Word: marsh
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Stressing the need for preserving intellectual freedom in this country to offset the losses to free thought in the totalitarian states of Europe, ten speakers, headed by Ralph B. Perry, Edgar Pierce Professor of Philosophy; Daniel L. Marsh, President of Boston University; and Mildred H. McAfee, President of Wellesley College, celebrated Lincoln Day last night in an open meeting at Sanders Theatre...
...democratic system, education is the indispensable means by which society shapes its ends," said Marsh. He pointed out three factors which are absolutely imperative; freedom of schools, freedom of education, and freedom of the pulpit. He emphasized especially the need for preserving liberty in our schools and churches in a time when democracy is definitely on the defensive...
...guest: gentle Alfred Barr Jr., director of the Museum of Modern Art; frosty-headed "Grouch" Goodyear, the museum's president; Mrs. Juliana Force, redoubtable director of the Whitney Museum; sunny Holger Cahill, director of the Federal Art Project; big, Indian-looking Artist Eugene Speicher, burly, blue-eyed Reginald Marsh, bright-eyed, skimpy-chinned Peggy Bacon, melancholy Morris Kantor, spindly Charles Sheeler...
Somewhere between the fancy counterfeits of fashion pictures and the buttocky satires of Reginald Marsh is the truth about the New York Working Girl's life & looks. Of her few sympathetic interpreters in art, the subtlest last week had an exhibition at Manhattan's Midtown Galleries...
...sounds too preposterous to be true, but Marsh Wells says that he has movies proving everything he says. There go those movies again. Wonder if he made the discovery while the play was happening or after he saw the films. Anyway, movies show a lot of things. For instance, the Yale line was offside on Struck's failure to convert a point after touchdown in the 1936 Yale game lost by Harvard 14-13. How about playing both games over...