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...Case," followed by an adumbration of the issue, with a "qualitatively different perspective," by Mr. Harold J. Laski, who thinks that to act as Mr. Berger did "is of the essence of citizenship," and that "What we (meaning the English) would almost above all forget is our imprisonment of Bertrand Russell." He compares the intolerance of the United States to that of Germany before the war, and that of Russia before the revolution, and ends with the comforting remark that Mr. Berger's case only faintly reflects the temper which caused such upheaval, yet its appearance must be distressing...

Author: By T. L. Hoob ., | Title: ADVOCATE'S CLASS DAY NUMBER MAKES "STRONG FINISH" | 6/22/1920 | See Source »

...call the younger men. "I believe it will be lowered to 19 on account of the opinions held by the War Department," wrote Senator Kirby of Arkansas. Representative Mott of New York thinks that "military authorities are unanimous in maintaining that it should be as low as that." Hon. Bertrand H. Snell thinks that the younger men will be called for training but will not be sent across the water until they...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MAY LOWER DRAFT AGE TO 19 | 12/7/1917 | See Source »

...Life," by W. Boyd Carpenter; "Regiment of Women," by Clarence Dane; "Chiefly Contemporary Dramatists," by Thomas H. Dickinson; "The Plattsburg Manual," by O. O. Ellis and E. B. Gary; "Twenty-Five Years of Massachusetts Politics," by Michael E. Hennessy; "The Issue," by J. W. Headlam; "Why Men Fight," by Bertrand Russell; "The Middle Years," by Katharine Tynan; "Masters of Space," by Walter K. Torvers; "Poems of Heinrick Heine," by Louis Untermeyer; and "The Hill," by Horace A. Vachell...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Additions to Union Library | 5/2/1917 | See Source »

...well as of some other distinguished former members of the Harvard Department of Philosophy, which appeared recently in the CRIMSON in the form of a clipping from the Springfield Republican, was very considerably marred, at least to students of philosophy, by the unnecessary and unjust disparagement of Mr. Bertrand Russell which went along with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communication | 1/3/1917 | See Source »

Since the death of Professor Royce, who held the Alford professorship of natural religion, moral philosophy and civil polity, in succession to Professor Palmer, it has been rumored that Bertrand Russell would be called from England to the chair made vacant by Professor Royce. It is certain that no such offer has ever been made to Mr. Russell, though he had been invited to lecture at Harvard during the present year. Whether or not such an offer ever will be made remains to be seen, but it does not seem likely that if Mr. Russell is called to Harvard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Loss to Harvard. | 12/21/1916 | See Source »

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