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...Advanced Research Projects Agency, by appointing General Electric Vice President Roy W. Johnson, 52, to run it (see Defense). Presidential Science Adviser James R. Killian Jr. undertook a classification of ways, means and reasons for space exploration. The armed services and all space dreamers seized the moment to plug for their pet projects (see cut). And the Congress correlated space with politics; Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson's carefully drawn resolution establishing an Astronautical and Space Exploration Committee pained Republicans who recognized good politics when they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATION: Space on Earth | 2/17/1958 | See Source »

...City, Mo., 5,427 people* crowded into the Nelson Gallery of Art, setting a new one-day record. By the time the Kansas City showing closes this week, some 20,000 will have seen Sir Winston's impressionist-style canvases, ranging from a wartime scene of Flanders' "Plug Street" (Ploegsteert, Belgium, as translated by World War I Tommies), painted in 1916, down to last year's landscape of the French Riviera seen from Villa La Pausa...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Great Churchill Debate | 2/10/1958 | See Source »

...siege to the gleaming new hotel. The hotel surrendered eagerly, put up $25,000 of the show's $40,000 extra costs, yielded its bellhops as extras, shut off its paging system and shooed its guests away from the pool to ensure undisturbed rehearsals. "Is there any hotel plug in this script?" somebody asked at the final production conference. Cracked Allen: "Is there any script in this hotel plug...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: High Wind in Havana | 2/3/1958 | See Source »

...Gorky Park along the Moskva River in the heart of Moscow, the first U.S. trade fair ever held in Russia will open its doors this summer. The Soviet government is eager to cooperate; it has already announced the fair in newspapers and magazines, promised to plug it over radio and TV. To handle research, publicity and contracts for the fair, the first commercial office opened in the Soviet Union by any Western country has been set up by America Abroad Associates in Moscow. Yet the U.S. Government is far from happy about this adventure into areas long tightly closed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BUSINESS ABROAD: U.S. Fair in Moscow | 2/3/1958 | See Source »

Prestige, Not Profit. The Soviets plug Aeroflot as "the only line in the world with mass and regular exploitation of jets." To fly into the jet age ahead of the West, Aeroflot adapted Designer Andrei Tupolev's twin-jet Badger medium-range bombers to regular commercial service. The TU-104 looks like a Victorian Pullman car with ornate chandeliers, overstuffed seats, brass serving trays and old-time chain-flush toilets. But overnight it has changed Aeroflot from a lowly regarded, primarily domestic line into a major international threat. Aeroflot has about 50 TU-104s, flies them regularly to East...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AVIATION: Russian Challenge | 1/27/1958 | See Source »

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