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...Picard quickly evacuated the Project Mercury Space Tracking Station outside Zanzibar Town and sent dozens of official personnel and dependents off to Tanganyika on a U.S. destroyer. But four American newsmen (including TIME'S William Smith) arrived in Zanzibar to provide a target for the government's wrath. The reporters sailed in on an Arab dhow and began asking questions. Karume, who wanted no visitors, had them placed under house arrest in the Zanzibar Hotel. When Picard intervened, Karume stormed into the hotel lounge and exploded. "Why are you interfering in our internal affairs?" he raged...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Zanzibar: The Cuckoo Coup | 1/24/1964 | See Source »

Unlike Romney, Scranton has not failed to put over a workable fiscal program in a chronically bankrupt state. Nor has he provoked the wrath of his own party, as Ronney did, after hinting he might accept a draft for the nomination...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: A Man for No Reasons | 1/15/1964 | See Source »

...moment, then, the Fat Man's problem seems incredibly difficult. If he becomes too closely associated with the U. S. and its moves to agree with the Russians, he will incur the wrath of the C.D.U. right wing and seem dangerously close to the policies of the opposition party. If he moves to cut back social security, he will give the Socialists a legitimate issue for the 1965 campaign. In either case, he would need consummate political skill to manuever around his opponents and toward his policies. He has shown distinct reluctance to taint his hands with such manuevers...

Author: By David M. Gordon, | Title: Erhard in Office | 11/8/1963 | See Source »

...anti-Jewish campaign, and the U.S. Minister to Switzerland warned the Vatican that failure to condemn these atrocities "is undermining faith both in the church and in the Holy Father himself." Baron Ernst von Weizsaecker, who claimed that he tried to protect the Pope from Hitler's wrath while serving as German envoy to the Holy See, cabled his Foreign Ministry superiors: "The Pope has not allowed himself to be forced into any demonstrative utterances against the deportation of the Jews...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Papacy: Pius XII & The Jews | 11/1/1963 | See Source »

...Administration's top civil rights troubleshooter, it fell to Bobby Kennedy to put the bill back on the track. Painfully aware that he would bring down the wrath of civil rights professionals, Bobby went to the Judiciary Committee to plead that the bill be diluted to passable proportions. He carefully avoided challenging Celler's bill on principle, skillfully confined himself to matters of language and legalisms. The new public accommodations section, he said, was "unclear," might extend federal regulation to "all businesses which a state does not affirmatively ban." He questioned the vast scope of powers granted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Civil Rights: The Gauntlet | 10/25/1963 | See Source »

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