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...midweek, mission controllers at the Kazakhstan cosmodrome succeeded in raising the craft's orbit to 166 miles by 161 miles, apparently by firing Salyut's on-board rockets. Still, Veteran Space Watcher Heinz Kaminski of West Germany's Bochum Observatory calculated that the boost would keep Salyut alive only for another seven weeks at the most -enough time for more docking attempts but too short a life-span for setting up a working space station...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: A Troubled Salyut | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

...make him one of the best dramatic male dancers anywhere. Egon Madsen, a youthful Dane with a baby face, skillfully alternates with Cragun in many dramatic roles: when Cragun is Romeo, Madsen is Mercutio and vice versa. Backing them both up in the rotational order is a German dancer, Heinz Clauss, whose black-clad Eugene Onegin seems as subtly menacing as an elegant spider, as sickly romantic as a young Werther...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dance: Goyas and Dolls | 5/10/1971 | See Source »

...past, about the worst the horses were known to suffer was poor teeth -too many sugar cubes from admiring children-and most reached the age of 20 before going to the slaughterhouse. But of late, said Löwenbräu's Heinz Moelter, "their fur lost its gloss, their eyes their shine, and their pulling power declined." Recently, Munich's local Animal Protection Society confirmed what the brewery had suspected. "They informed us that permitting the animals to continue working in Munich's poisonous atmosphere amounted to sheer cruelty," said Moelter. "Significantly, they didn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WEST GERMANY: Not Fit for Horses | 2/22/1971 | See Source »

...that he must leave Poland by the end of the month. To help pay for his Polish exit visa (about $200 for persons over 16), he sold his antique Polish car for $100. "Some Poles were angry with us and shouted that we should have gotten out earlier," said Heinz H., 60, a telegraph operator for the Polish state railroad. "I told them that if they had let us, we would have gone on foot...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Refugees: Two Kinds of Exodus | 2/8/1971 | See Source »

...Aboard. The multinational trend has built up a momentum of its own. Says Dr. Heinz Sippel, a Westdeutsche Landesbank representative at Orion: "There were a number of trains standing in the station, and we wanted to be sure to get aboard one of them before they all pulled out." Guido Carli, governor of the Bank of Italy, has long criticized Italian banks for lagging behind the "financial supermarkets" of the U.S., in size and range of services. By working together, Europeans will be able to provide both sufficient capital for the needs of the 1970s and the flexibility to deliver...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BANKING: Better Than Marriage | 2/1/1971 | See Source »

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