Word: chapters
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...mutually exclusive, but experiment until we discover a machine art." As art critic and esthetic philosopher, Read is erudite and discerning; as a writer, he is precise and dry, so that his prose shows at its best on subjects that need no embroidery. Example: the World War I chapter named "A Journal of the Retreat of the Fifth Army from St. Quentin," which English critics have justly ranked with the best war writing of the century...
Here in the Hotel Schroeder and in Milwaukee Auditorium two blocks away, the keynote thus becomes "Building, AVC.' In an opening-gun all-day Workshop tomorrow, delegates will exchange experiences and ideas on the pedestrian difficulties of integrating a young organization with its community environment. "Successful Chapter Meetings," "How to Raise Funds Locally," and "Techniques of Recruiting New Members" typify the topics for panel discussion. Franklin Roosevelt, Jr.'s Saturday morning address on housing will stress action on the local level...
Harvard's ten-man unit commands a healthy chunk of 826 votes. Less articulate chapter representatives from the grass-roots do not seem hesitant to listen to counsel that the delegation-hep on national AVC problems and politics-is happy to dispense. Chapter chairman Stanley G. Karson '48 and delegation head Reginald Zalles 2G are lining up a busy program of committee meets for their contingent: Richard G. Axt '46, Thomas R. Brooks '50, Robert L. Fischelis '50, Frank L. Haley 45, Selig S. Harrison '48, Russell H. Jackson 2L, William E. Nelson 1G, and Andrew E. Rice...
...members were formally initiated into the chapter at services in Sanders Theatre Monday...
Yesterday's announcement in the CRIMSON of recent additions to the Harvard Phi Beta Kappa chapter unfortunately listed the 13 members from the Class of '47 under the heading of Class...