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...biggest Catholic archdiocese (1,800,000). Although the diocese's official newspaper condemned the film in emphatic terms ("a hate-provoking movie"), Stritch's office issued a statement affirming "the democratic right" of all faiths to "the honest expression of a religious viewpoint" on TV. The diocese also disclaimed responsibility for the film's cancellation. Hard on the heels of the statement, enterprising station WBKB, which had contemplated showing the film earlier but postponed it when the controversy erupted, announced that on April 23 Chicago TViewers will see Luther at last...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Clearing the Air | 3/11/1957 | See Source »

...HYRC in the eyes of the rest of the College is self-admittedly at rock-bottom. While becoming an increasingly intellectually respectable philosophy in the rest of the country, Republicanism at Harvard is being discredited by the organization and people officially representing it. Gaining toleration for the conservative viewpoint is especially important at Harvard, an institution characterized by the liberality of faculty and students and by the number of influential leaders graduating from College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Dynamic Conservatism | 3/7/1957 | See Source »

Next day from General Walsh's brassbound ranks emerged two dissenters. The 49th (California) Division's retired artillery commander, Major General John W. Guerard, 50, a peacetime lawyer and XXIV Corps South Pacific veteran, upheld the Army viewpoint. He observed that "the day has gone when any lunkhead could have a rifle shoved in his hands and some officer would march out in front and wave a saber and say 'Charge...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: It Was Murder | 3/4/1957 | See Source »

Walter Selove, professor of Physics at the University of Pennsylvania and formerly assistant professor of Physics here, took a rather different viewpoint of the situation. He pointed out that it is virtually impossible to determine what may be reasonably called a "permissible level" of radioactive strontium 90 in the body...

Author: By Frederick W. Byron jr., | Title: Physicists Disagree About H-Bomb Fallout Dangers | 3/2/1957 | See Source »

...Person in a way to start with, partly cat and partly humans, because Miss Sarton's imagination allows her to take his viewpoint from the start. She knows that though cats can come to have human characteristics by living with people, still cats have their dignity, which human people must regard, especially those who dare write books about cats. Her point seems to be that it's easier for her to be a cat lover than for a cat to be a lover of people...

Author: By Jonathan Beecher, | Title: Sarton; 'The Fur Person' Explores Cats and People | 3/1/1957 | See Source »

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