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...terrain itself provides the ultimate drama, beauty and terror of the film: cascading rock-strewn rivers that can smash an outrigger like a coconut shell, the green deep-pile carpeting of the rain forest, so dense that only needles of sunlight ever filter through to the dank jungle floor, the incessant droning whine of insects, and the voracious, slimy leeches, the size of amputated little fingers, that have to be burned off the skin. In New Guinea, the cruelest headhunter is still Nature...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Cruelest Island | 7/6/1962 | See Source »

...coal a man shovels, or how much tennis he plays, or how far he walks. But man's nervous system is a data-processing mechanism that regulates the rate and rhythm of the heart without regard to the volume or energy of the signals it receives. Bright sunlight or a thunderclap may have no effect on the heart; a vital message read in semidarkness or a whisper that "A.T. & T. has fallen 30 points" may send the heart racing faster than it would during a hard set of tennis...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Work & the Heart | 6/29/1962 | See Source »

...center of the window, and the booster is off to the right slightly." During his flight, Carpenter was supposed to complete several experiments that Glenn had been unable to carry out because of attitude-control system problems. He was scheduled to photograph cloud formations, test for the polarization of sunlight, look for comets close to the sun, take eye and balance tests, and exercise with a thick rubber band. But on the first orbit Carpenter began maneuvering the capsule by the "fly-by-wire" system, a semiautomatic device something like power steering on an automobile. As a result, he fell...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Space: Aurora 7. Do You Read Me? | 6/1/1962 | See Source »

...Sail. The heaviest part of OSO is a nine-sided drum containing batteries, radio equipment and position-control apparatus (see diagram). Mounted on a shaft running through the center of the drum is a semicircular "sail" covered on one side with solar cells to make electric power out of sunlight. While OSO was getting its final push from the launching rocket's third stage, both drum and sail were spinning rapidly. After it was fully in orbit, three arms carrying spherical tanks of high-pressure nitrogen swung outward, and small nitrogen jets reduced the spin to a steady...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: To See the Sun | 3/16/1962 | See Source »

There is a brief pause, then the curtains open, revealing a portion of Armageddon's principal street. It is totally deserted and sadly run-down, but in the dazzling sunlight posses a lazy, rather Spanish charm...

Author: By Gerald Burns, | Title: THE PROPHET | 3/9/1962 | See Source »

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