Colonel ? Colonel JEWELL. I mean the activities carried on outside of the combat branches of the Army: for example, the carrying on of schools and the carrying on of the training of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers Hearings - 20. lappuseautors: United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Appropriations - 1931Pilnskats - Par šo grāmatu
| United States. War Department - 558 lapas
...with regular organizations or otherwise to be employed, under your direction, in the development of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. As the law provides for a military expansion by reinforcement of the Regular Army from the organized... | |
| 1926 - 786 lapas
...necessitate further reduction in the number of noncommissioned officers and specialists detailed to duty with the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. DEFICIENCY IN PERSONNEL The report then turns to an analysis of compliance with the provisions of the... | |
| 1921 - 728 lapas
...Army; (b) Duty with the expeditionary force of the Regular Army, and with the overseas garrisons; (c) Duty with the National Guard, the Organized Reserves and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. The office of the Chief of Field Artillery, the Field Artillery Schools and the Field Artillery Board... | |
| 1920 - 798 lapas
...required within the continental limits of the United States, the personnel needed in the training of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, and to provide the necessary overhead, etc. In the case of the National Guard. — (a) The character... | |
| Mary Katharine Reely - 1921 - 352 lapas
...defenses within the United States requires at a minimum twelve thousand men. Third, the training of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps, requires enlisted men detailed permanently with these forces ; also certain units of the Regular Army... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations - 1923 - 1154 lapas
...graduatehad the knowledge necessary in these camps of instruction. A large part of our work, of course, is with the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps units, and we feel that the officers' availabilitv for that kind of iVork is doubled by having had... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Military Affairs - 1924 - 164 lapas
...branches of the Army: for example, the carrying on of schools and the carrying on ni the training of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. I mean noncommissioned officers that are allotted to branches of the Army that serve the line: for... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Military Affairs - 1924 - 154 lapas
...branches of the Army: for example, the carrying on of schools and the carrying on of the training of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. I mean noncommissioned officers that are allotted to branches of the Army that serve the line ; for... | |
| Elbridge Colby - 1924 - 208 lapas
...with regular organizations or otherwise to be employed, under your direction, in the development of the National Guard, the organized reserves, and the reserve officers' training corps. As the law provides for a military expansion by reinforcement of the regular army from the organized... | |
| John McAuley Palmer - 1927 - 266 lapas
...with regular organizations or otherwise to be employed, under your direction, in the development of the National Guard, the Organized Reserves, and the Reserve Officers' Training Corps. As the law provides for a military expansion by reinforcement of the Regular Army from the organized... | |
| |