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...year is 1970, and the first human being has just set foot on the moon. But what's this he's carrying? A paintbox, some drawing paper, a few garden tools, three kimonos and two bottles of Scotch. He shouts a soundless "Banzai!" into the wastes of the Sea of Serenity, dashes off a haiku or two, and quickly builds himself a Zen rock garden. The inscrutable Nipponese have beaten Russia and the U.S. to the moon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Kamikosmonaut | 2/26/1965 | See Source »

...days of lunar life until his supplies of Scotch and oxygen dwindle. Then he walks into his Zen garden in the rays of the waning earth and commits hara-kiri by slitting his space suit. Since there is no atmosphere on the moon, the results are spectacular: with a sodden poof, Dr. Kanashima dissolves into "clouds of elementary particles hurled into space at a mile a second...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Kamikosmonaut | 2/26/1965 | See Source »

Shortage of Scotch. With more losses to come, the strike has already dealt the U.S. economy a $2.2 billion blow-$67 million for each day of the strike. Commerce Secretary Connor estimated that 191,000 workers were idled by the strike: not only the 60,000 striking longshoremen, but 38,000 seamen and other maritime workers, 45,000 railroadmen, 48,000 truckers. With 855 ships tied up, U.S. ocean shippers were deprived of 161 million tons of freight. The nation's strangled lines of trade also cost highway carriers 9,000,000 tons of business, railways...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Labor: How to Damage the Economy | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

...shortages showed up as far inland as Wisconsin. B. Kuppenheimer & Co., a Chicago suitmaker, laid off 200 cutters and trimmed its production 35% for lack of imported fabrics. Textile and shipping employees in Houston and Boston had to go on unwelcome winter vacations. In Miami, a shortage of Scotch threatened vacationers while 200,000 cases lay in six ships in the port...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Labor: How to Damage the Economy | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

Richard Todd plays a man-about-Edinburgh, a passionate travel agent who longs to be Scotch with a twist of Lemmon but more often looks stolid as a Rock. Todd has a prim fiancee and a yen for side trips. When his girl says no, he treks off to the Continent to find more accessible playmates, and for remembrance gives each a key to his flat. In Munich, he meets Nicole Maurey. In Venice, he nuzzles a handsome matron whose teen-age daughter gets the key by mistake. In the Alps, he gets stranded with blonde Elke Sommer, a scenic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Off-Key Farce | 2/12/1965 | See Source »

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