Word: reds
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Colleges are unfair unfair to organized baseball was the general theme of an interview with Eddie Collins, General Manager of the Boston Red Sox, yesterday at Fenway Park...
...ordeal of watching the Red Sox play their regular season has been gruesome enough of late without witnessing an exhibition game. Yesterday's class was no exception. Boston's million-dollar Hose merely went through the motions. The outfielders took so long getting to and from their positions that the game was on several occasions held up noticeably. Slugger Jimmy Fox struck out twice, the final time to end the game, and each time he laid his bat down so carefully that there was absolutely no danger of damaging the hickory...
Beneath the latest Red scares about Granville Hicks, the Cambridge schoolchildren and the Young Communists lies a serious defect in the University Administration. Harvard tends to be so sure that what it is doing is right that it ignores the publicity angle of its actions and allows itself to be grievously misrepresented. The result of such a policy is to seen in this week's papers, with all the politicians and patriots in full cry after the Red menace, and all sorts of organizations passing resolutions against the college. It cannot be denied that in Massachusetts at present there...
Well publicized faculty help to the state government might be valuable. At any rate Harvard has a clear cut problem of selling itself and its theories to the public. Whatever the means, the result should be such that whenever in the future a demagogue sees red attacks Harvard, his remarks will arouse laughter in Harvard and in the fraternal and patriotic organization as well...
Cambridge was in the grip of a new Red scare yesterday as an investigation led by Mayor Lyons pointed to a Dunster Street cellar as the center of a Communist organization, propagandizing school children with the end of enrolling them in the Young Communists League. Police believed that Harvard undergraduates were among the leaders of the movement...