on the opposite pagej. Guarding the air- port was an emergency duty carried out by the R.O.T.C. unit at the request of the mayor of Galesburg during the week fol- lowing the declaration of war. But gradu- ates of the advanced course were seeing- and were to see-plenty of active service. EYES RIGHT! Company B, led by Cadet Captain Blanc, passes in review before the five co-ed sponsors of the military unit. The parade was in honor of the sponsors who were presented their insignia by the company com- manders earlier in the afternoon. 13

Page 20 text:

For instance, one member of the class of 1940, Captain Milton Whaley, was among the defenders of Bataan peninsula. Nearly all of those receiving commissions at the 1941 Commencement were in the service, several of them over- seas. By the middle of April most of this year's advanced course students had received their orders to report for duty on or very shortly after May 15. In a few short years military science had become far more important than the average college course. Knox men were graduating into positions where they must manage and command-and be re- sponsible for-a hundred or more men. The college was now a factory vital in the Qaaluaiu See rqcfiae .Smaice 14 country's war effort. As Colonel E. D. Porter, the Knox P. M. S.8CT., put it, the freshmen are the raw materials and the seniors are the hnished products. The workings of this factory were not monotonous. In addition to the regular class periods, which totaled two hours per week for the basic students and four hours per week for the advanced members, there were parades, military teas, the military ball Cone of the season's biggest social functionsj , co-ed sponsors-plenty of color along with the undeniable thrill of being military, The Knox Battalion, more than 200 strong, was a snappy looking out- fit when lined up the length of Wfillard Field with Old Main as a background. Much of the success of military train- ing at Knox was attributable to the out-

Suggestions in the Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) collection:

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Knox College - Gale Yearbook (Galesburg, IL) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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