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...should profit from "that face," and Dr. Sobek, who was president of the Resistance, quickly agreed. Sobek has since retired, and Austrian stamp dealers as well as lawyers for two important foreign buyers, said to be an American and an Israeli, have stepped up pressure on his successor, Dr. Helmut Fichtenthal. But Fichtenthal is as adamantly opposed to selling the stamps as his predecessor. Rejecting all offers, he said last week: "The sale is an ethical question. I shall guard the stamps as long as I am in office." Philatelists estimate that in the meantime the value of the stamps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Keeping That Face Out of Sight | 6/28/1971 | See Source »

...curiosity team up to preserve life so well that the world faces a population crisis. Moreover, by extending the lives of those with defective genes, science increases the chance that damaging genes will be passed down to ever-larger portions of succeeding generations. Germany's pre-eminent Protestant ethicist, Helmut Thielicke, notes that men must recognize how "the act of compassion to one generation can be an act of oppression to the next." Thielicke argues that men must be willing to make hard choices. If society intervenes to keep alive the hereditarily ill (as he believes it should), then...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Special Section: THE SPIRIT: Who Will Make the Choices of Life and Death? | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

...Brian Keith). Between drinks, the captain interprets the unrest as a diversionary tactic. There must be something deeper underfoot, he decides -something like a tunnel. From that moment, The McKenzie Break becomes a lethal contest of Irish hound and German hares led by the glittering Übermensch, Kapitan Schluetter (Helmut Griem...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Escape Artist | 11/16/1970 | See Source »

Conrad insinuates himself into the Ornstein family circle first by murdering a groom, then by revealing the Nazi obsessions of the stolid head butler. While sexually subduing both doe-eyed, effeminate Helmut and the Countess, Conrad seduces the unprepossessing daughter of a German magnate. The millionaire and his imbecilic wife want to buy a castle and instant social status. Conrad, of course, sees the connection between their ambitions and the Countess' wish to re-open her decayed ancestral fief, Helmut marries the heiress, though he and his bride aspire only to sexual bliss with Conrad. Conrad himself mercy awaits...

Author: By James M. Lewis, | Title: The Moviegoer Something for Everyone At the Harvard Square Theatre through Tuesday | 11/5/1970 | See Source »

...only behind his mask that the Mardi Gras reveler loses his inhibitions and dares to act as he feels. So it is with today's driver, says one of Germany's leading sociologists. To reduce the slaughter of "that guerrilla war we call traffic," Bielefeld University Professor Helmut Schelsky advocates doing away with anonymity on the highway. How? As a first step, he would put names instead of number plates on cars. At the very least, he would let the police give out, on request, names corresponding to license numbers, or, as in Switzerland, publish license directories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: Behind the Auto Mask | 10/26/1970 | See Source »

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