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...traditional surplus-producing nations to curtail the amount of food that they normally give as aid to the hungry nations. For example, unless the U.S. adopts an expanded program, American aid this year will drop 50% in some categories. Sales of food are also shrinking. Argentina, Brazil, Thailand, Burma and the Common Market nations have restricted food exports. Several weeks ago, President Ford blocked the sale of some 10 million metric tons of grain to the Soviets and is permitting them to buy scarcely one-fifth of that amount. Ford feared that massive sales to the Soviet Union could inflate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: THE WORLD FOOD CRISIS | 11/11/1974 | See Source »

Only slightly less serious are the situations in Honduras, Burma, Burundi, Rwanda, the Sudan and Yemen. Additionally, poor harvests threaten food supplies in Nepal, Somalia, Tanzania, Zambia and even the Philippines and Mexico. In Haiti, because of disregard for soil conservation, hundreds of thousands of subsistence farmers face starvation. Whole families are often so hungry that they do not wait for mangoes to ripen; they boil the green fruit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: THE WORLD FOOD CRISIS | 11/11/1974 | See Source »

...city has had since the early trading days of the 17th century. Unlike the Marseille Corsicans, the Amsterdam Chinese do no processing of raw opium into heroin. That is done in Singapore and Hong Kong, major markets for the opium produced in the Golden Triangle area in Laos, Burma and northern Thailand. Known as "brown sugar" because of its color and texture, this Asian heroin has a purity of only 50%, compared with the 96%-98% of the old Marseille product. Once processed, this crudely refined "sugar" is smuggled into Amsterdam in small amounts (usually no more than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DRUGS: Now the Dutch Connection | 9/2/1974 | See Source »

...choke on their own waste, Illich predicts that their societies will collapse into a "sociocultural energy coma" and undergo cold-turkey treatment when they are forced by the rest of the world to reduce their energy consumption. Nations like China (for a short time, at least), India and Burma have not yet reached the point of no return and can still "stop short of an energy stroke." But while people in developed countries speed onward blindly addicted to ever-increasing energy consumption, he tells Third World peasants to remain sober and "to abstain from something they have yet to taste...

Author: By Travis P. Dungan, | Title: Hooked on Speed | 5/7/1974 | See Source »

...According to U.S. State Department estimates, the vast majority of rank and file soldiers are ethnic Burmese. But most of the officers and cadres down to the company level are probably ethnic Chinese trained in China. Still, nobody can say for certain that they are regular Chinese soldiers. Along Burma's porous and largely unpoliced border with China, it is very difficult to know exactly who is who among the various ethnic groups and rebellious armies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BURMA: Trouble in the Triangle | 3/25/1974 | See Source »

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