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...young children too long in adult company are merely involuntary signals of short-fused patience. Any competent psychiatrist remains alert to the tics and quirky expressions by which a patient's hidden emotions make themselves known. People even signal by the odors they give off, as Janet Hopson documents in superfluous detail in Scent Signals: The Silent Language of Sex. Actually, it is impossible for an individual to avoid signaling other people; the person who mutely withdraws from human intercourse sends out an unmistakable signal in the form of utter silence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: Why So Much Is Beyond Words | 7/13/1981 | See Source »

...insisted that man's soul lies in his smells. Wilhelm Fliess, a Berlin doctor and friend of Freud's, regarded the nose as the most important sexual organ. Pop Sexologist Alex Comfort predicts sex signals will be found in underarm odors. In Scent Signals, Author Janet Hopson says "sexones," or sex odors, guide human sexuality...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: The Nose Knows | 7/16/1979 | See Source »

Christopher Hopson, 7, worked hard in school last year and got all A's and B's, but this year he sometimes stares unseeingly into space, complains of feeling dizzy and gets D's. His mother Drema, 25, is often depressed, becomes alarmed whenever it rains heavily, and sometimes has nightmares in which her two little girls look at her intently as black mud begins to cover her body...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: After the Deluge | 10/9/1972 | See Source »

...ultimatum Peking issued to London early last week was an unacceptable affront to sovereignty and protocol. It was both peremptory and insulting, addressing itself to "the British government's utterly hideous and ferocious features of fascist imperialism." Britain's man in Peking, Charge d'Affaires Donald Hopson, 52, a cool, much-decorated World War II commando offi cer, simply refused to send it to London. Peking, of course, broadcast the texts anyway. It demanded the release of 53 imprisoned Hong Kong Communists within 48 hours and the re opening of three outlawed Red tabloids in the troubled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China: Ultimatum & Anarchy | 9/1/1967 | See Source »

Hong Kong braced for the worst-more riots, further cuts in supplies of food and water. But the Maoists struck first at Hopson's chancellery in Peking. On the dot of the ultimatum's expiration, even though all but 18 of the 19 prisoners had been routinely released, hundreds of Red Guards pushed past acquiescent Red Army and police guards. They crowded into the British diplomatic compound, shouting Mao-think slogans in English and French and throwing Molotov cocktails. Inside were 23 British diplomats, women and children. The mob set the chancellery afire, forcing the British to come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: China: Ultimatum & Anarchy | 9/1/1967 | See Source »

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