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Show DAILY UTAH CHRONICLE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14.1983 THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH VOL. 93. NO. 43 Vents aplenty S Mi Sj. y Peterson's oiaygyirafiiioiii) The University will celebrate the inauguration of Chase N. Peterson as its 1 1th president with a week of activities beginning Monday, Nov. 14 and ending Friday, Nov. 18, at the convocation in the Special Events Center. The public is invited to most of the events, especially to the convocation in the Special Events Center. To begin the week, Roger Rosenblatt, senior writer and essayist for Time magazine, will offer a public lecture titled "Children of War." Rosenblatt is a former Harvard professor and Fulbright scholar. On Wednesday, a symposium is scheduled on "The University and Human Values." The symposium will focus on how a university reflects and enhances the fl - cherished values of the society that created it. Participating in the symposium will be John J. Flynn, professor of law; Sterling M. McMurrin, E.E. Ericksen distinquished professor of philosophy and' professor of history; and Obert C. Tanner, professor emeritus of philosophy. The symposium will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Fine Arts Auditorium. The convocation, Friday at 10 a.m., will include representatives from other Utah colleges and universities, the Board of Regents, the University Institutional Council and University vice presidents, college deans and faculty. They will form a procession into the Special Events Center. The University Symphony Band, conducted by Gregg I. Hanson,, associate professor of music, will play the processional march as well as recessional music. John A. Dahlstrom, chairman of the University Institutional Council, arid Gov. Scott M. Matheson will U2es rip bannei;,MQn KUED will broadcast taped coverage of the inauguration Friday at 7:30 p.m. and again Sunday, Nov. 20 at 10:30 p.m. get 'raped' Before Saturday's State game in Logan Utah was in the mood to "rip the Aggies." After Utah lost 7, Ute coach. Chuck Stobart did some ripping of his own. "It wasihe worst rape ever committed in major college football," Stobart said after referees called 21 penalties on hi9team?4It was the worst officiating I've seen in my 23 years of coaching." Details of the Ute-US- U game on page9; ' Ute-Ut- 21-1- ah Only 32 coot balloto ln U dlotricto ofninig iriglhSs iiginioiredl by. Marilyn Abildskov speak. The Utah Symphony conducted by Joseph Silverstein will perform an inaugural concert featuring music by Brahms and Mendelssohn. The combined choruses of the Utah and University Chorale will perform "Now Dawns for Us a Glorious Day" by Johann Sebastian Bach, 'following Peterson's " J inaugural address. Friday afternoon from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., a reception for students and others in the University community wanting to meet President Peterson and his wife will be held in the "Park Building foyer. There will be refreshments and musical entertainment. 4 kept on the books for four years and is counted as part of the total number of registered voters in the district, said Kay Llewellyn of the County Election Qerk's office. Many students listed as registered voters in districts 2,358 and . Chronicle staff It was 1971 when won the right to vote, but already that right is something young people take for granted. In the two districts comprising University dormitories and Medical Towers, Mayor Ted Wilson received 22 votes. Sterling Webber, his opponent, received 10. As of primary election day, the number of registered voters in the two districts totaled 1,196. There have been tv o registration days since the primary, which means the figu ; is probably higher, said Kathy Marshall of the City Record r's office. Despite the lack of student interest, the figure re deceiving. There are twice as many registered voters liste, for the dorm districts as are students living there. Unless a person registers at another address, his or her name is 2,360 which include the dormitories and Medical Towers -- have moved out of the districts vote at their new addresses. but never registered to In addition, fewer people register to vote in a municipal election, Llewellyn said. "When the presidential election comes around, the number of people registering to vote will go up." Eric Wing, a sophomore in physics, is a good example of someone whose interest depends on the magnitude of the election. "It's a shame but true," Wing said. "I'm more interest i in national politics. I have strong feelings about the presidential race, but I am not too turned on by city upcomi election continued on page three Dealing with Nazi past is still difficult for Germans by Maribeth Thueson Chronicle staff The German people still cannot deal with their Nazi past, a German actress said Thursday at the Hinckley Institute of Politics. "Germans can't believe yet what happened. They can't understand it. The past has not been dealt with," Anne-liese Uhlig said. Her visit 4 coincided with the celebration . of the German-America- n Tricentennial. Uhlig was an actress in War II Germany, and she was opposed to the Nazis. She eventually married an American and became a journalist. She now lives in Santa Cruz, Calif. Not until 1977 did German publishers print books that focused on the Nazi years, she pre-Wor- ld said. ..; ; "For' me to stand here and talk about this is traumatic. I'm a fossil. I'm a survivor, I know how it was for me. I just happened to be in places where history was happening'. "A personal experience is valuable for people interested in the human experience of how people live in a totalitarian system," Uhlig said. Artists want more than anything to practice their craft, but in a totalitarian system, that is not possible, she said. The government had admiration for creative people, but did not understand them. "The artist is spoiled and given privileges, yet many defect or go underground. How do people with creativity live in a system that doesn't permit them to do it in any way but one way the governments way?" she said. Many German actors cooperated with the Nazis because they were interested in making great films, not in the message of the film. "This is the dilemma of artists and scientists: They are focusing on something they want to accomplish, and if someone will give them that opportunity, they'll take it," Uhlig said. "In a system of survivial, you don't worry what the person giving you a piece of bread believes. They're on your side because others won't give you a piece of bread. That's how simple it is," she said. Uhlig said discussing an issue freely is a marvelous opportunity. "I can stick my neck out here because I know no one's going to chop it off. It's a marvelous feeling." Time writer will speak by Brian Aggeler Chronicle staff Roger Rosenblatt, senior writer for Time magazine, will speak Monday night at 7:30 in the Fine Arts Auditorium on Children of War, his new book about a 25,000-mi- le odyssey he took to meet with children of war from six embattled countries. His lecture is part of Inauguration Week, which marks the installment of Chase Peterson as the University's new president. Rosenblatt's five-wejourney, the basis of a Time cover January story, took him to Northern the occupied West Bank, Israel and Ireland, and Vietnam to interview Cambodia Lebanon, and understand the children caught up in the wars of those countries. Six months later, during the Israeli siege of Beirut, Rosenblatt returned to Lebanon to seek out the Palestinian children he had interviewed earlier. The account of the search appeared in ek continued on page six Non-Pro- fit Org U.S. Postage Paid German actress Anncliese Uhlig, who survived World War II, condemns the Nazi's behavior. Permit No. 1529 Salt Lake City, UT |