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Carrying as anti-convoy petition signed by ever 1900 New England college students, including 950 from Harvard, Edward L. Barnes '36, president of the Student Council of the Architectural school, and Sponoer A. Klaw, second marshal of the Senior Class few to Washington by plane last night to present their petition of non-intervention to President Roosevelt before he makes his national address Tuesday evening...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HSU-Sends Delegates To Peace Picket Line | 5/27/1941 | See Source »

Dressed in the traditional garb of John Harvard, Barnes and Klaw will march on the "Eternal Vigil" of the American Peace Mobilization group. By joining this picket line that continually winds about the white House, they hope to show the President their determination that the United States should no participate in the present...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HSU-Sends Delegates To Peace Picket Line | 5/27/1941 | See Source »

...lineup: CRIMSON LAMPY Dammann, ss C. Zwoncus, p Klaw, exprxy A.W. Zwoneus, c Robbins, prxy S.Q. Zwoneus, off Conant, prxy W.R. Zwoncus, off Roosevelt, fhrer Persevere, off Margot, c O.U.R. Chair, msng Keith, hsbnd X. Cabot Moskin, sctry Y. Lowell Ibis, qtrback...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LaMpOoN tO bE tAkEn FoR 23-2 RiDe At BaLI GaMe | 5/22/1941 | See Source »

...Progressive" continues its excellent custom of featuring a pair of articles on opposite sides of a controversial subject. In the last issue, Granville Hicks discussed Progressives and the War, with a reply by the editors. This time the subject is work camps and the pros are presented by Spencer Klaw, while Yandall Harper reviews the cons...

Author: By A. Y., | Title: ON THE SHELF | 5/15/1941 | See Source »

...Klaw's article is a fully and colorfully documented study of the William James experiment at Sharon, Vt. He might have done better to take a more representative sector of the movement, where he would have found many of his criticisms inapplicable, but as it is he comes out with a favorable reaction. Harper, on the other hand, sces, in the work camp philosophy, as expounded by William James, dangerous fascist and war-mongering tendencies. The arguments he presents against even voluntary camps are pretty much those of the Student Union, but, as in last month's Hicks controversy...

Author: By A. Y., | Title: ON THE SHELF | 5/15/1941 | See Source »

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