Word: crediters
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...should Europe's oil shortage be met? Already private U.S. companies are selling oil to Europe, but the Europeans are having to pay with scarce dollars. Once Britain and France have withdrawn from Egypt, the U.S. will try to work out a way of providing dollar credit-probably on an all-Western-Europe basis, working through Western Europe's Organization for European Economic Cooperation...
...does not, as of now, accept the British-French thesis that Nasser must go. If he is toppled, who will replace him? Would this replacement enhance or detract from the much-needed stability in the Middle East? The U.S. is willing to grant him some positive credit if he sticks by his newly announced devotion to the U.N. and international order (see FOREIGN NEWS), will take a fresh, hard look if he goes back to dabbling with the Russians and Russian volunteers...
Added up, her work came close to fulfilling the ideal of modern U.S. diplomacy: to promote and expound the policies of the U.S., and in doing so, to strengthen the forces for independence, freedom and stability in the nation to which an envoy is accredited. Both Washington and Rome credit her with major achievements...
...would oppose Russian intervention in the Middle East. Next day Premier Bulganin piously denied to France and Britain that Russia "follows in the Near East some sort of special aims directed against the interests of the Western powers." Thus, without expending a single Russian soldier, Russia got credit among many Arabs for having made peace possible in the Middle East. (Among those not fooled was Egypt's top leadership, which saw that the Russians did not intervene to prevent the Anglo-French attack, but only sought to exploit...
There were few in the sold-out Stadium of nearly 39,000 who had expected a Harvard victory, and indeed, there were others willing to give away as many as thirty points, so confident were they of a Yale slaughter. And it is only to the credit of the Crimson players that a higher score was averted...