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Word: capes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Roving the Moon The flight of Apollo 15 will be man's most ambitious adventure in space. After its scheduled lift-off from Cape Kennedy next Monday, July 26 (at 9:34 a.m., E.D.T.), the 6.4 million-lb. rocket will hurl U.S. astronauts toward a perilous landing at the foot of the moon's towering, 12,000-ft.-high Apennine Mountains. During their 67-hour visit, twice as long as any previous stay, they will crisscross more than 22 miles of lunar terrain, traveling to the very edge of a winding, quarter-mile-deep gorge called...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Roving the Moon | 7/26/1971 | See Source »

...when Soyuz 1 crashed to earth after its descent-parachute shrouds tangled at the end of a 17-orbit mission. Only three months earlier, Astronauts Gus Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaftee were killed when a flash fire engulfed their Apollo 1 spacecraft during a simulated launch at Cape Kennedy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Triumph and Tragedy of Soyuz 11 | 7/12/1971 | See Source »

...after he was brutally beaten, gagged and dragged from a U.S. Coast Guard cutter by six burly Russians, little was heard of Lithuanian Sailor Simas Kudirka. Last November Kudirka, 32, sought asylum when his ship, the Sovietskaya Litva, tied up alongside the cutter Vigilant in U.S. territorial waters off Cape Cod to discuss North Atlantic fishing rights. Ten hours after Kudirka jumped aboard the Vigilant and pleaded for sanctuary, Coast Guard headquarters in Boston ordered the Vigilant to allow Soviet sailors to take him back. The incident so outraged the country and incensed President Nixon that the Vigilant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOVIET UNION: A Sailor's Fate | 6/7/1971 | See Source »

...transplanted South African, he recalls that he first encountered Australians as they passed through South Africa on their way to the Middle East during World War I: "My earliest memory is of watching, terrified, from an upper-story window as drunken, high-spirited, slouch-hatted Diggers brawled in Cape Town." After seven years running our Sydney bureau, he is now a confirmed Aussie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, May 24, 1971 | 5/24/1971 | See Source »

...silversmith on Cape Cod, while a 1970 Wisconsin graduate in anthropology is quietly living on a New York State farm, making harpsichords for sale. The income from a career in the crafts may be uncertain, but it is not necessarily low. Blacksmiths can make more than $10,000 a year, and according to one careful computation, a toolmaker today can net more in his lifetime than a judge. It is not, of course, the pay that attracts youth to the crafts; it is a chance to be autonomous and to have time "to look inside themselves," as one explains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Graduates and Jobs: A Grave New World | 5/24/1971 | See Source »

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