Word: exhibition
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...impressed last spring by the first tentative stirrings of renaissance in Winthrop House: a film society, an art exhibit, some seminars, and a small newspaper (the Griffin), the last ambitious, with some good work in it. Essentially the outburst came from a handful of sophomore draftees, determined and enthusiastic. And able...
...were safely housed in the collection of the Montclair, N.J., Museum of Art-and it was a fitting place for them. The museum is a small and unpretentious institution, but it has taste and a purpose: to be a discerning gatherer of American representational art. In November it will exhibit 40-odd of its 292 paintings at Manhattan's Hirschl and Adler Galleries. The show, to be called "Montclair in Manhattan," should be as good a survey of nonabstract American art as New Yorkers will see all season...
...first day in court, Assistant Attorney General Leo Sontag Ll.B. '48 had rested the Commonwealth's case with a presentation of Tropic as his prime exhibit. Sontag feels that he needs no witnesses to establish the book's obscenity. Thus the trial consists almost entirely of examination and cross-examination of the defense's witnesses...
...message to TIME marking the opening of the exhibit, Mayor Brandt said: "This is a period when all eyes everywhere are turned to Berlin, because decisions are being taken there that may well affect the future of the entire world. No one would be more pleased than the Berliners themselves were their city to occupy less space in current headlines. However, it is not the fate solely of the 2.5 million inhabitants of a city that is at stake in Berlin, but rather the question of whether freedom can assert itself throughout the world...
Welcoming the exhibit, James A. Linen, President of TIME Inc., said TIME'S purpose was to add to the public consciousness of the Berlin situation. "The news has many dimensions," he said. "One dimension gives people merely facts; still another lends a feeling of immediacy in these events, a feeling of history in the making. These are the things that our magazines always strive to give their readers." By playing host to the exhibit, he pointed out, TIME hopes to add a dimension of intimacy to the Berlin story: "For many visitors-for a great many, I hope...