To the Editor of the CRIMSON:
Harvard is not the British Cabinet, our students are not Nazis, we are not in Bavaria. The Munich analogy attributed to me in Wednesday's CRIMSON (12/18) is inaccurate and unwarranted in the context of our present problems. The possibility of an unrealistic and misunderstood reaction to the Paine Hall disruption is great. We all face a serious challenge to creditability, educational processes, and student concerns. We need hard thinking, not analogies. Dr. Chase N. Peterson '52 Dean of Admissions and Financial Aids
Read more in News
Dow's ReturnRecommended Articles
-
Feminine Is A 4-Letter WordThinking About Women, by Mary Ellmann. Harcourt, Brace & World, 240 pp., $4.95 "I was surprised at all the Cliffies
-
OBITUARY.Frank Dickinson Bartlett of the class of 1902, died of appendicitis at Munich, Bavaria, July 15, 1900, at the age
-
THE HIGHER EDUCATION OF WOMEN.The discussion of the higher education of women has been a prominent feature in the New York papers of late,
-
A HOUSE DIVIDEDSince the exodus of Kaiser Wilhelm, periodic rumors of revolt have kept the German pot a-boiling. German Ministries have ebbed
-
FORMER AUSTRIAN PREMIER TO SPEAK AT LIBERAL CLUBCount Lerchenfeld, former Premier of Bavaria, who will be a guest of the Liberal Club today at luncheon, will speak
-
COUNT LERCHENFELD PLEADS FOR NEW IDEAS IN EDUCATIONCount Lerchenfeld, former Premier of Bavaria, described the fundamental necessities of education at a luncheon at the Liberal Club yesterday.