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With 30 returned volunteers and three top Washington staff members as bait, the Peace Corps will open a ten-day recruiting drive at Harvard and Radcliffe on Monday...

Author: By Jonathan B. Marks, | Title: Peace Corps Opening Drive Monday, Will Not Require Three-Hour Exam | 2/26/1966 | See Source »

...both nations, Humphrey reasserted the President's fish-or-cut-bait foreign-policy line. Further economic aid, he made clear, depends on observance of the Tashkent agreement to a cease-fire and a pullback in Kashmir. Also, the two countries must take realistic self-help measures and, in view of the shared threat of Communist China, spare the Administration gratuitous criticism of U.S. foreign policy. Finally, Humphrey intimated that some non-military assistance for South Viet Nam would not be ill-received in Washington, though this was not made a condition of continuing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: Have Talking Cell, Will Travel | 2/25/1966 | See Source »

...draft. Inside, the effect is super-lush, with deep red plush seats, red-globed lamps, lots of traditional dark wood and highly polished brass fixtures. "Of course it's not a real pub. It's a parody of a pub for the French bourgeoisie," says a bearded Bait called Slavik, sipping his Old Forester bourbon neat. He should know, for he designed not only the original Le Drugstore on the Champs Elysees but the new Churchill as well, and now no decorator is more in demand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Decor: Vive le Pub | 2/25/1966 | See Source »

...colleagues privately called him "cemetery bait," and the bookmakers along his Broadway beat said that on any given day, the odds were 9 to 5 he would be killed. But when the shots were fired, they were off target; the knives and brickbats missed; the flung cue balls were wide of the mark. Johnny Broderick, "the world's toughest cop," was destined to die in bed-which he did last week of a heart attack on his 72nd birthday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Police: World's Toughest | 1/28/1966 | See Source »

...Nasser had a surprise in store. Not once last week did he curse his enemies in the Arab world. And not once in his 21-hour speech did he bait the West. Moreover, he made only a perfunctory reference to "liberating" Palestine. Instead, he talked calmly and sensibly about Egypt's economic problems. The country has run up a foreign debt of nearly $3 billion, and the gap between exports and imports has widened to a record $500 million for 1965. "We are facing difficulties," Nasser conceded. "We must all work harder and make sacrifices. I have no magic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Egypt: Fewer Curses, More Sense | 12/31/1965 | See Source »

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