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...therefore, no self-determination for the Cypriots-because, having banished Makarios, there is no one else with whom they can negotiate. The British now hope that new leaders will arise, meaning, of course, leaders who would be subservient to them while pretending to serve the people of Cyprus. The feverish attempts to create such leaders in my own country at the present time will serve to document the preceding statement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Apr. 9, 1956 | 4/9/1956 | See Source »

Murder at the Mosque. Hussein grew up in this back-country court in a feverish atmosphere of family jealousies. Grandfather Abdullah had three wives, whose offspring schemed to-obtain the succession. His father Talal was an un happy, unstable man who beat Hussein's mother and denounced his own father Abdullah as a British puppet. The old King took to the young princeling. Hussein galloped on his blooded Arabian mare through the hills of his grandfather's summer place near Jericho, and hunted small game with the rifle that Abdullah had given him. One of his grandfather...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JORDAN: The Boy King | 4/2/1956 | See Source »

...radios for every portable; now the margin is closer to two to one, and is steadily narrowing. Radio's transistorized reawakening began when Regency brought out the first T-radio in late 1954. Raytheon and G.E. followed, and today the industry is in the middle of its most feverish sales battle since the early postwar years. The outcome, said one busy manufacturer, "boils down to who makes transistors faster and in bigger quantities than the others...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: The Mighty Mite | 3/12/1956 | See Source »

Kokoschka's many other portraits are nervous and feverish. They look hurried. Twenty sanguine drawings, six of which are shown, were actually done in one evening. Kokoschka, however, is not concerned with the external aspects of his subjects so much as with the strange lines of their inner personalities. The results are haunting...

Author: By Lowell J. Rubin, | Title: From Kokoschka to Jennerjahn | 1/25/1956 | See Source »

Western visitors will find their advent well prepared for. In the past seven years, a feverish activity has seized Moscow: broad new thoroughfares have been dynamited through the old quarters, big buildings have been lifted and put down in new alignments, broad plazas and parks have been created. Eight skyscrapers, 20 to 38 stories high, have sprung up like corn, and more than a million trees have been planted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: MOSCOW FOR THE TOURIST | 11/28/1955 | See Source »

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