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Indeed, the choices are unappetizing. The price for a kilogram of ham, for example, would rise from the current $5.78 to $7.36 under plan 1, to $7.89 under plan 2 and to $8.42 under plan 3. Edam cheese would go from $2.10 per kg now to $2.42 under plans 1 and 2 and to $2.65 under plan 3. The particularly large price increases of plan 3 would be partly offset by higher subsidies to below-average incomes. While plans 1 and 2 would boost incomes of less than $74 a month by $3, plan 3 would provide a $4 subsidy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poland: Dial an Unappetizing Choice | 11/28/1983 | See Source »

...supply of L-5HTP, however, was always in jeopardy. No drug company was interested in developing a drug with such a small market. Van Woert had to buy it at a cost of $2,000 per kg from a biochemical supply house, where it was available for animal experiments, and sift it by hand into capsules. When his grant money ran out, Van Woert could no longer obtain the unapproved substance; nor could Dobkin legally do so. Van Woert's patients had to make do with far less effective medications. For Dobkin, 29, that meant returning to her wheelchair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Adopting Orphan Drugs | 10/11/1982 | See Source »

...complained a woman waiting in a long line at one downtown Warsaw supermarket. When shoppers there reached the white enamel butcher's counter, they found that the popular zwyczajna sausage had gone up from 40 to 190 zlotys (51? to $2.42 at the official exchange rate) per kg. A small canned ham had jumped from 200 to 600 zlotys ($2.55 to $7.75). A white-haired woman who had been hovering on the edge of the meat line turned away with only a loaf of brown bread in her wire basket. "I'm terrified," she confided...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poland: Tightening Belts at Gunpoint | 2/15/1982 | See Source »

...handling radioactive materials, including theoretically, how to separate tiny amounts of plutonium from spent uranium fuel. Because plutonium can be used to make nuclear weapons its possible production at the Tammuz site was central to the Israelis justification for the raid. The Iraqi-French contract required delivery of 70 kg of 93% enriched U-235 a grade and amount of uranium well suited for making nuclear weapons. In addition the 70-MW Tammuz reactor was 14 times as powerful as most research reactors, and Israeli physicists contend it could have been modified to readily produce weapons-grade plutonium...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Disputed Target in the Desert | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

...taken steps to minimize the possibility that nuclear fuel might be diverted for military purposes. Paris had promised, for example, to deliver only enough enriched uranium in a shipment to keep the reactor going, thus preventing the Iraqis from stockpiling the material. Last June, when the first 12 kg of uranium were shipped to Tammuz under careful IAEA and French supervision, the French took the precaution of irradiating the uranium to make it impossibe for the relatively unsophisticated Iraqi technicians to handle it without assistance. So far Iraq has not been found guilty of any violations. The most recent inspection...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Disputed Target in the Desert | 6/22/1981 | See Source »

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