Writer
Selig S. Harrison
Latest Content
Brass Tacks
In the period immediately following November 2, much talk centered upon the five--elections-- wrong American press, which had all but
Justice Douglas Tosses a Credo into the Ring
It is now reasonable to predict that at the Democratic National Convention labor-liberal forces will find it politically impossible to
Cabbages and Kings
With the top-level labor leadership of Walter P. Reuther a six-months established fact, it is hardly surprising that Walter P.
Conant Scores Barnes Bill As Harbinger of 'Hysteria'
Enactment of the Barnes Bill would danger-signal to nations everywhere that "the American people had begun to succumb to a
Cal Head Hails GE, GI's, Gridders
New state universities in "an unstoppable wave" will result from GI Bill-stimulated demand for higher education if the guess of
Advanced Studies Institute, Opinion Polling Breathe Life into Princeton
Traditionalist Princeton has never allowed itself to slip out of modern American education's mainstream. Although the College operates for the
Three-Way War Memorial Recommendation Veils Near Coup for Plaque, Scholarship Fund
Memorial Church will sport $200,000 worth of new bronze-tableted inscription and cream-marble statuary next Fall unless Alumni as well as
Record PBH Squad Treks to Settlement Houses
Skinny kids and five-by-fives, soot-covered scalawags and rosy-checked cherubs, kids from all the dark reaches of Boston and Cambridge's soapier
On the Record---Pepper Assails 'Red' Hysteria, Sees Labor Holding Gains
The Honorable and red-faced Mr. Pepper of Florida, dubbed "Senator" by fellow-students in the Law School during the early Twenties,
Parley Delegations Reconcile Differences
CRIMSON Observer at the Conference In the brief sober pause midway between Christmas and New Year's Eve, 358 delegates at
Budenz Sees Red on Communists, Parries Query on Faculty's Tinge
The Reds'll get you if you don't watch out. Louis Budenz, turn-coat ex-editor of the Daily Worker who makes a
Atom Research Restrictions Assailed By Shapley; Denounces Censorship
CHICAGO, February 26 (Special to the Harvard Service News)--Pleading for unhampered research by American scientists in the field of atomic
Too Little And Too Late, Remarks Hutchins On Harvard's General Education Scheme
CHICAGO, Dec. 6--Robert M. Hutchins, Chancellor of the University of Chicago and the nation's leading exponent of traditionalism in university
Municipal Judge Derides Book-Banning, Urges Common Sense to Guard Morals
Eiijah Adlow '16, Associate Justice at Bosten Municipal Court, who gave the Watch and Ward Society its first major fatback