Word: clough
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...through the West Wing almost all day long-and often far into the night. Carter has explored the White House collection of 2,000 LPs-donated by a record-industry group when Richard Nixon was President-and selected a few dozen albums of classical music for his secretary, Susan Clough, to spin on the turntable near her desk. The music is channeled to stereo speakers in Carter's private study so that he can play his records as long-and as loud-as he likes...
...Clough says that Carter leaves the choice of pieces to play "in my hands." She starts her boss off gently in the morning with Bach and Schumann, working up in intensity as the day progresses to Beethoven, Rachmaninoff and Tchaikovsky. At night Carter is his own deejay. Among his recent choices: Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, Grieg's Piano Concerto in A Minor and Franck's Symphony in D Minor...
Gregory Moore '74 of Eliot House and Auburn, Ala., President; Paul J. Fornaro '74 of Claverly House and Huntington, N.Y., and William D. Ratnoff '74 of Claverly House and Huntington, N.Y., Publishers: Thomas W. Clough '73 of Mather House and Morristown, N.J., Business Manager...
Perhaps the theologian, with his distinction between ordinary and extraordinary means of sustaining human life, will also say with Arthur Hugh Clough...
...Says Unitarian Jack Mendelsohn, minister of Boston's Arlington Street Church: "There are occasions when mercy killing is justified because it is desired by the person who is ill." More cautiously, the Roman Catholic Church follows the principle, poetically and archaically articulated by the Victorian poet Arthur Hugh Clough, that "Thou shalt not kill; but need'st not strive officiously to keep alive...