Word: husbanded
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...product of this adjustment, thinks Goodman, is greater reliance by women on other women for friendship -- an observation that accords with Hite's. Psychologist Carin Rubenstein, co-author of the Redbook study, also finds this trend striking. "I've heard women say, 'Maybe I should date my husband and live with my best friend...
...perfect ending for Woodward's dramatic spy saga. Too perfect, in the view of some. Casey's widow Sophia flatly denied that Woodward had seen her late husband in the hospital. Ronald Reagan branded Woodward's account an "awful lot of fiction." Others questioned whether, even if true, Casey's dying nod and the tantalizingly ambiguous "I believed" were enough to close the books on the CIA director's involvement in the Iran-contra affair. Though Lieut. Colonel Oliver North testified in July that Casey had embraced the diversion as the "ultimate covert operation" and many suspect...
Many readers were thumbing directly to the last two pages, where Woodward recounts his final meeting with the ailing CIA chief. Sophia Casey insists that Woodward "never got in to see my husband," claiming that either she or her daughter was at Casey's bedside constantly. "We had our food brought up there," she says. "There was a lavatory there. We never had to go out of the room." What's more, she says, the incapacitated Casey was unable to talk. But a knowledgeable medical source at Georgetown University Hospital says that Casey, though gravely ill, was not totally incapable...
...center of Hite's life these days is a West German concert pianist more than 20 years her junior, Friedrich Horicke, 24, whom she married 2 1/2 years ago. Unlike her disgruntled respondents in Women and Love, Hite is euphoric about her husband. "With some people you feel like the whole world is open and everything is possible," she says. "That's how I feel with Fred...
...none of the emotional violence she describes in Women and Love. Because Horicke was raised with sisters who did the household chores, Hite did set down firm domestic rules. "He has learned to live with them," she says, laughing. "He even changes light bulbs without being asked." Her husband is supportive of her work. On the rare occasions , when he insults her or sulks, Hite says, she reminds him, "Fred, you're doing that thing...