Word: revoltingly
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Wisconsin primary last April, TIME Washington Correspondent Anne Chamberlin wore black tights under her skirt-the sort of couture that back in 1940 earned her a full-page picture in a national magazine as "the worst-dressed girl in Vassar" (a portrait later published in a book entitled The Revolt of American Women). Her fellow reporters on the Wisconsin hustings-mostly male-taunted her about the costume, but the principal subject of her reportage, Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, who is one of the best-dressed women in the world, took a different view. "She loyally told me," recalls Reporter Chamberlin, "that...
Scooping up President Joseph Kasavubu himself, Mobutu charged down to Camp Hardy to quell the brewing revolt. What happened is wrapped in the inevitable confusion that surrounds every Congo crisis. One report had it that Mobutu was arrested temporarily by his own troops and that Lumumba was freed. But when it was all over, Patrice Lumumba still sat in jail. With his loyal supporters taking over more and more of the country, how long he would remain there was an open question...
...crack poker player, summed up his basic attitude in a paraphrase from Mister Dooley: "Trust everybody, but always cut the cards." Hunting & Homework. Don Felt learned the beginnings of his furious discipline from his mother. Through most of his boyhood she beat down the familiar pattern of juvenile revolt-his preference for hunting rather than homework, athletics instead of afternoon classes. Under her watchful eye young Don got good, if not spectacular, grades. The pattern continued after the family moved from Kansas to Washington, D.C., and when there was no money for college, Mother Felt had an answer for that...
There are degrees of freedom and pressure, and often nations that subdue their own' press will allow foreign correspondents free passage-while censoring their findings in incoming papers and magazines. Last week, for example, Ethiopia, annoyed by factual accounts in U.S. magazines of December's short-lived revolt against Emperor Haile Selassie, turned back the magazines at customs...
...Hunt. Would the revolt, and fear of worse to come, lead to any changes in Haile Selassie's feudal monarchy? "None at all," said the durable Emperor. But he seemed suddenly old, tired, and sad. Grimly his troops hunted through the nearby hills for the two chief leaders of the revolt-a Columbia University-educated provincial governor named Germame Newaye and his brother Brigadier General Mengistu Newaye, Commander of the Imperial Guard...