See Also: Baldwin, Roger (Nash)(encyclopedia)
Baldwin (of Bewdley), Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl(encyclopedia)
Nash(dictionary)
nash-gab(dictionary)
Nash, John(encyclopedia)
Nash, Ogden(dictionary)
Nash (as used in expressions)(encyclopedia)
Nash, (Frederic) Ogden(encyclopedia)
Nash General Hospital(health)
Nash, John Forbes(encyclopedia)

deave (iou) and Baldwin, Roger (Nash) (sh)


deave (iou)



deave verb. [di:v] Now Scot. & north.
[Old English -deafian, formed as DEAF adjective. Cf. DEAF verb.]
verb intrans. Become deaf. rare. OE-LME.
verb trans. Deafen; stun, worry, or confuse with din or talk. ME.

Baldwin, Roger (Nash) (sh)




born Jan. 21, 1884, Wellesley, Mass., U.S.
died Aug. 26, 1981, Ridgewood, N.J.

U.S. civil-rights leader.

Born into an aristocratic Massachusetts family, Baldwin attended Harvard University and taught sociology at Washington University (1906-09) in St. Louis, where he also was chief probation officer of the city's juvenile court and secretary of its Civic League. When the U.S. entered World War I, he became director of the pacifist American Union Against Militarism, the predecessor of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). As the ACLU's director (1920-50) and national chairman (1950-55), he made civil rights, once a predominantly leftist cause, a universal one.