Word: richardson
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...game may well hinge on the play of the second and third lines, and especially on the second defense. Tony Patton, Nod Almy and Jim O'Brien. Ed Mrkonich and Jeff Coolidge will start on the first defense, with Carl Hathaway or Brad Richardson in the goal...
...with last July's military coup, which resulted in Farouk's exile. General Mohammed Naguib showed himself to be just as sensitive to criticism as his predecessor, but less determined to censor criticism from abroad. After Naguib became a cover subject himself (TIME, Sept. 8), Correspondent Dave Richardson brought him a copy of the story. Entitled "A Good Man," the story told of the start of Naguib's rise to power...
...general read it during a break in an all-night meeting with his Army Committee, scribbled in his comments and returned it to Richardson. One line in the story seemed to have found Naguib's Achilles' heel. Comparing him with Turkey's Kemal Ataturk, the story read: "Naguib, a simpler man, lacks Ataturk's grasp of politics, his vision, his rousing oratory; he may also lack his iron will to rule." Naguib had crossed out these words and had scribbled in the margin: "How did you know all this? It is not true...
About three months later, Richardson and TIME's part-time Cairo correspondent, Mohammed Wagdi, visited Naguib to present him with Ernest Hamlin Baker's original cover portrait. When Richardson reminded him of their earlier meeting, Naguib grinned broadly, bent over to autograph a copy of the TIME cover for Richardson with the words: "I am grateful to TIME forever." Naguib then told TIME's correspondents that he intended to stay in power until Egypt had reached a point where the policies he had begun would be carried on of their own momentum...
Neither Fred C. Sawyer '56 nor Robert C. Richardson '56 would admit how long they had been perfecting their new method for whipping cyclists into shape. But their reasoning seems to run that undesirable hills would not have to be climbed if the trainee contented himself with spinning his bicycle's wheels...