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...doubt Lowell under the Stewarts will remain a place in which the Tutors are as interested in staving in the dining hall after meals making good talk as in scurrying back to their rooms to write another page of their dissertations. Lowell men nourish themselves on intelligent conversation. They work off the Central Kitchens' starchy fare by hard study: Lowell consistently houses a high percentage of the College's most distinguished scholars. And if a student is having difficulties, and needs help or advice, he could find no more simpatico person to talk to than Lowell's Senior Tutor, Richard...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: House Profiles | 3/20/1963 | See Source »

...beard got him-in a bristly, both-cheeks embrace. The Algerians were all for Williams because he observed the sunrise-to-sundown Moslem fast of Ramadan-plus the fact that their government had decided to headline the U.S. emergency aid (40,000 tons of foodstuffs monthly) that helps nourish the country. Glowed Soapy, when he recovered his tongue: "I shall tell President Kennedy of the gratitude of the Algerian people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Feb. 22, 1963 | 2/22/1963 | See Source »

...known as New England's female Groton-a rigorous, reticent prep school for rich girls (tuition: $2,700) with rich minds. Steeped in Connecticut charm, it boasts a noted art history department, one teacher for every eight of its 220 girls, and a grade-A milk herd to nourish its grade-A students, who consistently enter Radcliffe, Vassar, Smith and Wellesley...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: O.K. for C.B.K. | 5/4/1962 | See Source »

City Sickness. Even the A.N.P.A.'s proud list of newcomers served as added proof that the nation's bigger cities do not nourish its healthiest newspapers. The 1961 crop of new dailies sprouted in such towns as Chesterton, Ind. (1960 pop. 4,335), Napoleon. Ohio (6,739), and Princeton, W. Va. (8,393). But in a city the size of Boston (697,197), Hearst's cost accountants found it expedient to merge the empire's morning and afternoon papers into a single tabloid, the Record-American...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: No Competition | 1/19/1962 | See Source »

...usually celebrate their colleagues in public. Please allow me to break system by commemorating in your columns the life and work of Werner Jaegey. Like many Greeks of old, it befell him to be exiled from his country, and he found in America a homeland which continued to nourish his genius, and to which he gave the full measure of his service and affection. We are all the pearer for his passing. Eric A. Havelock, Professor of Greek and Latin. (Visiting Professor, Princeton University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: IN MEMORIAM | 10/28/1961 | See Source »

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