Word: bulletining
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...psychoanalyst could obviously find all sorts of sexual obsessions in Delvaux's work. In one canvas, a female nude walks through a garden past a group of fully clothed scholars, and, like the sad little figure in the ads entitled "In Philadelphia nearly everybody reads the Bulletin," is wholly ignored. And Delvaux's trains could be a Freudian symbol for the male sex drive or an occult reference to death. But Delvaux ignores all that sort of speculation. He paints trains, he says, probably because they remind him of happy trips he took during his childhood...
...Kennedy 50. He is 5 ft. 7½ in. tall, weighs 170 Ibs., likes a martini before dinner and a nightcap of bourbon and water. He comes to his post with some knowledge of American girls, since in 1938 he married one, Mary McEldowney, onetime associate editor of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. The Simpsons have two married daughters just into their 20s and a son, Rupert, 11. Simpson believes adamantly in the purpose and future of women's colleges: "The strength of education in this country is its diversity. A coeducational campus is a male-dominated campus...
Associated Press and United Press International kept direct lines to the Vatican Press Office open for days; they wore out several batteries listening to Vatican Radio, which unnerved everybody by broadcasting occasional bulletins in Swahili. Just 60 seconds after the Pope's death, U.P.I, carried a flash to all its U.S. clients: POPE DEAD. A.P., whose man on the phone tipped over backward in his swivel chair when he heard the words "E morte!" from the Vatican pressroom, still managed to fire off a bulletin two minutes later...
Program donations were insufficient to meet even the current needs of the library. In 1962 lack of funds forced the suspension of the Harvard Library Bulletin, and cataloguing lies hopelessly in arrears because of a chronic staff shortage. A cut-back drastic enough to make present income sufficient would involve giving up something like half the collection, and closing a number of buildings. Harvard would have to abdicate its traditional library pre-eminence...
America's Money. When scientists discuss NASA's requested $5.7 billion budget, they show themselves deeply divided. A large and influential faction believes that the cost of man-on-the-moon could be better spent in other ways. In the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Mathematician Warren Weaver, former president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, estimates that the $30 billion to be spent before 1970 would do all of the following...