Word: bartons
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
PRESIDENT LEE DuBRIDGE of the California Institute of Technology once wanted to be a newsman ("But I was too scared to go up and ask the right people the right questions"), Education Editor Bruce Barton Jr. notes in this week's cover story on Caltech and its president. For several weeks, TIME newsmen on the West Coast, some of whom still have painful memories of long division, knew just how DuBridge felt. With only the hastiest preliminary cramming, they had to EDITOR BARTON ask Caltech's men of pure science the right questions...
...Harvard Law School professor has made a start at filling the gap. Lanky balding W. (for Walter) Barton Leach, 55, brigadier general U.S.A.F. Reserve knew much of his broad subject firsthand. A onetime secretary to the late Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Lawyer Leach became an operations analyst for the Army Air Forces in World War II served as Air Force legal counsel through postwar congressional hassles over unification and the B-36 bomber. Last year he got the university's permission to set up a graduate-level course on national defense policy, began the experiment in September...
Although no definite plans have been announced yet, W. Barton Leach, professor of Law and organizer of the plan, revealed last night that he will devote next year to working on the new program, and will carry a reduced teaching load himself...
...been defeated only once, 9-15, 15-10, 15-12, and 15-9, and Cal Place displayed a powerful and aggressive game in routing John Wierdsmar of Williams in the number five match. At seven, Pete Milton, the final Crimson winner, played with precision and control to beat John Barton in straight games...
...enough. My impression is that the CRIMSON is too ambitious and is not satisfied to do a god news reporting job on College and University matters. Accurate and complete reporting of local agents is the foundation of all good journalism from the New York Times down. Raiph Barton Perry, Professor of Philosophy