Word: weaver
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Ellen Lake '66, Peter Orris '67, and Claude Weaver '65-3 will describe their experience in Mississippi at 7:30 p.m. Monday in Lowell Lecture Hall. The three were part of the Mississippi Summer Project run by the Council of Federated Organizations. Admission is free...
...Weaver was project director in Batesville, Panola County, one of the biggest projects in the state, and has been working in the state for the past year. The Batesville project registered about 600 Negroes to vote in the coming election...
...Freedom house in Batesville, Miss., where Kathie Amatniek '64, L. Geoffrey Cowan '64, and Claude Weaver '65 were living, was bombed with tear gas on July 27. Fears that the tear gas attack was only a prelude to stronger action (as threatened in numerous phone calls to the house) proved unfounded...
...less a challenge than to devote our Great Prosperity to the building of the Great Society." Said Health, Education and Welfare Secretary Anthony Celebrezze: "I am confident that we now, as in the past, will pledge our efforts to make that Great Society a reality." Declared Housing Administrator Robert Weaver: "The Great Society can be and will be ours." "The Right Track." Some officials tried to place the issues above partisanship. Secretary of State Dean Rusk said that he was testifying on "the foreign policy of the American people"; yet he conceded that he was a "lifelong Democrat...
...women, notably one played by the lovely Swedish import Ulla Sallert. Book and lyrics are by prolific Sidney Michaels, who adapted Tchin-Tchin. Sherlock Holmes would hardly have approved, but he and Watson become song-and-dance men in the long-postponed Baker Street, now Broadway-bound with Fritz Weaver under the deerstalker. Fiddler on the Roof is nominally based on Sholom Aleichem's moralistic tales of Jewish life in pre-revolutionary Russia, with irrepressible Zero Mostel in the leading role. The season's most technically ambitious adaptation will be a Broadway version of Aldous Huxley...