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After the Indians and guerrillas had moved about six miles inland and seized the village of Chaugacha, Pakistani resistance halted the advance. In the counterattacks that followed, the first tank battle of the war broke out. In ten hours of fighting, Pakistani forces said, they destroyed eight Indian tanks and damaged ten others; they admitted losing seven tanks. Next day, Pakistani forces called up an air strike, sending four Sabre jets on Indian positions. Indian Gnats, lightweight jet fighters, intercepted the planes within Indian territory, and shot down three of them. Two of the Pakistani pilots who bailed out were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: India and Pakistan: Poised for War | 12/6/1971 | See Source »

...capital. The results are visible, for example, in rapidly expanding port facilities at Dunkirk and Le Havre. Nowhere has life changed so much as along the western Riviera, where builders are hard at work on Fos-sur-Mer, a new port that will provide entry to a vast inland shipping route. By 1980, when dredging work along the Rhone and Rhine rivers is completed, vessels will be able to reach the North Sea from the Mediterranean via Fos, thus avoiding the long trip around the Iberian Peninsula...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: France Enters The Enjoyable Epoch | 12/6/1971 | See Source »

...great piles of earth, up to hundreds of feet in diameter. Some of the mounds are shaped like animals, so vast in circumference that their forms could not have been fully perceived at ground level by their creators. Mound building had ceased by the time the first Europeans probed inland in the 16th century. But traces of the practice persisted in the burial rites of such tribes as the Creeks and the Natchez...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bones, Spears and Hohokam | 11/22/1971 | See Source »

Died. Edward L. Ryerson, 84, civic-minded chairman of the immense Inland Steel Co. between 1940 and 1953; in Chicago. Though he once claimed to "resent the idea of being introduced or publicly identified as a representative of big business," Ryerson was one of the steel industry's most prominent and articulate spokesmen. After his 1953 retirement from Inland Steel, Ryerson's continuing participation in numerous Chicago community organizations earned him the title "Mr. Welfare...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Aug. 16, 1971 | 8/16/1971 | See Source »

Local Monster. No one in Dunnellon, a lazy, little (pop. 1,146) inland town near Ocala, is above the Chamber of Commerce come-on. The town bills itself as the "Home of the World's Largest Bass," and everywhere from the Dinner Bell Restaurant to Bass Galore Village ("Fishing Headquarters, U.S.A.") are mounted specimens to prove it. Up at Joe L. Cobb Inc., Realtors, Joe has a photograph on the wall memorializing the morning he and a friend boated 18 bass totaling 124 Ibs. in "2½ wild and wonderful hours." Down at Bucky's Sports Center...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Magic on the Withlacoochee | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

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