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...devaluation, he was greeted by raucous cries of "Out! Out! Out!" and "Resign!" Wilson faced the inevitable vote of confidence in the Commons and won it with only a single Laborite breaking ranks. But the debate produced bitter invective and bile unparalleled during his three-year tenure. Tory Iain Macleod thundered to the House that "the country is sick to death of this whining and whimpering from the Prime Minister." When Wilson claimed to have answered a question that he really had not, Tory Chairman Anthony Barber exclaimed: "That confirms the suspicion of the whole country that the right honorable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Britain: After the Fall | 12/1/1967 | See Source »

There are a phenomenal number of these letters. Among them, such magazines as Ingenue, 16 and 'Teen handle more than 50,000 a month. Says Robert MacLeod of 'Teen: "It demonsrates these girls' great hunger to be involved. A magazine is a personal thing to them." Some of the letters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Aiming at the Hip | 6/2/1967 | See Source »

...next week's "shakedown cruise," as Munro calls the trip, will give the veteran coach and his first-year assistant Bruce MacLeod, a former goalie at Williams, a chance to look at this year's large crop of sophomores in top-flight competition, to see "just how golden the wealth really...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Southern Trip Will Test Young Lacrosse Squad | 3/31/1967 | See Source »

...members of the community work in Britain's industrial slum parishes, preaching lona's ideals: the Christian duty of political and social involvement, and the necessity of sacramental worship. Thoroughly ecumenical, the lona Community includes Anglicans, Congregationalists, Baptists and Methodists as well as Presbyterians, and many of MacLeod's ideas have been adopted by such ecclesiastical experimenters as the Anglican worker-priests of England and the Protestant brotherhood of Taizé in France (TIME, Sept...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clergy: A Peerage for a Presbyterian | 1/13/1967 | See Source »

...MacLeod lives in an Edinburgh flat, identified not by his name plate but by a passport-size portrait. He travels much of the year, preaching the lona ideal in a glass-shattering baritone that still needs no microphone to reach the farthest corner of the loftiest church. He bristles when addressed as "Sir," on the ground that ministers should not use hereditary titles-although he has no objection if his wife is called Lady MacLeod, since "she's not a minister." Elevation to the peerage has not changed his views. "I hope," he says, "that people will continue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Clergy: A Peerage for a Presbyterian | 1/13/1967 | See Source »

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