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...people. The vast oil industry employs only 8,000 workers and technicians, many of them foreigners. Only 2% of the land is under cultivation, and even workable farm land has been ignored as inflation, and the illusory promise of jobs spurred an exodus from the countryside. Even the nomad Bedouins have left the desert to live in the filth-ridden shantytowns that now encircle Tripoli and Benghazi. What little industry or trade exists, besides the oil business, is mainly controlled by Italians...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: TEXTBOOK COUP IN A DESERT KINGDOM | 9/12/1969 | See Source »

...explanation for Prescott's rigorous "wilderness course," declares the school's president, Ronald C. Nairn, is that "man is a part of nature. Millions of years of his evolutionary history are rooted in life as a hunter, a nomad, an adventurer. Deep facets of personality and emotional needs are tied to his past Urban industrial society increasingly fails to meet these needs." gritty native spirt is only one part Prescott's unique educational program. The college has junked traditional academic departments and installed a system of wide-ranging integrated courses that bridge the gap between humanities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Colleges: 21st Century Frontier | 10/11/1968 | See Source »

...seen. Long caravans wind across distant valleys, as they have for centuries past. In the south, high-walled family compounds housing fierce Pathan tribesmen still stud the countryside. In the bleak mud houses of northern villages, young children often go blind weaving and knotting traditional Bukhara rugs. Nomad Kuchis seek fresh pasture land for their camels and fat-tailed sheep on the desolate plateaus, as chill winds whistle down from the snowy summits of the 600-mile-long range of the Hindu Kush...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Afghanistan: History v. Progress | 9/20/1968 | See Source »

...Historian Max Nomad believes that anarchists follow a "daydream of desperate romantics." Man's urge to do away with the apparatus that governs him is obviously almost as old as government itself. It is, perhaps, the ultimate Utopia-the idea of a community totally without constraint. Zeno, founder of the ancient Greek school of Stoic thought and anarchism's earliest forerunner, opposed Plato's ideal of state communism in favor of his own vision of a free community without government. Medieval Christianity was full of individualist sects that held that man's laws necessarily interfere with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: ANARCHY REVISITED | 5/24/1968 | See Source »

...pictures, however, support the book immeasurably. Duncan's Korean War photography is outstanding, and so are the color shots, many of them not included in his two bestselling books, The Kremlin and Picasso's Picassos. Among other things, Yankee Nomad does a lot to tout photography as a good career. For one dazzling picture essay on Paris, shot in color through prisms, Duncan got $50,000 from McCalls-the highest price ever paid for a single picture story...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Happy Adventurer | 11/18/1966 | See Source »

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