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Meanwhile, the Egyptians mercilessly attack Saudi Arabia's rulers as corrupt and sybaritic. One member of the Saudi royal house hired a French movie crew to photograph his gambols with girl friends. Prince Mansour delights bartenders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Yemen: Trouble for the Sons of Saud | 11/23/1962 | See Source »

...with him out of the coalition Cabinet. But in the end Adenauer salved his hurt feelings by firing a couple of the second-level ministerial officials involved in the arrests. They were obviously political scapegoats. The compromise hardly satisfied Der Spiegel's editors, who splashed Augstein's photograph on the cover of the following week's issue, ran a 24-page story on the affair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: West Germany: The Issue Is the Rule of Law | 11/16/1962 | See Source »

...naval blockade of Cuba. Fresh from a two-day respite in Puerto Rico, where he engaged in his favorite sport of skin-diving, Vice Admiral Alfred G. Ward went back to sea to command Task Force 136. Once again, low-flying jet reconnaissance planes screeched over Cuba to photograph the state of the Soviet nuclear missiles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: The Morning After | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

...institute's ultramodern equipment, Director John R. Green is proudest of the massive electron microscope. Magnifying 200,000 times, it can photograph bits of matter as small as a brain cell. "We can study changes in single cells in tumors and changes due to aging," says Dr. Green. "We see this machine as ten tons of hope...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dream Institute | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

...things about objective correlatives, classicism applied to his poetry? Surely you must have seen he was one of the most subjective and demonic poets who ever lived? Take The Waste Land, which Eliot would have written about the Garden of Eden but which your age thought its own realistic photograph. After the first few years, his poetry existed undersea, thousands of feet below that deluge of exegesis, explication, source-writing, scholarship and criticism that overwhelmed it. And yet how bravely and personally it survived . . . plainly human, full of human anguish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: View from Parnassus | 11/9/1962 | See Source »

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