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...chief opposition comes from the Hicks-Lee-O'Connor axis of the committee, which has refused to admit either the existence of racial imbalance or the need for constructive action. Many of the more ardent Civil Rights leaders are also hostile to Eisenstadt, regarding him as a political opportunist with no strong convictions. While they may vote for him, they have never trusted him as one of their...

Author: By John F. Seegal, | Title: Thomas S. Eisenstadt | 3/3/1966 | See Source »

...intransigents for his present difficulties, accusing each of sensationalizing the issues, and thereby exaggerating the positions of the participants. As a result, the man in the middle is ignored by both press and public. He is made to seem weak, inconsistent, and unprincipled. The moderate is mistaken for the opportunist...

Author: By John F. Seegal, | Title: Thomas S. Eisenstadt | 3/3/1966 | See Source »

Webster's hero-villain is a spleeny young opportunist named Flamineo. He is secretary to the Duke of Brachiano. To better himself, he plots the murder of the duke's wife and his own sister's husband, thus clearing the way for his sister to marry the duke. When his brother becomes squeamish about this short cut to success at court, Flamineo kills him, driving his mother mad. In Act II, Operation Avenger, the duke, his new wife and Flamineo are, in turn, killed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Skull Beneath the Skin | 12/17/1965 | See Source »

...action. He has confessed to being "nostalgically for Stevenson, ideologically for Humphrey, and realistically for Kennedy." Fortunately for his future, realism won out. Kennedy, vacationing on the Cape at Hyannis Port, invited him for intimate dinners and sought his counsel. Stevensonians were furious, accused him of being a "turncoat opportunist" who had made "peace with the enemy." His wife announced that she was still for Adlai ("Can't you control your own wife," wrote Bobby Kennedy, "or are you like me?"). His mother was too, but the stately, grey-haired lady shrugged: "In a way I suppose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Combative Chronicler | 12/17/1965 | See Source »

Carmichael, who has no more use for black racism than for white, deplores civil rights opportunists. "I don't think the Reverend Milton Galamison* is a very intelligent leader. The trouble is that you get an opportunist and he becomes a rhetorician; he says things that are going to appease people; he's not going to really look for solutions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Magazines: Inside Snick | 4/30/1965 | See Source »

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