Page:United States Statutes at Large Volume 39 Part 1.djvu/188

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squadron one ammunition train, one supply train, one engineer train, and one sanitary train.Corps. The typical army corps shall consist of a headquarters, two or more Infantry divisions, one or more Cavalry brigades or a Cavalry division, one Field Artillery brigade, one telegraph battalion, and one field signal battalion, and such ammunition, supply, engineer, and sanitary trains as the President may deem necessary. A brigade, a division, an army corps, and an army headquarters shall consist of such officers enlisted men, and civilians as the President may prescribe.Supply, etc., trains. Each supply train, ammunition train, sanitary train, and engineer train shall consist of such officers and enlisted men and shall be organized as the President may prescribe,Details from line.
Vol. 31, p. 755.
the line officers necessary therewith to be detailed under the provisions of sections twenty-six and twenty-seven, Act of Congress approved February second, nineteen hundred and one.Changes allowed. Nothing herein contained, however, shall prevent the President from increasing or decreasing the number of organizations prescribed for the typical brigades, divisions, and army corps, or from prescribing new and different organizations and personnel as the efficiency of the service may require.

General officer of the line.
Constitution of.
Sec. 4. General officers of the line.—Officers commissioned to and holding in the Army the office of a general officer shall hereafter be known as general officers of the line;Staff. officers commissioned to and holding in the Army an office other than that of a general officer, but to which the rank of a general officer is attached, shall be known as general officers of the staff.Increase. The number of general officers of the line now authorized by law is hereby increased by four major generals and nineteen brigadier generals:Proviso.
Appointments in time of peace.
Provided, That hereafter in time of peace major generals of the line shall be appointed from officers of the grade of brigadier general of the line shall be appointed from officers of the grade of colonel of the line of the Regular Army.

General Staff Corps.
Constitution of.
Sec. 5. The General Staff Corps.—The General Staff Corps shall consist of one Chief of Staff, detailed in time of peace from major generals of the line; two Assistants to the Chief of Staff, who shall be general officers of the line, one of whom, not above the grade of brigadier general, shall be the president of the Army War College; ten colonels; ten lieutenant colonels; fifteen majors; and seventeen captains, to be detailed from corresponding grades in the Army as in this section hereinafter provided. All officers detailed in the General Staff Corps shall be detailed therein for periods of four ears, unless sooner relieved. While serving in the General Staff Corps officers may be temporarily assigned to duty with any branch of the Army.Tour of detail, etc. Upon being relieved from duty in the General Staff Corps officers shall return to the branch of the Army in which they hold permanent commissions,Redetails limited. and no officer shall be eligible to a further detail in the General Staff Corps until he shall have served two years with the branch of the Army in which commissioned, except in time of actual or threatened hostilities.Filling vacancies made by details. Section twenty-seven of the Act of Congress approved February second, nineteen hundred and one, shall apply to each position vacated by officers below the grade of general officer detailed in the General Staff Corps.

Duty in District of Columbia limited.Not more than one-half of all of the officers detailed in said corps shall at any time be stationed, or assigned to or employ upon any duty, in or near the District of Columbia.Employment restricted. All officers detailed in said corps shall be exclusively employed in the study of military problems, the preparation of plans for the national defense and the utilization of the military forces in time of war, in investigating and reporting upon the efficiency and state of preparedness of such forces for service in peace or war, or on appropriate general staff duties in connection with troops, including the National Guard, or as military attachés in foreign countries, or on other duties, not of an adminis-