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...some 1,000 space and electronics firms in whose executive echelons businessmen and scientists are often indistinguishable. Professors do consulting work for research firms, often earning double or triple their academic salaries. Similar business colonies and "think factories" have sprung up everywhere: Arthur D. Little in Boston, The Rand Corp. in Santa Monica, Aerojet General in Sacramento...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: THE FLOURISHING INTELLECTUALS | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...frustration. Winner of a bare two-seat majority in the new 'National Assembly was the conservative Basutoland National Party, dedicated to close ties with South Africa's apartheid-minded regime. The Nationalists were helped to victory by the South African government, which encouraged them to visit Rand mines for electioneering among the thousands of Basuto laborers who planned to go home to vote. No such campaigning facilities were permitted the Peking-backed Basutoland Congress Party, a bitter enemy of the government of Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd. Nevertheless, Congress won 25 of the 60 seats in the Assembly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Basutoland: A Friend for Verwoerd | 5/14/1965 | See Source »

Besieged by Noise. Some prophets however, see no near-future Utopia brought to reality by Early Bird and its progeny. "I doubt if more food will be grown in India," says RAND Corp Sociologist Joseph Goldsen, "even if every village gets a television set with lecturers teaching new agricultural techniques every hour. It takes generations to change customs and traditions. Only a few years ago, we used to pipe-dream about a TV-satellite system that was ten to 20 years away. It doesn't seem that far off any more, but what will it be used to transmit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Electronics: The Room-Size World | 5/14/1965 | See Source »

Merely to locate the pituitary, encased in a bony box like a bomb shelter in the middle of the skull, is a highly delicate, dangerous procedure, and surgeons have tried several approaches. Dr. Robert W. Rand and his team at U.C.L.A. go in through the nasal passages and the sphenoid bone that lies behind them. First, the patient's head is clamped in a stereotactic device that enables the surgeons to take bearings in three dimensions. Then the surgeons saw through the intervening bone and insert the ultracold cannula. Dr. Rand found that temperatures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: The Cold That Cures | 4/30/1965 | See Source »

...press for action. Partly to head off Dixon's stiffer proposals, Congress last week considered five cigarette bills of its own. It is likely not to demand warnings in cigarette ads but to pass a bill requiring warnings on all cigarette labels. If it does so, Paul Rand Dixon will get much of the credit-or blame...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Government: The Old Lady's New Look | 4/16/1965 | See Source »

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