Word: angelo
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...back in our senior year, Tyrell started to dub himself "The Gale from Yale," after his high school hero, Gale Sayers. In those days it seemed an unlikely dream, but this year it became a reality. The American Dream did not work out for the rest of our friends. Angelo Nutall, a 9.6 hundred man, is in the Marine Corps. Don Thompson, a tough Irish kid who played tackle, signed up for a four-year hitch in the Navy. Russell (Sweet Sing) Singleton went to Vietnam. The others are married and working in the steel mills. The more successful...
Last week Angelo was back in the press section of the presidential jet for a stretch of hard campaigning that within two days encountered gale winds in Montana, a sleet storm in Wyoming, and heat of 102° F. in Southern California. "First Ladies," says Angelo, "are no longer treated as perishable commodities...
...course until one day recently when Angelo, accompanying Mrs. Nixon's party, found herself locked in a hotel room in Yellowstone Park. With no phone, no response to her shouts and the press bus about to leave, she threw caution - and herself - to the winds: "Feeling like the prisoner of Zenda, I opened the window, forced the screen and jumped out. The room, happily, was on the first floor...
...Angelo's reporting from the road went to Associate Editor Jonathan Larsen, who wrote the story. For Larsen, who recently served as our Saigon bureau chief, writing about the feminine side of presidential politics offered an interesting contrast. "In Viet Nam," he says, "the wives of some politicians are their husbands' silent business partners, and often you hear about them only when a scandal breaks. Here they have become vocal members of the team and must go on display for public approval. The American wives have it tougher...
...complained once, with perhaps a trace of bitterness, that she has always been too busy working to "just sit back" and think of herself or her "ideas," but she does seem to have her own vision of America. Reports TIME Correspondent Bonnie Angelo: "Her view of life is that of Pollyanna going steady with Horatio Alger. With hard work and the old dependable virtues, there is nowhere you can't go. That's the way it was for her and Dick, and the America she sees agrees with...