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Page 44 text:
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h '-h .a .h twilllllll'llllll'lll' wuVJOii aplzllll ll 111,111,111, 4 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIO t'. Oll'llll'lll'lllllla . Val THE MENtS RIFLE CLUB Military Science The Rifle Teams The course in Military training as part of the required work for degree students has been in the curriculum of the University of Cahfornla since 1878, but only since January, 1923, have students at the Un1vers1ty F arm been offered this course. In the first year of its existence here the Military Department has made excellent progress both in the profielency of the company in drill and in the other subjects taught in the equipment for instruction. Two inspections by visiting re gular army officers have been made and on both occasions the officer s making the inspections expressed themselves as being quite favorably impressed. Major General Norton, Commander of the Ninth Corps Area, seemed especially pleased. Colonel Nance and Major Kelly, from Berkeley, also expressed their satisfaction. Captain Howard has been the U ' men here. bV m the future. On daV of Lieutenant Duruz. A bayonet course and a rifle range have been important additions to our equipment. The rifle r W l' . ange has been of great benefit in teachlng L rm nnents of rlfle shooting as well as w 1080 membership in the R in the v 1 . - . 0- T. C. team at Berkeley helped materially .0, ?flm standmg ,attamed by this team. We have our own company M r Hell 1188 Dartlcipated in a number of matches. mombg; 51:10 lmllge has extended its usefulness beyond the R. O. T. C- on tho c5nlpuijhifglng Sport and instruction to three other rifle teams and the Mews Rifle Chignen s lele Team, the American Legion lele Club, I38J
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Page 43 text:
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f3h$ s 'm'a . a: r. v 4'. '-. O . - o4lf. Q l ' i. GIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIO 14 Val O'llnllltllltntrllloya: ;.E. b 9 l . . V lo. .' 5.... .'.-..... hillllllllllllllillllll Associated Federal Students The Government of the United States is making a determined effort to assist, by education, every deserving person Who served their country in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps or as Nurses during the late war. First by means of the XVar Risk Insurance Act, then the Federal Board, and now the United States Veterans Bureau, all of them products of a generous country and all for the purpose of instilling into each disabled person the importance of knowing how to do some useful thing efficiently. The work of the Veterans Bureau is fast drawing to a close. Those men who are entitled to the benefits to be derived have taken advantage of the opportunities offered and have gone back to civilian life even better fitted to ttcarry 01? than before they sacrificed their all to answer the call of their country. There are now only twenty-eight Veterans Bureau men at this branch of the University of California. They are organized as ttThe Associated Federal Students? Their work in the class room and on the campus is unsurpassed. Due to the fact that they are all suffering some physical disability directly due to their service they are not represented in athletics. The Associated Federal Students are indebted to the Government of the United States for the opportunity offered them to better themselves. More directly they are indebted to Mr. HerbertH. Hope, who is the local rehabilitation otticer of the Bureau, WllO by his encouragement and advice has helped us all through our difficulties in getting back to normal, after the unsettled life in the service. Also to Miss Margaret Anderson, the Veterans Bureau nurse in charge of this district. And to Messrs. Warr and Queen of the District ottice Who are always most encouraging and helpful. t37l
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Page 45 text:
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vfk fur Linrnm .xrrsnt r! ilir. N am .pxanf niyk ,erV'l fouli. .ylnli'tl It NH. .3 Jilin- . this bx lil' .,tt1 33 .lLJY4' 'th. . tilt! . ms ' v 4 . l'apnnnlanlndtlnlo : :' il'. : t: i. $l '--- -- -- J 4:; Q I n u y tn; 1...... 0.; spnnntllllllllllllll THE 1924 PICNIC DAY COMMITTEE Picnic Day In the cycle of modern agriculture, the agricultural college plays a very definite and important part. Much of the recent rapid advancement in development of systems, improvement of methods, increased produc- tion, etc., has been correlated closely with the growth and development of the agricultural colleges and experiment stations, which have been, in the major part, directly responsible for it. It is natural then, is it not, that California, the state in which the most rapid and extensive develop- ment has occurred, should be possessed of a College of Agriculture and an Agricultural Experiment Station whose resources, achievements, and possibilities are second to those of no other like institution in the world? One has but to consider for a moment the reputation, both local and international, which the College of Agriculture of the University of California has attained to realize the truth of this statement. And how, it might be asked, was all this brought about? The answer to which is that the people of the State of California, even from the days when the Argonauts drew up our first constitution and provided therein for a great State University, have ever been most generous in their support of their educational institutions, and have liberally provided for the growth and development of their College of Agriculture. We, the students of this College of Agriculture, realize the debt which we owe to those who founded and fostered the institution which we Claim as our Alma Mater. We realize that we who are here now are deriving the benefits of years of sacrifice and devotion on the part of those men who have built our institution into the reputation which it now enjoys. What, then, is more typically Californian than that we should feel a l39l
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