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...other matter is football. '58 had heard all sorts of rude things about Harvard football before it entered, and after UMass dumped the Crimson in 1954, is was ready to believe them. But then three big wins, over Princeton and Yale (13 to 9 in a thriller in a rainswept Stadium) in 1954, and over Princeton in 1955 made things look better. But that rainy, 7-6 victory over the Tigers was the last Big Three victory '58 would witness as undergraduates...

Author: By Adam Clymer, | Title: The Four Years of '58 | 6/11/1958 | See Source »

...schools, worked as a shipping clerk, disk jockey, even a jingle judge. "It was easy-throw out the dirty ones, and the one that was left was the winner," remembers Mike. He took acting lessons from Broadway's Methodman Lee Strasberg, then in Chicago teamed with Elaine ("extremely rude, a very dark bohemian girl in a trench coat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Fresh Eggheads | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

Word of Caution. One of the effects of this new friendship "is a constant invitation from Protestants to Catholics to cooperate with them in their projects." Catholics, he said, "are embarrassed about this new trend. They do not wish to be rude, and they wish to reciprocate the good will shown them. But they do not know to what the acceptance of the invitation commits them. Many therefore politely but awkwardly refuse the welcome, but many more are now accepting the welcome and find the intercourse pleasant and profitable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Era of Good Feeling? | 6/2/1958 | See Source »

World War II. On the day France surrendered to the Nazis in 1940, Jacques Massu, still a lieutenant commanding a fort in the Sahara scribbled a "rude French word'' in his diary and beneath it the pledge: "Nous vainerons" (We shall win). Hearing De Gaulle's radio appeal from London, Massu joined the Free French in Africa, was nicked in the calf by an Italian bullet in a desert battle, calmly cauterized the wound himself with a cigarette, fought on across North Africa and into France and Germany as a lieutenant colonel with General Le-clerc...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: REBELLIOUS PATRIOT | 5/26/1958 | See Source »

Down the Middle. All this has come as a rude shock to opposition politicians. The party which Malagodi heads is the heir to the one that made Italy a nation, and, until the advent of Mussolini, most of Italy's Premiers called themselves Liberals. But in 1952, when Malagodi joined the party, it was, says one of its members, "in the seventh day of pneumonia." Thanks to his family's longtime prominence in Liberal politics and his own sharp intelligence-he was general manager of Milan's giant Banca Commerciale Italiana at 29-stocky Giovanni Malagodi rose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ITALY: The Gadfly | 5/12/1958 | See Source »

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