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Beyond Korea. Clearly, the Communists' Tet offensive had much to do with the groundswell of pessimism. An unremitting stream of TV clips and still photographs-such as LIFE'S classic shot of wounded U.S. Marines stacked aboard a tank in Hue-daily underscored the war's horror. Since the widespread attacks began on Jan. 31, the U.S. has lost an average of 500 men a week, pushing the overall casualty total-Americans killed in action or wounded-since the beginning of 1961 above Korean War totals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The War: Debate in a Vacuum | 3/15/1968 | See Source »

Choice Graffiti. From the outside, the club could hardly be plainer. Except for a black awning, a red flag emblazoned with a monkey wrench, and a stream of Rolls-Royces arriving and departing, the grey, two-story building looks no different than it did in World War II, when it was a factory turning out bombsights. Inside, the proletarian theme continues with chicken-wirescreened windows, secondhand tables bought at auction for $5 apiece, and bartenders who are togged out in dungarees and blue denim work shirts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Night Life: The Factory | 3/15/1968 | See Source »

From a crescent-shaped position along the west wall, the enemy was able to keep a steady stream of supplies and reinforcements flowing into the Citadel. At week's end this position was threatened by allied forces advancing on the Citadel from the west. For mobility within the city, the Communist troops found a second, more cunning conduit. They crawled through sewer lines beneath the city that led up to street level behind allied lines. Time and again, Communist mortar and rocket fire slammed into the advancing U.S. armor. Sometimes a tank lurched, then treaded wildly through brick walls...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: FIGHT FOR A CITADEL | 3/1/1968 | See Source »

From 1960 until his arrest by the KGB in 1962, Colonel Oleg Penkovsky of Soviet military intelligence funneled out to the West a steady stream of Moscow's most vital secrets. His side of the story was recounted in The Penkovsky Papers, published in 1965. Contact on Gorky Street is the autobiographical account of the British businessman, recruited by British intelligence, who befriended Penkovsky in Moscow and became his conduit to the West. The book is far more chilling than any of the fictional adventures of James Bond or Harry Palmer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Notes from a Soviet Prison | 2/23/1968 | See Source »

...disease takes the form of a deficiency in antihemophilic globulin--Factor VIII. In normal humans the Factor VIII level in the blood stream ranges from 50 to 200 per cent. Hemophiliacs generally have a Factor VIII level of less than 25 per cent...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Boston Doctors May Have Cure For Hemophilia | 2/9/1968 | See Source »

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