======================== HES POSTING ================== Jim Craven's baseless and vulgar charge against Milton Friedman brings to mind that Friedman's advocacy of freedom, noninflationary monetary policy, and limited government has indeed been associated with efforts to censor. But Friedman was never the censor; he was the one censored. Before Chile, in 1974, members of the Students for a Democratic Society tried to shout Friedman down as he gave a talk at the Oriental Institute in Chicago. After Anthony Lewis's _New York Times_ article (October 2, 1975) accusing him of contributing to repression of Chile's poor, a "Committee Against Friedman/Harberger Collaboration With the Chilean Junta" was formed at Chicago. The group's posters on the University of Chicago campus called for members of the community to "drive Friedman off campus through protest and exposure." After the announcement of Friedman's Nobel Prize there were protests, and the Friedmans were given special protection during their stay in Stockholm for the ceremonies. Other efforts by demonstrators to silence him followed after the Friedmans returned to the U.S. If censorship is measured by the effort made to silence a person, which economists have been subject to more censorship than Milton Friedman? Dan Hammond Department of Economics Wake Forest University ============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============ For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]