Word: adolf
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Washington last week emerged the pattern of the Kennedy Administration's approach to Latin American policy. Back to his old hemisphere bailiwick with the broadest grant of powers to handle Latin American affairs ever given any U.S. official went Adolf A. Berle, 66, Assistant Secretary of State from...
...York City's RCA Building one afternoon last week, top news executives of the ABC and NBC television networks were waiting for the man from CBS, so that they could begin discussing joint coverage of the Adolf Eichmann trial, coming up next month in Israel. But CBS's man, Sig Mickelson, 47, president of CBS's news division, never showed up. Just minutes before the meeting in the RCA Building, Mickelson resigned...
...Auschwitz before him were caught and hanged by the Poles, one of them on gallows especially built so that the last sight to meet his eyes would be the camp in which he had sent an estimated 2,000,000 innocent Jews to their death. After Exterminator-in-Chief Adolf Eichmann was found in Argentina last May, West German intelligence officers started a fresh search for Baer...
Donald Arthur Glaser, 34, wore an evening waistcoat that was yellowed with age when he stepped up to receive his Nobel Prize in Physics from Sweden's King Gustav VI Adolf early this month. The old vest, he explained, had been worn by two other Nobelmen, Edwin McMillan and Emilio Segre, before him, "and I guess I'll pass it along to somebody else for some future Nobel ceremony." Chances are, Glaser himself may some day want it back for just that reason. Having reached top rank in his field with his invention of a bubble chamber for photographing atomic...
Reflecting the growing importance of West Germany in the NATO alliance, General Adolf Heusinger, 63, top officer in the German armed forces, was named chairman of the NATO permanent Military Committee in Washington. The Germans also agreed last week to boost their contribution to the cost of NATO facilities (pipelines, depots, etc.) from 13% to 19%, enabling the U.S. to cut its share from 37% to 31%-an estimated annual saving to the U.S. of $15 million...