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ANTI-PERSONNEL bombs were manufactured in the small towns that dot the rolling dairy country of Wisconsin and Minnesota. Teen-age kids who had to keep their cars moving and farm wives who needed to supplement the family income took jobs in the munitions factories, which were turning out all types of shells and bombs around the clock at the peak of the Vietnam War. Anti-personnel bombs were shipped to Southeast Asia, loaded aboard bombers, and dropped over wide swaths of Vietnamese territory...

Author: By Dan Swanson, | Title: A Parting Shot | 2/20/1974 | See Source »

...from it, and he doesn't major in Visual Studies. He likes Hitchcock, Mike Nichols, Woody Allen, Blow-up, nothing fancy. Nothing experimental or avant-garde for him. He makes full-length feature films on commercial subjects and with big-name stars. One purpose of Counterpoint was to supplement applications to the film schools at USC and UCLA, the two major feeders for TV and Hollywood, and partly for this reason the picture is flashy--over 400 special lab effects were used. "I tried to run the gamut," says Brown. Right now he's halfway through a tongue-in-cheek...

Author: By Richard Shepro and Richard Turner, S | Title: Hollywood at Harvard | 2/14/1974 | See Source »

Accordingly, Nixon will ask Congress this week for Pentagon spending of $85.8 billion next year. In addition, the President will ask Congress to vote $6.8 billion for long-term Pentagon contracts and to supplement this year's defense spending by $6.2 billion. The extra money for 1974 is needed to cover inflation and military-pay increases, as well as to buy $2.2 billion worth of ammunition and weapons to replace those shipped to Israel during the Middle East...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEFENSE: Arming to Disarm in the Age of Detente | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

...heavy liquids. His process is still widely used to prepare Worcestershire sauce, ketchup, cosmetics and paint. Five years ago he set out to design a more advanced machine, which would have enough force to rip apart single-cell organisms, releasing their protein to provide a cheap and plentiful food supplement. He built the Cottell Ultrasonic Reactor, which is hardly larger than a long loaf of bread and resembles an electric drill. The reactor is a mechanical torture chamber in which liquids and semiliquids are broken down under pressures of 1 million lbs. per sq. in. This force is built...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FUELS: Oil and Water Alchemy | 2/11/1974 | See Source »

...student of Congress since his days as a Harvard undergraduate and author of a book about the House of Representatives (Forge of Democracy, 1963), MacNeil covered Capitol Hill for United Press for eight years before joining TIME in 1958. To supplement his reporting, MacNeil reread accounts of the impeachment trial of President Andrew Johnson in his personal congressional library of 6,000 volumes - no fewer than 65 of them deal with impeachment - that he has painstakingly collected over the years. "But there is no substitute for eyeball-to-eyeball discussion," he says. "If you try to guess what...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Feb. 4, 1974 | 2/4/1974 | See Source »

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