News

‘A Big Win’: Harvard Expands Kosher Options in Undergraduate Dining Halls

News

Top Republicans Ask Harvard to Detail Plans for Handling Campus Protests in New Semester

News

Harvard’s Graduate Union Installs Third New President in Less Than 1 Year

News

Harvard Settles With Applied Physics Professor Who Sued Over Tenure Denial

News

Longtime Harvard Social Studies Director Anya Bassett Remembered As ‘Greatest Mentor’

PLAN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE IN ENGLAND

Intercollegiate Conference Also Votes for Release of Political Prisoners and Entrance Into League of Nations

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Plans for holding an international students conference in England in June, 1924, were discussed at the Intercollegiate Conference of eastern students at Goucher College, Baltimore, last Friday and Saturday. With the view primarily of bettering relations between France and Germany, students, principally of France, Germany, England, and the United States will be asked to attend, and all the colleges in this country will be invited to send delegates.

The conference at Goucher was called in an attempt to obtain an expression of collegiate opinion on the League of Nations.

Three resolutions were passed by the conference: 1, that the fifty prisoners which were confined during the war for political reasons should be released; 2, that the United States should support the League of Nations because it is an instrument of peace and one which can be adapted to the constitution; 3, that this second resolution should be sent to the President and Congress of the United States.

C. F. Dunbar '25 represented the Harvard branch of the League of Nations Non-Partisan Association.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags