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...year exile in Prague. This time, said Raúl, Escalante had organized an anti-Castro movement that extended into several key government ministries, the University of Havana, the Academy of Sciences, several youth organizations and even the Central Committee itself. With his contacts, Escalante and his "micro-fraction" reportedly filched secret government documents and spread anti-Castro propaganda among both Cubans and foreign Communists, particularly the Russians...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba: Deepening Split with Russia | 2/9/1968 | See Source »

...winter began in earnest, temperatures fell to 49° below zero. Frozen German corpses piled up like logs, many still clad in light uniforms. German rations ran out, and proud troops began to eat the flesh of horses, cats and rats. Hermann Goring's airlift brought only a fraction of the promised relief. The city's rubble grew so high that German tanks were unable to roll over it. Through it all, Hitler insisted that his generals stand firm, refusing to allow them to try to break out of the trap and save part of their army. Against...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: Where Hitler Was Halted | 2/2/1968 | See Source »

...sheer size of foundations-their collective wealth and power as investors in the stock markets and their influence on U.S. society-has begun to stir criticism and concern in some quarters. When looked at in the widest context, this point of view seems unwarranted. Foundation wealth represents the tiniest fraction of all private wealth in this country, which is estimated at $2.15 trillion. Foundation grants account for only 8% of total U.S. philanthropy, 80% of which comes from the individual giver, in a gamut of generosity that embraces large and small offerings to hospitals, churches, the Community Chest and even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: THE FOUNDATIONS AS PIONEERS | 1/19/1968 | See Source »

...world is too much with us," wrote William Wordsworth in a famous sonnet, and Russell Baker echoes the poet three times a week in the New York Times. A funny place to do it, in a paper full of world news. But to Humorist Baker, 42, even a fraction of all the news that's fit to print is far too much. "The law of life," he writes, "is that there is almost always less happening than meets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Columnists: The Quiet Subversive | 1/19/1968 | See Source »

...Brown, Boveri is hardly a household name; yet B.B.C., as it is known, has long generated wide respect for its heavy electrical equipment. Brown, Boveri's parent plant in Baden, near Zurich, depends on exports for 73% of its $146 million sales, which in turn are only a fraction of the company's global business. It has 17 manufacturing subsidiaries worldwide: 76,000 employees in 40 plants and 250 field offices make and sell turbines and locomotives, heavy transformers and radio transmitters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Switzerland: Power Play | 1/12/1968 | See Source »

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