News

Adams Alumni Go Nuts for Newly Renovated House

News

A Better Cambridge Announces Endorsements in City Council Race, Giving Boost to Incumbents

News

HUA Kicks Off With Inaugural Meeting Under New Administration

News

Harvard Ends Undergraduate Minority Recruitment Program as Trump Targets Race in Admissions

News

Memorial Church Reduces Programming Amid University Budget Cuts

Campus Groups Plan 'Teach-Out'

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Representatives of the United Ministry and a campus political group agreed yesterday to pool their efforts for a "teach-out" on Vietnam.

The participants, members of the Harvard-Radcliffe Young Republicans and Young Democrats, Americans for Reappraisal of Far Eastern Policy, Students for a Democratic Society, and the May Second Movement, made no definite plans but agreed to meet again next Sunday.

The groups considered setting up a Faculty-student speakers' bureau that would try to spread debate on Vietnam into the Boston community. The bureau could help provide a "broader hearing," said Rev. Richard E. Mumma, Presbyterian member of the Harvard-Radcliffe United Ministry who called the discussions in response to a Crimson editoral which appeared in Saturday's edition.

Each Harvard organization would provide speakers for the bureau, Mumma said, and Faculty members would be asked to join. Members of the bureau would then debate Vietnam policy before Boston religious and lay groups.

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

Tags