Friday, Feb. 24, 1961
Everybody from A (Adlai) to Z (Zorin) got into the main act last week, along with the two Ks (Kennedy and Khrushchev). A partial index of the variety of names that make news in this week's TIME:
Dallapiccola, Luigi, whose name as a composer has become something to reckon with as well as pronounce. See Music.
Duque, Evelio, who used to fight for Castro and now leads the fight against him in the hills. See THE HEMISPHERE.
Freeman, Orville, Cabinet member, who felt the presidential touch in a movie theater. See NATIONAL AFFAIRS.
Graves, Robert, poet and scorner of poets, who became Oxford's resident poet. See EDUCATION.
Hayes, Hal, friend of Zsa Zsa's, who has set a new kind of building record --unfinished houses. See BUSINESS.
King, Cecil Harmsworth, a press lord seeking to take over an empire.
See PRESS.
Lawrence, Jacob, Negro painter, who uses bright colors to record sorrowful moods. See ART, and two pages of color.
Lumumba, Patrice, who proved more valuable dead than alive. See FOREIGN NEWS.
McKean, Brigadier General William B., a marine who shoots down marines. See NATIONAL AFFAIRS.
Pike, Bishop James A., whose talk of Biblical myths raised the cry of heresy. See RELIGION.
Rorimer, James, who had to acknowledge that the Metropolitan Museum's prize ancient Etruscans were really recent Romans. See ART.
Secunda, Sholom, a songwriter who sold a $3,000,000 tune for $30. See SHOW BUSINESS.
Stephen II, whose two-day Papacy upset the whole apostolic succession. See RELIGION.
Symington, James, the Senator's folk-singing son, who traveled south to spread President Kennedy's gospel. See THE HEMISPHERE.
Venus, which found itself subjected to close-up Soviet inspection. See SCIENCE.
Welk, Lawrence, who has his first real jukebox hit and finds himself no longer square. See Music.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.