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...grand view by those same jets that bring them so swiftly. They soon are dumped back into the realities of Detroit and New York. But the memories mingle and linger: supreme of pheasant smitane, Rockefeller, Harriman, Dillon, chestnut mousse, Bob Stack, Nanette Fabray, De La Renta, Alsop, filet of salmon in aspic, Cronkite, Swearingen, Humphrey, Schramsberg blanc de noir, Auchincloss. Watching from the dim corners of the old Decatur House on Lafayette Square, where the ladies went for tea, or inside the stately Anderson House, where Sadat the next day returned the White House favors with a dinner, one could...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY by HUGH SIDEY: Subtle Joys of Being in the Court | 11/10/1975 | See Source »

Though no one has yet matched Eckstein's success, by any other standards Harvard professors are doing remarkably well. The average Business School professor does about 20 days a year in outside work, Walter J. Salmon Jr. '30, associate dean for educational affairs at the Business School says. Business School professors earn a salary of about $100 an hour--about that of a top lawyer in a large firm," Salmon said. This means, Salmon adds, that the average Harvard Business School professor earns about $10,000 a year from outside work...

Author: By Thomas W. Janes, | Title: Moonlighting in Academia | 11/7/1975 | See Source »

Sources at the Business School say that Lawrence E. Fouraker, dean of the school, was concerned about the amount of time professors were spending away from academic work. "Fouraker was upset," a source said, "and started to exert pressure on certain professors to stay around Cambridge more." Salmon, however, denies that time spent away has become a problem. "As long as it is an average of only 20 days a year," he says, "and loyalty remains to the Business School, there is no conflict." Salmon adds that the School even encourages outside work on the grounds that it is often...

Author: By Thomas W. Janes, | Title: Moonlighting in Academia | 11/7/1975 | See Source »

Nine out of ten Americans lived on farms, grew their own corn and potatoes, made most of their own clothes. In the not-yet-crowded countryside and seashore, the woods were full of wild game and the waters of cod, carp, shad and salmon. Life was tough and dangerous but self-sufficient. What now seems amaz ing about this hardy era was the immense national feeling of self-confidence-the feeling, summed up in the phrase still imprinted on the back of every dollar bill, that America was a "new order of the ages." Toward the impressive contemporary Europe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: The Best of Times-1821? 1961? Today? | 9/1/1975 | See Source »

...with suspension bridges over ravines, cable cars across two river canyons and a boardwalk along the rougher sections. At one point, the only way to cross the Nitnat Narrows is by dugout canoe, handled by Nitnat Indians who charge $2 for the ride and sell fresh crabs and smoked salmon on the side. Ideal for a four-day camping trip, the trail winds through forest and beside the ocean, where gray whales can be seen. John Watts, Pacific Rim's acting superintendent, told a visitor last week, "It's exciting and enjoyable, and I will personally guarantee...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: Adventure in Tranquil Places | 8/18/1975 | See Source »

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