Bergen Evans

Bergen Evans

ACTOR

Dr. Bergen Evans was a disseminator of knowledge to thousands on the Northwestern U. Campus before serving as the chairman of the board of editors for the CBS television "The $64,000. Question". Dr. Evans was born in 1904 in Franklin, Ohio and was the son of a physician. his father entered the U.S. Consular service in 1909 and was assigned to England and Bergen entered school there at age four. When World War 1 came around in 1915 , Bergen and his four siblings were sent back to the U.S. Bergen entered Franklin High School in Ohio and worked afternoons and nights in the local paper mill. Bergen entered Miami U. in Oxford, Ohio and received a Bachelor of Arts degree. He received his Master of Arts degree from Harvard and returned to Miami U. as an assistant professor of English. He won a Rhodes scholarship in 1928 and attended Oxford in England for three years. He received a B. Litt. degree. He returned to the U.S. and added a Ph.D. at Harvard. He then returned to teaching at Northwestern as a full professor. He wrote several books including ""Natural History of Nonsense" and "Spoor of Spooks". Following that he edited a new dictionary published by Random House. He also wrote the "Skeptics Corner" for Mercury magazine.
  • When was
    Bergen Evans born?

    Bergen Evans was born on Monday, September 19, 1904

  • Where was
    Bergen Evans born?

    Bergen Evans was born in Frankl, Ohio, USA

  • How old was
    Bergen Evans when they died?

    Bergen Evans was 73

  • When did Bergen Evans die?

    Bergen Evans died on
    Saturday, February 4, 1978


Best Quotes

  • Wisdom is meaningless until our own experience has given it meaning.
  • The mere abhorrence of vice is not a virtue at all.
  • We may be through with the past, but the past is not through with us. Ideas of the Stone Age exist side by side with the latest scientific thought. Only a fraction of mankind has emerged from the Dark Ages, and in the most lucid brains, as Logan Pearsall Smith has said, we come upon nests of woolly caterpillars. Seemingly sane men entrust their wealth to stargazers and their health to witch doctors. Giant planes throb through the stratosphere, but half their passengers are wearing magic amulets and are protected from harm by voodoo incantations. Hotels boast of express elevators and a telephone in every room, but omit thirteen from all floor and room numbers lest their guests be ill at ease.
  • That is the essence of a witch-hunt, that any questioning of the evidence or the procedures in itself constitutes proof of complicity.
  • Bergen Evans Quotes- See more quotes

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