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...years ago, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington sifted through a decade of Plowden's work and organized a show of 75 remarkable black-and-white photos. Now these same pictures have been collected in a handsomely designed and printed paperbound book entitled The Hand of Man on America (Chatham Press; $5.95). In a subtle, ironic way, Plowden's shots tell more about the nation and its manifest values than reams of reports, plans and environmental statements...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: View of America | 11/19/1973 | See Source »

...process by which Al Chatham came to Cambridge involved representatives of 125 citizen groups plus representatives of teachers, administrators and students serving on interviewing panels to quiz five final applicants for the job. Unlike the frantic petition drive for signatures to support incumbent Frank J. Frisoli, which was mislabeled "citizen participation," this process gave Cambridge citizens a choice...

Author: By Ellen Preusser, | Title: Patronage Tries for a Comeback | 11/6/1973 | See Source »

...Jane Berquist of Chatham, N.J., has become one of the few female graduates of the Lycee Technique Hotelier de Paris, a government-run cooking school. Despite French prejudice against women in commercial kitchens, Berquist is employed in a restaurant near Paris. The hardest part, she says, is the physical labor: lifting 25-lb. containers of almonds, for example...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Sexes: Male and Female | 2/19/1973 | See Source »

...hope that during the next year both the School Committee, working with the new Superintendent of Schools Aflorence Chatham, and the City Council, in cooperation with Corcoran, will put aside past differences and make the better future of Cambridge their common goal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Cambridge's City Circus | 9/20/1972 | See Source »

...help cement such loyalties, Humbard once a month packs a small, multipurpose staff* into a four-engine Viscount turboprop to fly to one-night stands around the northern U.S. and Canada. Last week Humbard was in Chatham, Ont. (pop. 33,000) to play to a crowd of 2,700. Both the music and the message were familiar: "I believe that God wants us to be happy 'cause there's enough troubles in the world," he told the audience. Afterward, like a candidate on the hustings, he signed autographs and pressed flesh for 25 minutes while the crews packed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Electronic Evangelist | 5/17/1971 | See Source »

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