HENRY HILLIARD-PICTURE GROUP A balancing act: Sheldon Glashow in his Harvard office harsh on creationists, whom he regularly describes as "fools" and "jerks." He is also irate with gawkers who interrupt his lectures and campus strolls. "People don't realize how intolerable it is for somebody who thought he had privacy to learn people are watching him," he says. Prominence does have its ad- vantages. Gould pays grad assistants out of his speaking fees and royalties and reportedly gave much of a $200,000 Mac- Arthur Foundation "genius grant" to the Department of Invertebrate Paleontology. But success has also brought detractors. What Gould most resents are suggestions that he is merely a popularizer. "Why is there the notion that writing science for the public cheapens the profession? ... I have some colleagues who might be very negative toward me, but the real motivation is jealousy and overt ill will." Prize in Physics, Steven Weinberg is still much in The Physicists: Eight years after winning the Nobel demand. In 1982 the University of Texas lured the 54-year-old scientist from Harvard for one of the highest salaries ever paid a state employee. (His wife, attorney Louise Weinberg, had been hired in 1980 as a professor at the UT law school.) In addition to his salary (now more than $126,000), Weinberg was, allowed to fill three tenure-track positions-in effect to build a faculty cluster around himself. "He contributes to the image of the universi- ty as a bustling, high-quality research university," says William Livingston, vice president and dean of graduate studies. "When you're raising money, Weinberg is a plus." A regular part of Weinberg's duties involves fund raising with both private donors and the Texas Legislature. He chairs a committee that recruits faculty for the university's 32 $1 million chairs in science and engineering and serves on the national panel charged with choosing a site for the proposed superconducting supercollider. Such visibility has obviously paid some healthy dividends for the university. Although UT's physics department enjoyed a reasonably good reputation before Weinberg's arrival, says associate professor Joseph Polchinski, a Weinberg hire, "he made it a world-class institution." Weinberg himself is comfortable with his high-profile role. "What I really enjoy more than anything else is still doing physics and writing papers," he concedes. "But that's very bloodless work ... We are in the real world where you have to convince the voters to support the universities if you expect to do the things you want to do. I feel more alive here." Weinberg's former Harvard colleague, Sheldon Glashow, was also courted assiduously by other colleges after winning his physics Nobel in 1979. Texas A&M reportedly offered a deal that was even better than the $1.5 million package it gave to football coach Jackie Sherill, who, after all, was not promised a new scientific staff. Glashow managed to work out a complex balancing act. While remaining on the faculty at Harvard (which limits outside commitments to 20 per- cent of a professor's schedule), Glashow parceled himself out among three other institutions. Now a board member at Texas A&M's College of Science Research, he is also listed as an "affiliated senior scientist" at the University of Houston, lecturing there during Harvard's spring break (annual fee: $10,000), and as a "distinguished visiting scientist" for one day a week of research and advising students at Boston University. At Harvard, Glashow teaches a spring graduate seminar and a fall course called From Alchemy to Elementary Parti- JOHN W. H. SIMPSON Repaying a lifelong debt through a firm commitment to teaching: Novelist Joyce Carol Qates with writing class at Princeton SEPTEMBER 1987 NEWSWEEK ON CAMPUS 11