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...desperate effort to salvage something, Boun Oum's delegates argued that the princes should confer in the no man's land of the center of the bridge at Hin Heup. This brought wild guffaws from the other side, as one of the neutralist dele gates pointed out that the bridge had been blown up and the princes could not stand in midair. The Boun Oum man came back with the suggestion that a raft be built and anchored in midriver. With a mock-serious air, the neutralist chief delegate drew a lurid picture of the dangers that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Laos: The Raft in the River | 10/6/1961 | See Source »

Corridor Incidents. But despite Gromyko's willingness to confer, it was still not certain that Nikita Khrushchev was ready to negotiate on rational terms. Soviet Defense Minister Rodion Malinovosky, in an ominous article in Pravda, said that Russia must arm its forces for "a strenuous, difficult and exceptionally fierce war." Along Western air corridors to Berlin, Soviet MIG-17s began making close-up inspections of U.S. passenger liners-the first such incidents in a year. There was a rising chorus of East German and Soviet complaints that the Allies were "misusing" the corridors-a possible foreshadowing of Red efforts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Cold War: The Long Shadow | 9/22/1961 | See Source »

Still, Bourguiba displayed enormous forbearance. In January 1960, when De Gaulle was fighting to survive the Algerian Revolt of the Barricades, Bourguiba graciously called off a scheduled "Bizerte Protest Week." As a reward, Bourguiba was invited to Paris last February, welcomed with pomp, and permitted to confer with De Gaulle. He came away glowing, convinced that the general was finally ready to negotiate withdrawal from Bizerte. Hearing nothing further, he suspected the worst; and the airstrip work confirmed his suspicions. Three weeks ago, Bourguiba sent his chief aide to Paris bearing a personal letter for De Gaulle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tunisia: The Wages of Moderation | 7/28/1961 | See Source »

...President Kennedy intended, at the beginning of his term, to stay in Washington as much as possible." said the New York Times a little sternly. "He embarks on a crucial journey to confer with the leaders of our two principal allies. President de Gaulle and Prime Minister Macmillan. and to confront our principal adversary. Premier Khrushchev. There is a compulsion on prominent persons, as on almost all the rest of us. to arise and go. Geneva, Saigon, Paris, London, Buenos Aires, Havana, in time the fogs of Venus and the mountains of the moon. These can be reached...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Greek Chorus | 6/9/1961 | See Source »

...present law would be eased for consultants who work only part time for the Government. But it would also be toughened to provide stiff penalties for officials who try to wangle favors for friends or associates. Other key points: 1) members of federal regulatory agencies would be forbidden to confer privately with persons involved in cases that are to be decided only on the records of formal hearings; 2) Government officials would be prohibited from "switching sides" and joining a private company on cases that they had handled for the U.S.; 3) federal employees would be barred from accepting virtually...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Work Week | 5/5/1961 | See Source »

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