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...since broken with the council, dismissed the reports as "inaccurate and highly colored," and dangerous because "they deceive and frustrate the hopes of anti-Castro elements" within Cuba. U.S. intelligence men guessed that no more than 50 people could be put ashore in Cuba unnoticed. In Miami, Manuel Antonio de Varona, 54, coordinator of the Revolutionary Council, agreed that perhaps infiltration was a better word than invasion. And in Philadelphia, the freighter Maximus, bound for Havana, loaded 5,000 tons of supplies, valued at $1,750,000, the last payment to Castro for the $53 million ransom release...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba: Infiltration, Not Invasion | 6/28/1963 | See Source »

...customers who like to do their banking along with the family shopping, the San Antonio Savings Association has opened nine branches inside local Handy-Andy supermarkets, right among the soap and spinach. The Bank of Pasadena has a limousine service that carries banking directly to customers who cannot get to the bank; a small truck with a two-way radio wheels around town doing business for The Endicott National Bank of Endicott, N.Y. Chicago's Home Federal Savings and Loan can provide instant mortgage appraisals for telephone callers by dispatching a bank officer to their homes in a radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Banking: Cashing In on Convenience | 6/21/1963 | See Source »

Mazzoni, who quickly gave his patient still another transfusion and called in for consultation Roman Surgeon Pietro Valdoni and the Pope's old friend and personal physician, Dr. Antonio Gasbarrini of Bologna. When on Tuesday of last week the bleeding increased, the quaintly formal Vatican press releases, full of references to "the august patient," for the first time admitted the gravity of the situation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Papacy: Vatican Revolutionary | 6/7/1963 | See Source »

Italy had a new Premier-designate last week. Out after nearly three years in office was scrappy little Amintore Fanfani, tagged with most of the blame for heavy Christian Democratic losses in last month's national elections. Summoned to Rome's Quirinal Palace by President Antonio Segni to get the nod as Premier was cautious, quiet Aldo Moro, secretary-general of the Christian Democratic Party...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Italy: An Anxious Moment | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

...territory, African leaders in Addis Ababa last week vociferously supported Algerian Premier Ahmed ben Bella's call to "establish a bond of blood" with the Angolan nationalists. The war is a grievous burden for tiny Portugal, which already has Western Europe's lowest living standard. But Strongman Antonio de Oliveira Salazar. 74, is by now too deeply committed to preservation of Angola as a "province" of Portugal to yield the Africans even token self-government without imperiling his own 31-year reign in Lisbon. Despite the steady rise in the guerrillas' strength and effectiveness, Salazar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Angola: Bond of Blood | 5/31/1963 | See Source »

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