The third class [noun] is the sophomore class. As a noun, it is two separate words. As an adjective, it is hyphenated.
The third-class [adjective] cadet was early to class.
Do not use numerals when referencing.
See Fourth-Class System.
Erected in 1954, the carillon and tower were donated to The Citadel by two alumni, Charles E. Daniel, Class of 1918, and R. Hugh Daniel, Class of 1929, in tribute to their friend, Maj. Thomas Dry Howie, who was killed in action during World War II. Cast in the renowned Royal Van Bergen bell foundries in the Netherlands, the carillon contains one of the largest Dutch bell installations in the Western Hemisphere with bells ranging in size from 25 to 4,400 pounds. Also located in the tower is a marble and mahogany columbarium which contains 403 niches to hold urns bearing the remains of college alumni and their family members.
Home of the nationally recognized Academic Support Center as well as the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science. The building is named for Hugh S. Thompson, an 1856 graduate who was the first commissioner of the U.S. Civil Service, assistant secretary to the U.S. Treasury and twice governor of South Carolina.
Only capitalized when it precedes a person’s name and becomes part of that person’s title.
Governor Nikki Haley thanked The Citadel for its support.
Joseph P. Riley, Jr., the former mayor of Charleston, accepted the newly-created chair in his name.