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...industrial base that rivals the U.S.'s in some respects, excels it in others. At Italy's forward-driving Fiat, computers design engine parts and direct machine tools; Fiat intends to double daily auto production within three years. At Hamburg's Willy Schlieker shipyards, a slender beam of light moves along the lines of a blueprint and automatically directs acetylene torches that slice through thick slabs of steel like butter. And the Europeans are spending freely for more automation. The Common Market Six are plowing back an average 15% of their gross national products into fixed capital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Automation Speeds Recovery, Boosts Productivity, Pares Jobs | 12/29/1961 | See Source »

...question whether such sheer bulk has carried the U.S. Sunday newspaper several compass points off journalism's true course. While the typical metropolitan Sunday paper has grown from 111 to 243 pages in the last 20 years, its news content has shrunk from 11.6% to 6.5%. Unlike its slender-and more single-minded-daily brethren, which are deeply embedded in the work week, the Sunday paper must snare that most elusive of all readers: the American at play. Two-day weekends, new leisure pursuits, and the emergence of television's mesmeric eye all have conspired to pry loose...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Ever on Sunday | 12/1/1961 | See Source »

...This slender volume-in which Poet Lowell assembles his imitations of 66 "important poems" by 18 poets (from Homer to Pasternak) in five languages (Greek, German, French, Italian, Russian)-suggests that, in Lowell's case at least, one man's muse is another man's poison. About half of the poems still show the smudge of translation; about half read like English originals composed by a talented foreigner. But a few of them roil and hiss with the vigor and brilliance that makes Lowell, at 44, one of America's major minor poets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Limits of Imitation | 11/3/1961 | See Source »

...life. "Always try," he said, "to understand what is behind this, what is at the bottom of that-always look for the key, and then build detail around it." Jones was an honor student at Stanford University, where he studied aeronautical engineering on a scholarship and stretched out his slender savings by waiting on tables at a sorority house...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Technology: A Place in Space | 10/27/1961 | See Source »

Biggest Moments. But as a ballplayer, Maris still is no match for Babe Ruth. A rollicking, muffin-headed giant (6 ft. 2 in., 230 Ibs.) with the slender legs of a showgirl, Ruth was the finest baseball player who ever lived. As a pitcher with the Boston Red Sox, he won 46 games in two seasons, pitched 29 consecutive scoreless World Series innings-a record that still stands. As an outfielder, he joined a Yankee club that had no ballpark and had never won a pennant; his presence (backed up by the formidable figure of Lou Gehrig) turned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: The Making of a Hero | 9/29/1961 | See Source »

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