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...scheduled transatlantic line belongs to the International Air Transport Association, which sets industry-wide fares for one and all. Icelandic is outside I.A.T.A. With its lumbering, low-overhead DC-45, it flies round trip from New York to London for $469.20 (v. $522 for bigger lines), New York to Oslo for $472.20 (v. $590.60). Says Nicholas Craig, president of the line's U.S. subsidiary, which operates the transatlantic business: "For years the airlines have talked about bringing trans-ocean travel within reach of everybody's pocketbook. We've done something about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Sparrow in the Treetop | 9/2/1957 | See Source »

...week from Oslo to Ohio, track and field stars ignored midsummer heat, coolly cracked records. In Cleveland, Mrs. Olga Fikotova Connolly, the ex-Czech Olympic star who broke the Iron Curtain to marry U.S. Olympic Hammer Thrower Harold Connolly, scored at a national Amateur Athletic Union meet by breaking the U.S. women's discus record. Her throw: 147 ft. 8 in. In Naantali, Finland, England's Derek Ibbotson ran his fourth sub-four-minute mile (3:58.7), was followed by Finland's Olavi Vuorisalo (3:59.1). In Oslo, Pennsylvania's Josh Culbreath broke...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Scoreboard, Aug. 19, 1957 | 8/19/1957 | See Source »

...West Berlin, for example, Yaleman Dilworth said they offer "conclusive proof of how essential it is to the health and well-being of a large city to have ample, well-planned open space." In Norway he was impressed by the complete absence of slums, the "extraordinary" beauty of Oslo's city hall, the "extremely attractive small public beaches," the "profusion of attractive parks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Home Truths from Abroad | 8/5/1957 | See Source »

...Here there is no longer talk of Nature, only eccentric fanaticism, delirium-drunk moods and fever-sick hallucinations." So said the conservative Norwegian Aftenposten, outraged at the show of some 50 oils by young Edvard Munch (pronounced Moohnk) in the summer of 1892 in Christiania (now Oslo). The storm of criticism was all that Munch, then 28 and just back from Paris, needed to become a scandalous success in the gloomy provincial city. Berlin painters promptly invited him to show in the German capital, and the scandal was even greater, splitting the Union of Berlin Artists permanently into two camps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Madman Munch | 6/17/1957 | See Source »

Neither Russian saber-rattling nor nervous visions of the onrush of Armageddon impressed the Western leaders who must deal with the stern realities of power. From Oslo Premier Einar Gerhardsen, unmoved by Soviet threats against his nation, fired off a note informing the Russians that Norway's defense was her own business. In Britain Macmillan assured the Labor Opposition that the Christmas Island test would be held. "Those who carry responsibility and perhaps even those who aspire to responsibility must make decisions," he said. "We must rely on the power of the nuclear deterrent, or we must throw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ATOMIC AGE: Regrets & Realities | 4/29/1957 | See Source »

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