Word: argentinas
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...held throughout the year, but take on an added bustle in the first weeks of autumn, when government leaders converge on New York City for the United Nations General Assembly. In the ten-day period prior to their breakfast with Sepulveda, TIME journalists met with the President of Argentina (in this case, at his New York City hotel), the Prime Minister of Lebanon, and the foreign ministers of Australia, Austria and Jordan...
...after Argentina worked out the arrangement with the IMF, Grinspun and Alfonsín were in New York City, pressing their case before a few powerful bankers at a luncheon given by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. IMF Managing Director Jacques de Larosière has also been helping Argentina by telling the banks that the IMF will not come through with its money unless the banks come up with theirs...
There were doubts that Argentina will be able to live up to the terms it agreed to last week. The political situation in the country remains tense, and workers may rebel at the austerity. But the IMF seemed ready to give Alfonsín the benefit of the doubt. If Argentina fails to comply with the austerity program, however, both the IMF and the banks could turn off the money, leaving Argentina worse off than before...
...under seven Presidents, who epitomized the old-school foreign service officer during his many key assignments; in Brattleboro, Vt. A graduate of Yale, Bunker was an executive in the sugar industry for 35 years before President Truman named him to be Ambassador to Juan Perón's Argentina in 1951; he was later posted to Italy, India and Nepal. Bunker helped avert a war between The Netherlands and Indonesia in 1962, and three years later mediated between factions in the Dominican Republic. Called from retirement and sent to Viet Nam in 1967 to preside over what he hoped...
...admirable writer, earned much favor in Western eyes. All that those mullahs and ayatullahs seemed to want was to make trouble and pray. Naipaul's report on this journey was written more in anger than sorrow, and the formula that he had earlier used to criticize Argentina (The Return of Eva Perón) or his ancestral homeland (India: A Wounded Civilization) began to seem a trifle predictable: the author regrets to find yet another swatch of the Third World behaving in veddy bad taste...