MILITARY TRAINING
APPLICATIONS FOR EXEMPTION
TWO OUT OF FIFTY GRANTED
(EY TELEGKAPH —PRESS ASSOCIATION."* AUCKLAND, Feb. 16. _ About fifty applications for exemption from military drill,- the majority being from students attending evening engineering classes, came before Mr Poynton, S.M., in the Magistrate's Court to-day. Only two applications were granted. Lieut. Judson, V.C., appeared for the Defence Department, which opposed the applications. Lieut. Judson said the Department would make the same arrangements in the case of students attending evening classes as had been made for university students. Attendance at such classes should not interfere with parades. The applications by the students were refused. The attitude of the Defence Department regarding the military training of university students and youths attending evening classes at other colleges was explained by Major Wallingford. He said those young people were the coming brains of the country, and in war they had proved to be leaders, a great number of ex-college students having held commissions in the great war. At present some of the students wanted to obtain exemption from military training owing to their studies. The Department was opposed to that, and was not going to sanction exemptions in such cases, for these youths required military training just as much as, if not more than, anyone else, in view of the positions they would probably'hold in,the event of another war. Further, the Defence Department was not going to grant exemptions to college students and compel only boys who were in poorer circumstances to_ drill. The Auckland Defence Office was willing to meet the studenls at any time, and if they liked they could do their drill at any hour convenient to them, provided they put in 50 hours a year. They could do 50 hours in their long vacation if they desired. It did not matter when they did their training, but they would have to comply with the terms of the Military Service Act the same as other sections of the community had to do.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/HNS19210217.2.34
Bibliographic details
Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLI, Issue XLI, 17 February 1921, Page 5
Word Count
330MILITARY TRAINING Hawera & Normanby Star, Volume XLI, Issue XLI, 17 February 1921, Page 5
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