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Deborah Hughes Hallett, Senior Preceptor in Mathematics, and Leonard K. Nash, professor of Chemistry, will receive the first Phi Beta Kappa Faculty-wide Teaching Prizes today at the Phi Beta Kappa Literary Exercises...
...awards' presentation, David Riesman '31 will read short citations on each winner, composed of quotations about Nash and Hughes Hallett from students' letters of recommendation and from the CUE Guide to Courses, Gullette said...
...Georgia Abortion Rights Action League, she found herself listening to the cooing of the pro-abortion leader's nine-month-old daughter. Making the correspondents' task even more difficult was the fact that many women still have mixed feelings about abortion. Says Chicago Correspondent Madeleine Nash, recalling a visit to a Planned Parenthood clinic in St. Paul: "The cheerful waiting room could have been in any doctor's or dentist's office. But the impression that lingers is not of physical surroundings, but of the emotionally charged atmosphere...
...paused for breath, Mayes would start talking. By the time he had finished, their names were often affixed to contracts. F. Scott Fitzgerald was one of his authors; so were Sinclair Lewis, Ernest Hemingway, J.D. Salinger, Katherine Anne Porter, Herman Wouk, Agatha Christie, Art Linkletter, Clare Boothe Luce, Ogden Nash, Hubert Humphrey, Jacqueline Kennedy, Lucille Ball and Maurice Chevalier, and most of them are worth a story or two. Mayes treated them with amused kindness, helped them through personal crises and paid them well, even for that golden age of magazines: $10,000 per short story for Somerset Maugham...
Most often, though, TIME reporters and photographers were better, though bulkily, equipped. They sweated inside disposable vinyl body suits and bootees and hard hats. Wearing a respirator was a new experience for Chicago-based Correspondent Madeleine Nash, who went to dump sites in six states. Says she: "Breathing through those things is hard labor And even with one, sharp fumes cut through to create a slight burning in your throat." Mandatory rubber gloves made reporters' notes look more like toddlers' scrawls...