Word: corliss
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...article by Roger N. Baldwin '04, and Corliss Lamont '24, appearing in the current issue of "The Nation," was originally published in the March number of the "Advocate...
...dissenters should be accepted as a contribution to the country and to the university itself." Such is the thesis of an article, "Harvard Heretics and Rebels," in the latest Harvard Advocate. The article was written by Roger N. Baldwin '05, director of the American Civil Liberties Union, and Corliss Lament '24. They point out Harvard is a place not of supreme indifference but of intelligently questioning persons...
...picture hung on the walls of Adams House. Yesterday workmen placed a portrait of John Reed '10 on the wall of the stairway to the Upper Common Room. The portrait was painted by Robert Hallowell '10, a classmate of Reed, and was donated by a committee headed by Corliss Lamont '24. Reed, after leaving college in 1910 became a war correspondent and later went to Russia, where he took part in the revolution. He is the author of a book describing the revolution, entitled "Ten Days That Shook the World." He is buried near the Kremlin in Moscow...
...Corliss Lamont '24, flayed William Randolph Hearst and Hamilton Fish, Jr. '10, in his speech to a scattered few Friends of the Soviet Union assembled at Ford Hall last night. He remarked cryptically that "Ham Fish represented the Pilgrim Fathers, and would have served his country a great deal better if he had kept playing football instead of going into politics." He intimated that Hearst had cooperated with Hitler in attacking the Soviet Union...
...Kansas City William F. Corliss spread a blanket on a wagonload of potatoes, lay down on the blanket to sleep. As he snored, Farmer Corliss sank lower & lower in his wagon. When he woke, he lifted his head from the wagon's bottom. All his potatoes had been niched from under the snoring nose of William F. Corliss...