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Very Bad. Ha Thi Vo, a Vietnamese mother who gave up three sons during the babylift, is now living in California, where she is fighting to regain them. She found her youngest child, Tung, 3, at an adoption agency. But since he did not immediately recognize her, agency officials said she could not take him. "They call me a liar," she says. "They make me feel very...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REFUGEES: The Bitter Legacy of the Babylift | 5/24/1976 | See Source »

...youthful concert-goers: The Boston City Council is currently considering a resolution which would ban youngsters under 17 from the streets of Boston after 10 p.m. This, quite frankly, means that you probably won't ever be able to go to a rock concert again, at least legally. Ha, ha. Have fun seeing Uriah Heep next week--from then on it'll have to be Helen Reddy and Dick Clark on the tube. . .Later...

Author: By Richard S. Weisman, | Title: Rock | 5/6/1976 | See Source »

...sent Baez! The next best thing!! So in that crazy, turbulent sea of mud and peace and love, all the goals of the French Revolution were finally realized, and the sixties could then die in peace (and love). Or so everybody thought...Because--you guessed it again!!--ha, ha, the sixties are back! And I'm not just talking about some vain attempt to stage just another Wood-stock; no, such efforts have been doomed to failure from the outset--look what happened in the early '70s, for instance. You just couldn't get the groups...

Author: By Richard S. Weisman, | Title: Rock | 4/29/1976 | See Source »

...papers have printed one-sided accounts of other dissidents who have been locked away. Perhaps the most notable is the popular poet Kim Chi Ha, 35, who, after a brief month of freedom from one imprisonment, has for the past year been kept in solitary confinement in Seoul's West Gate Prison. He is accused of being a Communist-a charge Kim and his supporters deny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTH KOREA: More Dissent, More Repression | 3/22/1976 | See Source »

...swords are, to Western eyes, paradoxical. At first, you cannot fail to respond to them as weapons, designed to cut and kill. But at the same time they are quite untactile. Bear down on the ha, the edge, and it will (to put it mildly) hurt you, being of surgical sharpness. Yet you hurt it. The skin of the steel can be ruined by the moisture and acids left by one fingerprint; breathe on it and it will begin to rust in 30 minutes. The blades conjure up tension between one's senses of sight and touch-threat...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Sculpture in Cutting Steel | 3/22/1976 | See Source »

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