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...constitutions. In legislative elections two years ago, he had his name printed at the top of every ballot, then announced that everyone who voted had thereby unanimously elected him to a new six-year term. So now, as all could see, he still had four years to go. With bland audacity, Duvalier received foreign newsmen last week at a press conference in Port-au-Prince's National Palace. "Gentlemen," he said in cool, precise English, "I wish to take this opportunity to assure our friends in the Western Hemisphere that Haiti will continue under my administration as a peaceful...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Haiti: Outraged & Helpless | 5/24/1963 | See Source »

...George Grizzard reveal "something naked of the human condition. I've got to get him to take off his 'clothes.' " He failed. Grizzard is a buttoned-up Hamlet in a buttoned-down shirt, a bland suburbanite puzzled by the mess he is in, but with no hint of being the terrible plaything of destiny. He is the nice boy who always got good marks at Wittenberg U., never dented the family convertible, was engaged to that sweet Ophelia girl next door, and then inexplicably got his name splashed all over the tabloids by his revolting behavior toward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: In the Land of Hiawatha | 5/17/1963 | See Source »

Unusual Happenings. Alas, poor Sig! One day in 1956, with no advance warning, the British fired him. Not without cause. Sig's saga finally came to light last week in a remarkably bland report by the judicial tribunal that has spent three months investigating the latest British spy scandal: the strange case of William John Vassall, a homosexual Admiralty clerk who had been assigned to the Moscow embassy for two years, and had been spying for the Russians for seven. Vas-sall's superiors, and all but one of the officers who picked him out of 40 applicants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia: Sin Along with Sig | 5/3/1963 | See Source »

Perhaps in Bits & Pieces. Both before and after Kennedy's bland statement, steel executives kept warily silent about their intentions. But it was widely believed that the industry would indeed raise prices, perhaps in bits and pieces over a period of time. The steel industry has been feeling better of late. Steel prices have been firming somewhat, and production has been rising for ten straight weeks. It now stands at 77% of capacity, due partly to strong demand from automakers and partly to hedge buying against the possibility of a steel strike this summer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Steel: It's Spelled Steele | 4/19/1963 | See Source »

...things affect people; they do not have an obsession with always doing the "right thing," hoping that history will absolve them. Furthermore, all of them are politicians with a special touch for people. They have something more than the rather common ability to shake hands vigorously and say bland things to a disinterested electorate...

Author: By Joel E. Cohen, Albert B. Crenshaw, and Donal F. Holway, S | Title: Portraits of Some Freshman Senators | 4/19/1963 | See Source »

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