Enid Nemy

Enid Nemy (born 1924) was a reporter and columnist for The New York Times for many years. She began at the Times in 1963, and remained for four decades before retiring. She was awarded the 1984 Matrix Award "for achievement in newspapers and wire services".[1]

Although retired, she continues to pen the occasional obituary for illustrious New Yorkers (e.g. Enid A. Haupt,[2] Lucille Lortel, Betsey Whitney, Patricia Buckley, Leona Helmsley, and Elaine Kaufman[3]), and select others (Larry Hagman).

Early years

Enid Nemy was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba. She attended United College and the University of Manitoba. She began her career with The Canadian Press, later working with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as well as the Bermudan Mid-Ocean News.[4]

Career highlights

Nemy reported from Southeast Asia and accompanied President and Mrs. Reagan in 1982 to the European Summit meeting, and in 1984 to China. She was editor of Metropolitan Diary, a weekly column of stories submitted by New York Times readers. She wrote for other magazines and periodicals, and was known in literary circles for her often biting quotes.[5]

Personal life

Enid Nemy was married to S. Ralph Cohen, a vice-president of the Scandinavian Airlines System, until his death in 1983. The union was childless.[6]

Current or past affiliations

  • Dorothy Strelsin Foundation, President
  • Lighthouse International (former board member)
  • New York Newspaper Women's Club, member
  • New York Newspaper Guild, member
  • Women in Communications, member

Writing

  • Hot Potatoes, Doubleday; 1st edition (February 1, 1993); ISBN 0385468849, ISBN 978-0385468848

Quotes

  • "Even at the United Nations, where legend has it that the building was designed so that there could be no corner offices, the expanse of glass in individual offices is said to be a dead giveaway as to rank. Five windows are excellent, one window not so great." (Nemy)[7]
gollark: It mostly doesn't happen unless the existing stuff is also very bad. I suspect it's also easier for somewhat purpose-specific instant messaging than for general social network stuff because the group which has to move with you is smaller and you don't have to migrate giant friend lists or something.
gollark: Even if better services *do* exist, people generally don't move to something they don't have stuff/people they know on.
gollark: Generally it requires the existing service to be really bad before people start moving.
gollark: Yes, privacy-focused stuff often lacks features. But even if someone came up with "Facebook but significantly better somehow", network effects mean adoption would be very slow.
gollark: Discord isn't ideal, but at least they seem to have a mostly non-data-harvesting business model and somewhat better privacy policy.

References

  1. Nemy receives 1984 Matrix Award on April 16, 1984
  2. Enid Haupt obituary, New York Times; October 27, 2005; accessed May 24, 2014.
  3. Elaine Kaufman obituary, New York Times, December 4, 2010; accessed May 24, 2014.
  4. "Enid Nemy". The American Theatre Wing. Retrieved 2020-01-29.
  5. Nemy quotes, thinkexist.com; accessed May 24, 2014.
  6. "American Theatre Wing profile with marriage info". Archived from the original on 2010-07-20. Retrieved 2010-12-10.
  7. Brainy Quote website
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