Word: brandts
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...British Prime Minister Edward Heath the following week in Bermuda; > West German Chancellor Willy Brandt, who will come to Key Biscayne, Fla., in late December; > Japanese Premier Eisaku Sato, who will visit San Clemente in January; >Canada's Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, almost certainly, at some point not yet determined...
...talks with Pompidou, Heath and Brandt will be far-ranging. They will include the forthcoming European security conference and the proposed mutual reduction of forces between the Warsaw Pact nations and the NATO countries. Since Secretary of the Treasury John Connally is accompanying Nixon and Henry Kissinger, the international economic impasse will also be discussed -though not likely resolved (see THE ECONOMY). The summit conference with Sato will give the Prime Minister a badly needed boost at home, where his reputation has been seriously damaged by the sudden U.S. policy reversals on both China and international trade...
...Master Gamester Willy Brandt gives away to the Soviets what is behind the Iron Curtain, then walks off with a Nobel Peace Prize for himself [Nov. 1]. The big losers are the millions of people in East Germany who had hoped to some day determine their destiny for themselves. What will Willy win when he wagers what lies behind the Wall...
...important was Britain's decision to the Continent last week that West German television carried live coverage from London, repeatedly flashing the word YES on screens after the vote was in. Two minutes later, Chancellor Willy Brandt was on TV to declare it "a great day for Europe." NATO's Secretary-General Joseph Luns glowed to reporters: "The sun shines all over Europe today." Queen Juliana of The Netherlands, informed of the result at a gala banquet in Hamburg, immediately raised her glass and told the 360 dinner guests, who broke into applause. Jean Monnet, 82, justly known...
...head of the Bank of Italy, recently declared that economic development has gone about as far as it can go without further political development. And political development-meaning internal integration and common international policies-has been held up pending Britain's entry. Shortly before the Commons vote, Willy Brandt said, "The success of the Western Europeans' efforts to assert their political weight more forcefully in the world depends to a large degree on the full cooperation of the British." That the Common Market will have. Heath wants to use the Community for developing a distinctly European foreign policy...