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Completing the list are D.D. Potter, M. Ptashne, H. Putnam, B. Rosenkrantz. R. A. Rosenthal. S.F. Sampson, B. Shapiro, M. Sinensky, C.R. Taylor, A. Tobin, M. Useem, G. Weld, J.D. Watson, T.G. Wegmann, T.E. Weisskopf, T. Wiesel, and D. Wiggins...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FACULTY STATEMENT | 4/24/1972 | See Source »

Tribe has served as a Law clerk to Potter Steward of the U.S. Supreme Court. He is currently a consultant to several Federal agencies...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: M. D. Gets Interdisciplinary Professorship Of Law and Psychiatry at Law School | 3/24/1972 | See Source »

According to one legend, the art of painting was invented by a Greek potter's daughter, who traced the shadow of her swain's profile by candlelight on a cave wall. In the centuries since then, the opposite view of sexual roles in art has prevailed-namely, that the heights of creation are inaccessible to women, whose misfortune it is to possess something called a "feminine sensibility." This is largely a fantasy, akin to the one found in literature (see BOOKS). But every woman artist at work today still has to contend with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Myths of Sensibility | 3/20/1972 | See Source »

...only item that the studio has even purchased ready-made is a small electric kiln. Everything else has been either built, borrowed, or found. Rippe has built all seven potter's wheels--four at his own expense--and a small raku kiln for special firings. Instructors and students have built shelving, work tables, plaster tables, and all other equipment for the studio...

Author: By Margaret S. Mc kenna, | Title: Tortured Turns of a Potter's Wheel | 3/4/1972 | See Source »

Rippe concedes that a certain amount of the potter's appeal derives from the fact that it is outside the University's regular activities. "There's a certain romantic vision attached to the myth of the impoverished artist. But that's what it is--a myth," Rippe insisted. "It is possible, perhaps, that another full-time workshop like the pottery could arise at Harvard with as little financial support as we have had. What's more unlikely is that a really vital studio--one that strives to offer more than just a pleasant diversion--can keep going without a concrete...

Author: By Margaret S. Mc kenna, | Title: Tortured Turns of a Potter's Wheel | 3/4/1972 | See Source »

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