Word: bonnes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...quarrelsome Continent is caught up in a quiet revolution of cooperation. On a busy Turin street corner, a pretty Dutch policewoman expertly directs traffic. In Florence, work is in progress on the University of Europe, financed by six nations and scheduled to open its doors in 1962. A Bonn delicatessen owner makes his twice-weekly trip to Belgium to buy vegetables for his newly finicky customers and grumbles: ''They won't buy German vegetables any more, even when they're cheaper." Looking toward outer space, Britain, France and West Germany are establishing a $200 million project...
...Bonn foreign office is shot through and through with Nazis," William L. Shirer declared last night the Ford Hall Forum...
...United Nations, a force which included Washington Bureau Chief John Steele, Chicago TIME Chief Murray Gart and Correspondents Fred Gruin, Bert Meyers and Bill Smith covered the U.N. crisis. From correspondents in Bonn, Moscow, London, Paris, Tokyo, Belgrade, Vienna, Cracow, Leopoldville and Ndola came reports of reaction to the situation. At the TIME & LIFE Building, Associate Editor Edward Hughes pulled together all of the facts surrounding the U.N.'s hours of trial for the cover story, edited by Henry Grunwald. For Writer Hughes, 40, onetime TIME correspondent in Africa and Germany, the international tensions of recent weeks have provided...
Over morning coffee, Bonn celebrated the first day P.A.-Post-Adenauer. Almost in disbelief, politicians of all parties concluded that West Germany's fourth postwar election had finally scuttled the Old Chancellor. Angrily, Konrad Adenauer vented his rage on campaign officials, the Socialists, the U.S. (for not allowing him to accompany Lyndon Johnson to Berlin, which would have been great campaign publicity). When he announced a press conference for noon, friends and foes alike guessed that der Alte was about to step down. Instead, the Old Fox left no doubt that in West Germany it was still Anno Adenauer...
...send a high Government official to Berlin, many would remember that he had rebuked Brandt for his letter to Washington demanding "not merely words, but political action'' to save the city. Belatedly, the busy Chancellor flew up to Berlin last week to address the voters, prompting Bonn's usually pro-C.D.U. General-Anzeiger to note acidly that "an earlier visit certainly would have saved the Berliners many hours of hopelessness.'' The Chancellor had, critics pointed out. found time at the height of the crisis to drop down to Regensburg for an election rally...