Word: censored
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...policy, the Committee voted down an amendment to strike the qualifying phrase. Committeeman Francis H. Duehay, assistant dean of the Ed School, and author of the amendment argued that the policy would be clearest and most effective if the Committee did not try assert any power to censor controversial speakers...
Duehay, however, voted for the policy, even without his amendment. He insisted "some policy is better than no policy at all" and agreed with Mayor Daniel Hayes, who ogered the plan, that it is desirable to shift the censor's role to university administrators...
...Censor...
Watson has tentatively agreed to this plan, clearly to prevent further controversies similar to the one over Carmichael. He has said he would even warn the Committee if he thought a certain speaker warranted extra police at Rindge. But he has also said he will not be made a "censor" of who speaks at the school--something he would become if the current plan went through. The Committee under the current proposal could still reject anyone Watson proposed. To avoid another Carmichael controversy, Watson would have to judge how acceptable each prospective speaker would be to the Committee...
...profit-when she was Shirley Temple. And so, when her fellow members of the board of directors of the San Francisco Film Festival insisted that Night Games remain on the schedule for showing later this month, Shirley resigned from the board and the festival. "I'm not a censor," she said. "But I have a right to my opinion...