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Mark Carroll, director of the University Press, was fired early in 1972. The Press was losing money. Hall expressed support for the publishing of worthy, but economically unsound books, but added, "a financially risky book would jeopardize our ability to publish other books...
World War II found Christie again practicing pharmacy and brushing up on the latest lethal drugs. Poison was a preferred method of dispatching a victim-frequently "in quiet family surroundings." She continued to publish one or two novels a year, often plotting them in a hot bath while eating apples. There was scarcely a time when her work was not before the public, not only on book jackets but in the credits of such stage and film works as Witness for the Prosecution and Ten Little Indians...
...that make her Agatha Christie's alter ego. Although Poirot is gone, Marple survives for at least a while longer An unpublished manuscript in which she too passes on is locked in the Christie vault, along with the ultimate whodunit, Dame Agatha's autobiography By refusing to publish it during her lifetime, Dame Agatha has assured herself one last, suspenseful hurrah...
...doctors affiliated with the Harvard School of Public Health will publish within the next few months a study probing a possible link between estrogens and breast cancer in women, one of the doctors involved in the study said yesterday...
Jeffrey Reiman, a third-year law student and president of the Law School's student government who asked Gignoux to publish the report, said yesterday he feels students have a right to know the findings of the visiting committee's Subcommittee on Student Concerns, since the report is based on student opinions expressed at a hearing last spring...