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...half: Tage Nielsen, 56, now works as an office clerk; Edmond Glud, 64, switched to the mail department; Sigvald Bangsager, 62, cuts a fine figure as a security guard. Says he: "You have to know when your time is up, when you're burned out." Adds Poul Jensen, a former director who now works in marketing liaison: "Why shouldn't a manager work as a mailman? Any kind of work deserves respect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Better Down Than Out | 5/15/1978 | See Source »

...Herbert and Heinlein? Science Fiction, Today and Tomorrow is a collection of fifteen essays that focuses on some of these questions and tries to provide answers. The authors of the short pieces are drawn from the top ranks of science fiction writing: Frank Herbert, Frederik Pohl, Alan E. Nourse, Poul Anderson and Jack Williamson. They bring their considerable talents to bear on the issues confronting science fiction, but the end result, while absorbing, tends to be choppy. The essays run the gamut from a discussion of science fiction in the visual media to a detailed description...

Author: By Jefferson M. Flanders, | Title: Facing A New Audience | 2/11/1975 | See Source »

...contributor to contributor; from the short, contained prose of Frank Herbert to the philosophic ramblings to Theodore Sturgeon. The book is labelled "A Discursive Symposium" and indeed, it is a comprehensive survey of the field. Frederik Phol and George Zebrowski analyze science fiction in publishing and the visual media Poul Anderson and Hal Clement, in back-to-back essays, explain how writers create imaginary worlds and creatures, drawing on scientific data. And one of the few female science fiction novelists. Anne McCaffrey, examines the lack of glamour and romance in science fiction...

Author: By Jefferson M. Flanders, | Title: Facing A New Audience | 2/11/1975 | See Source »

Next week the Danes will head for the polls to elect their second Folketing (Parliament) in 13 months to decide how much welfare and inflation they will tolerate. The right-of-center minority government of Premier Poul Hartling, 60, called for elections last month after failing to muster a majority for a one-year freeze on wages, prices and profits. Although the bland, schoolmasterly Hartling has by no means attracted a large popular following, his Liberal Party (according to the latest polls) may win as much as 30% of the vote-compared with 12.3% in December 1973. If these projections...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DENMARK: A Growing Dissatisfaction | 1/6/1975 | See Source »

Even the recent whereabouts of China's venerable Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung, 81, has been something of a mystery. For the past three months, Mao has been out of Peking and on the move, occasionally meeting foreigners-such as Danish Premier Poul Hartling and President Omar Bongo of Gabon. At the same time, rumors abound that Mao's wife, Chiang Ching, is aggressively accumulating power for herself while Premier Chou En-lai remains in a hospital, recovering from a heart ailment. Chou still meets with visiting dignitaries, but many of his duties have been taken over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA: Who's in Charge? | 12/2/1974 | See Source »

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