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...nonchalantly unshaven, wearing the same clothes he made sure he was seen in the night before with Hilda. Hilda herself had been carefully selected; she would let him put his hand on her shoulder, but would resist every time he tried to move it down to her breast. She was just enough of a prude to let Reid show everyone else what a mover he was without ever having to actually do anything to (with?) her. Later, Hilda told Reid that she couldn't let him go very far because he seemed to be interested only in her body...

Author: By Charles Bonnell, | Title: Gay in the Ivy League | 10/30/1973 | See Source »

...Democracy carries within its breast the seed of its own destruction. There is a saying that 'democracy has to be bathed occasionally in blood so that it can continue to be democracy.' Fortunately this is not our case. There have been only a few drops...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: General Pinochet: Bloody Democracy | 10/1/1973 | See Source »

...name to Akhenaten, meaning Useful to Aten. Women's Lib would have loved him: he gave equal billing, in bas-relief and statuary, to his Queen, Nefertiti. She was portrayed in the sleek drapery she might actually have worn, one shoulder bare, a clasp under her right breast. In dark red quartz, the Queen's torso, on loan from the Louvre, is one of the beauties of the exhibition...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Power and Some Glory | 10/1/1973 | See Source »

Watergate would have happened at about this time irrespective of who was in the White House. There may well have been similar incidents perpetrated by other high members of government. Most distressingly, we can expect more of the same in the future, in spite of the national breast beating and catharsis over the present Watergate. In future entanglements the persons involved may be different; the personalities, however, will be substantially the same...

Author: By Avi Nelson, | Title: The Real Perpetrators | 9/25/1973 | See Source »

...Carrera-Sheraton Hotel, which overlooks the Presidential Palace, is a bulky brown 17-story building with what at least one travel brochure optimistically describes as "tastefully decorated rooms." At the height of the fighting on Tuesday, Carrera Manager Luis Miguel ("Mike") Gallegos−upon whose thin breast every one of last week's guests would like to hang a medal−evacuated his 270 charges and 200 employees to the cavernous second basement. It took on the atmosphere of a London tube stop during the blitz, but with a notably international flavor. A French journalist challenged all comers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: The Coup: The View from the Carrera | 9/24/1973 | See Source »

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