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Invitation to Learning's new series of 32 programs was planned on a slightly different basis from its previous 67. Of the three regulars who made up the old team, Mark Van Doren, who is both keen and engaging, alone remains regular. The other two, Allen Tate and Huntington Cairns, are to make occasional appearances. CBS's notion is to vary Mr. Van Doren's companions for the sake of a less foreseeable meeting of minds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Keeping Civilization Alive | 11/24/1941 | See Source »

HARVARD ARMY Willetts, l.w. r.w., Woodruff Ayres, c. c., F. Tate Duane, r.w. l.w., Gilbert Gray, l.d. r.d., Grygiel Hulse, r.d. l.d., Plume Fenn, g. g., J. Tate...

Author: By John C. Bullard, | Title: SKATERS MEET CADETS TODAY | 2/26/1941 | See Source »

...professor of modeling at the Royal Academy of Stockholm. But the Swedish critics disliked the distortions and fearsome grimaces of his statues, never conceded him a top ranking among Swedish artists. It was not until 1926, when curious Londoners gathered together a large Milles exhibition at the Tate Gallery, that Carl Milles became known to the outside world as Sweden's No. 1 sculptor. Following year Chicago's Architects Holabird & Root brought him to the U. S. to do a fountain for their Michigan Square Building in Chicago. Then Detroit's Philanthropist George Booth, who was trying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Giants in Baltimore | 12/2/1940 | See Source »

...Barr & colleagues combed a list of 300 critics, eventually chose as the program's regulars Princeton's Novelist-Poet Allen Tate, Columbia's Pulitzer Prize Poet Mark Van Doren, and Huntington Cairns, assistant general counsel of the U. S. Treasury. Chairman and star performer was Mr. Cairns, who in his spare time speaks 15 languages, reads omnivorously, likes to play the abstruse Japanese game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: How to Make People Read | 10/21/1940 | See Source »

Classicists Cairns, Tate and Van Doren earnestly tried to enliven their performance with modern applications of the classics. Quite without sparkle, their program plodded at a pedestrian classroom pace. Nonetheless, to the amazement of one & all, by last week it had attained an estimated audience of 1,000,000. Half a dozen publishers began to sell cheap editions of the classics hand over fist, 4,000 libraries found the books in such demand that they dug them out of dusty stacks, put them on special shelves...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: How to Make People Read | 10/21/1940 | See Source »

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