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...first glow of dawn was just brightening the sky over Santo Domingo when a force of 17 U.S. tanks and 2,000 OAS troops in full battle dress rolled into the city's downtown rebel zone. Within an hour, the OAS soldiers set up sandbagged emplacements throughout the l-sq.-mi. stronghold that leftist rebel partisans still call "sacred revolutionary soil." Shouted curses and a few harmless sniper shots greeted the troops. Most of the city's 500,000 frightened citizens could give thanks that the OAS was acting in the nick of time to prevent the Dominican...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dominican Republic: In the Nick of Time | 11/5/1965 | See Source »

...dock, an "immigration official" introduced himself ("just call me Roberto") and motioned toward 300 Cubans milling around across the river. "When a boat arrives for them," he said, "we will notify them and admit them here for processing." The people waited late into the night, visible only by the glow of their cigarettes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba: Gusanos' Paradise | 10/22/1965 | See Source »

Unfamiliar Glow. All that intense professional activity-involving everything from rockets to careful studies with powerful telescopes-was touched off by a couple of amateur Japanese stargazers working with homemade equipment. For Kaoru Ikeya, 21, who lives in a tin-roof shanty near the eel farms on Lake Hamana, 140 miles southwest of Tokyo, this was his third comet discovery. Since his first (TIME, Jan. 25, 1963), Ikeya has advanced from a $28-a-month lathe operator to a $44-a-month ivory-key polisher in the same piano factory, but has no greater ambition than to help support...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Astronomy: Splendor in the Night | 10/22/1965 | See Source »

...platform, built from driftwood, and aims his homemade telescope toward the sky. He has come to consider the stars old, familiar friends. It was only a month ago that he focused on the constellation Hydra, near whose tail he had spotted his first comet. Suddenly he spotted an unfamiliar glow. "It shone," says Ikeya, "like a street lamp on a misty night." All his checks confirmed what he could hardly believe: he had found another comet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Astronomy: Splendor in the Night | 10/22/1965 | See Source »

Despite their fiery appearance, comets are not actually aflame but glow mostly from fluorescence due to solar radiation. The closer they get to the sun, the brighter and larger they grow. One of the rare "sungrazing" comets, Ikeya-Seki will whip around the sun at a maximum speed of about 300 miles per second, passing within 300,000 miles of the sun's surface. Astronomers discounted some predictions that the comet will collide with the sun. But it could be broken up by the sun's radiation and gravitational field. If it survives its solar encounter, the comet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Astronomy: Splendor in the Night | 10/22/1965 | See Source »

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