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Page 47 text:
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Cadet llnspeotion by the R. O. T. C. By Captain Arthur J. Tufts, H. S. C. I VER SINCE the Cadet Corps has been under the training of the War Department, it has been inspected twice a year by a regular Army ofiicer detailed with the Reserve Oflicers' Training Corps. It was in the year 1921 thatfthe Corps came under the supervision of the War Depart- ment under Section 55c of the National De- fense Act. In 1922 the first inspection was held. This officer from the R. O. T. C. inspects all the units in the Corps Area in which he is stationed. - The Cadet Corps is in the Third Corps Area. This year the inspecting officer for this Area is Lt. Col. Ralph H. Leavitt. He was appointed by the Commanding Officer of the Area. The purpose of this inspection is to 'see if the various units in the Corps Area are functioning according to the regulations under which they are organized to note what progress they are making, and to check up on the condition of their equipment. Lt. Col. Leavitt inspected the Cadet Corps on December 5, and also in April. His inspec- tion had nothing to do with the standing of the various companies within our Brigade, for individual company inspections were not made. It was an inspection of the Brigade taken as a whole. Each of the inspections this year was completed in one drill day: so, taking into con- sideration the time necessary for going from one school to another, there was not much time left for an inspection of each company. For these inspections, some of the companies are usually in position for a personal inspection, so that when the inspecting officer arrives, he may inspect them or not, as he wishes. Some companies are practicing company movements, some platoon movements, and some are separated and drilling in squads. The inspecting officer frequently asks a Cadet officer to do a certain problem with the unit he commands. The Cadet Bands are also inspected. The inspecting officer makes a report on the matters mentioned above about each of the various units, to the Commanding Officer of the Third Corps Area. The latter usually sends excerpts of the reports to the commanding of- ficer of the unit concerned. An excerpt of the report which Lt. Col. Leavitt .made about the Cadet Corps after his first inspection on De- cember 5, follows: ' The close order drills observed at the five schools were very good for this time of the year. Steadiness in ranks was excellent. Cadet officers and non-commissioned officers gave their commands well, and showed evidence of lead- ership. Simple problems given by the inspector to squad leaders were well performed. The methods used by the Professor of Mili- tary Science and Tactics in training this Corps are excellent, and the results are shown by the interest and support of the student body. FAIRMONT Thirtieth Year. College Preparation, Eight 2-Year Jun- ior College diploma courses. Educational advantages of National Capital. Address Principal, 1713 Massa- chusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. 1371
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Page 46 text:
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Cadet Aehieveinents By Dr. Frank W. Ballou, Superintendent of Schools DR, FRANK W. BALLOU Superintendent of Schools l URING an observation over a period of ten years of the Washington High School Cadets, I have felt a growing interest in the work of the organization, and an increasing conlidence in the line results achieved by the high school cadets in the development of those qualities of leadership, respect for duly constituted authority. and other charactertistics of good citizens in a democracy, which the high school cadets an- nually for a period of forty years have inculcated in the young men who have made up the corps. Cadets in the National Honor Society By Lieutenant Maurice A. Tschantre, H. S. C. HE NATIONAL HONOR SOCIETY is a nationally known organization composed of youths of secondary schools who have won distinction in their respective schools by dis- tinguishing themselves in the classroom and in the extra-curricular activities of their schools. The National Society holds practically the same position in relation to the American secondary schools as the Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity holds to institutions of higher learning. Its purpose is to create an enthusiasm for scholarship, to stimulate a desire to render service, to promote leadership, and to develop character. These four qualities, scholarship, service, leadership, and character must be possessed by a candidate before. he 'can be eligible for membership in this organization. At present there are two high schools which have chapters in the National Honor Society. These chapters are the Pharos chapter, from McKinley, and the chapter from Central. Be- cause of the similarity between the requirements for membership in this society and the require- ments demanded of cadet officers, it will be found that of the cadets who have achieved the distinction of being appointed to command- ing positions in the cadet corps there are many who have also won the distinction of being elected to the National Honor Society. Those candets who are members of Central's chapter are Colonel Jack Stearns, Lieutenant Colonel John Wiley, and Major Arthur Conn: Captains Howard Turner, Harry Watson, Henry Gibbs, Archie Kennedy, Arthur Tufts, Stanley Rakusin, Thomas Raysor, and Malcolm Hay: Lieutenants Eugene Crittendon, Calvin Waring, Lawrence Julihn, Richard Herman, Robert Jackson, Frederick Roop, Jack Beane. William White, and Cleveland Norcross: and Sergeants Richard Lane, and Claude Pierce. The cadet members of McKinley's Pharos chapter are Major Howard Larcombe: Captains Lorimer Gerard, Henry Kroll, John Shipman, and Albert Powers: Lieutenants James Marshall, Maurice Tschantre, and Herbert Mitchell: and Sergeant Thomas Corwin. l36l
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Page 48 text:
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The Brigade Sttatiff, Cemtredl High SQIROOJI , , . MAJOR AARON GOLDMAN MAJOR LEONARD KAPLAN Adjutant Quartermaster COLONEL JACK C. H. STEARNS Commander HARRISON DYAR MAJOR ARTHUR CONN EDGAR HOWARD Sergeant Major Personnel Adjutant Quartermaster Sergeant GEORGE N. CROCKETT JEROME JOHNSON WILLIAM ROTHROCK CLARK HEIRONIMUS Color Sergeant Technical Sergeant Technical Sergeant Color Sergeant U81
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