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SYDNEY PROFESSOR CRITICISED.—Professor Anderson, Professor of Philosophy at the Sydney University, addressing a crowded meeting of students. Professor Anderson, whose recent attack on the teaching of religion in schools brought him under fire in the Legislative Assembly, said that theoretically university lecturers should be allowed to be as blasphemous, obscene, and seditious as they wished, but in practice restrictions were observed, and the theoretical freedom was, for obvious reasons, not ..exercised.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19430507.2.46.2

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23941, 7 May 1943, Page 6

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71

SYDNEY PROFESSOR CRITICISED.—Professor Anderson, Professor of Philosophy at the Sydney University, addressing a crowded meeting of students. Professor Anderson, whose recent attack on the teaching of religion in schools brought him under fire in the Legislative Assembly, said that theoretically university lecturers should be allowed to be as blasphemous, obscene, and seditious as they wished, but in practice restrictions were observed, and the theoretical freedom was, for obvious reasons, not ..exercised. Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23941, 7 May 1943, Page 6

SYDNEY PROFESSOR CRITICISED.—Professor Anderson, Professor of Philosophy at the Sydney University, addressing a crowded meeting of students. Professor Anderson, whose recent attack on the teaching of religion in schools brought him under fire in the Legislative Assembly, said that theoretically university lecturers should be allowed to be as blasphemous, obscene, and seditious as they wished, but in practice restrictions were observed, and the theoretical freedom was, for obvious reasons, not ..exercised. Press, Volume LXXIX, Issue 23941, 7 May 1943, Page 6