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...flamboyant ornament. Other materials went to dust?except for some ornaments of wood or cloth, such as the elegant swan made of felt stuffed with reindeer hair (see color opposite) that was discovered, preserved by ice for almost 2½ millennia, in a tomb in the Altai Mountains of Siberia. Yet the gold survived. Almost all the major examples of Scythian gold have remained in the U.S.S.R. up to now, chiefly in the Kiev State Historical Museum and Leningrad's Hermitage. Now, as a result of an exchange agreement worked out between the U.S. and the Soviet Ministry of Culture, written...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gold of the Nomads | 4/21/1975 | See Source »

Anatoly Marchenko, a well-known dissident Soviet author, was sentenced in Kaluga last week to four years of banishment, probably to Siberia. The story of that case has not yet appeared in the West, but it will break this week in the latest issue of A Chronicle of Human Rights in the USSR, a bimonthly magazine published in Manhattan. Since its founding two years ago last month, the little Chronicle, which is edited by Valery Chalidze and Pavel Litvinov, a pair of liberal Soviet exiles now living in the U.S., has become one of the most carefully read and respected...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Samizdat West | 4/14/1975 | See Source »

...oily luster and can possess an extraordinary range of colors. The bright green, glassy jadeite, the substance most people think of when they think of jade, was not used extensively until the 18th century. Neither substance is indigenous to China; nephrite had to be imported from East Turkestan and Siberia and jadeite was carried from Burma. Jades were precious and exotic materials and were revered by the Chinese as substances possessing special moral as well as physical attributes...

Author: By Susan Cooke, | Title: Mysterious Jades Expressly From the Orient | 2/7/1975 | See Source »

...there are exotic trains still in ser vice. The Trans-Siberia Express is running, though there is a strong possibility of having a lady commissar as your sleepermate. Angola's Benguela line, whose locomotives are the world's most fragrant (they burn eucalyptus logs), huffs up and down mountainsides, as does Chile's Antofagasta & Bolivia. The great Sud Express from Paris to Madrid - with a stop at the Spanish border for a change from standard-to broad-gauge (more than half a foot wider) undercar riage - still hauls magnificent Pullmans with inlaid-wood furniture and three-star...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Old School Ties | 12/9/1974 | See Source »

...American firms often miss out on big Soviet sales for reasons that the omnibus U.S. trade bill would not touch. General Motors has just turned down an offer to build a truck plant in Siberia because the Soviets refused to grant G.M. any role in sales or service of the vehicles to be made there. IBM cannot get Washington clearance to sell the firm's system 370 computer to the Russians because the Pentagon fears that the computers might be used by the Soviets for military purposes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TRADE: Firming the Soviet Connection | 11/4/1974 | See Source »

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