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...Chang and Halliday also connect a few dots. While 38 million Chinese were starving to death during 1958-61, much of the grain they produced was being shipped to the Soviet Union, where it accounted for two-thirds of all food imports. It was a weapons-technology-for-food program, a demonic bargain to make China a military superpower even at the cost of its own citizens' lives. "Half of China may well have to die," Mao said of this deal to his inner circle in 1958, according to Party documents. China's acquisition of the atom bomb, the authors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Taking Aim at Mao | 6/6/2005 | See Source »

...damning disclosures in Mao that Chang and Halliday have little room for the emotive prose and lyrical description that animated Wild Swans. Neither, to their disadvantage, do they balance their relentless criticisms with any of Mao's accomplishments, like fending off Stalin's attempt to run China as a Soviet fiefdom, reimposing central authority in a fractious country, giving Chinese a new sense of pride and nationhood, or marketing his own image at home and abroad with dazzling aplomb...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Taking Aim at Mao | 6/6/2005 | See Source »

...CONVICTED. MIKHAIL KHODORKOVSKY, 41, former chief of Russian oil giant Yukos, who became the country's wealthiest oligarch as state industries were privatized after the collapse of the Soviet Union; on charges including tax evasion and fraud; in Moscow. The conviction ended a long trial that critics claimed was part of a politically motivated campaign by the Kremlin to deter the billionaire from financing opposition to Vladimir Putin and discourage independent business. Khodorkovsky, whose now-dwindled fortune was once estimated at $15 billion, was sentenced to nine years in prison, which will remove him from the scene well past Russia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones | 6/6/2005 | See Source »

...frequently poked into waters where it has not been welcome. It belongs to Greenpeace, an international environmental group that opposes whaling. Last week Greenpeace carried out its most daring protest yet. The ship narrowly escaped being captured, but seven Greenpeace members, six Americans and one Canadian, were detained by Soviet authorities ... Greenpeace believed that the Soviets were violating the [International Whaling Commission's] recommendation that only native groups be allowed to hunt the California gray whale. With 23 men and women aboard, THE RAINBOW WARRIOR STEAMED ACROSS THE BERING STRAIT TO THE SIBERIAN WHALING VILLAGE OF LORINO. Six Greenpeace members...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters | 6/6/2005 | See Source »

...William M. Beecher ’55 shared the 1983 Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting with several other editors at the Globe for β€œWar and Peace in the Nuclear Age,” a special feature about the nuclear arms race. Beecher, who had covered U.S.-Soviet relations in Washington, says he helped formulate the idea for the feature and wrote the 8,000-word lead story for the 56-page Sunday special...

Author: By Adam Goldenberg, Evan H. Jacobs, and Sam Teller, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Five From ’55 Grab a Total of Six Pulitzer Prizes | 6/6/2005 | See Source »

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