Word: ens
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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When he heard the news of France's recognition while on tour in Africa, Red China's Foreign Minister Chou En-lai broke into rapturous French. "Bonjour, bonjour, comment allez-vous!" he cried to France's ambassador in the Sudan. "That's great. I am very happy." He also recalled that he and Foreign Minister Chen Yi "were both students together in Paris many years...
...Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman and Philippines President Diosdado Macapagal. But in view of Indonesian President Sukarno's un relenting "Crush Malaysia" campaign, there was widespread doubt over the chances of ending the bitter four-month feud. In London, where the U.S. Attorney General stopped off en route to Washington, Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home warmly thanked Kennedy for his efforts but was plainly skeptical of their success. Kennedy himself was not overoptimistic. "If the conference is not successful," he said bluntly, "everybody can go back to the jungle and shoot one another again. So nothing has been...
Andrew Field, a Teaching Fellow in Slavic Languages and Literature last year, was arrested on Jan. 21 at the Polish-East German border town of Slubice while en route from Moscow to Paris for a two week holiday with his wife. Since September, Field had been studying Russian literature in Moscow under the U.S.-Soviet cultural exchange program. Harvard officials indicated last night that Field was a student "in good standing" and was expected to return to the University next year...
Nikita Khrushchev had a fine man on hand for the job in Vice President Kassim Hanga, who studied at Moscow's Lumumba University for 21 years. And if Red China's Premier Chou En-lai was interested, he had only to pop over from West Africa and talk with Peking's good friend, Foreign Minister Abdul Rahman Mohamed. "Babu" would certainly listen...
...promptly sever diplomatic ties with Paris. The U.S. counseled the Nationalists against a quick break on the grounds that 1) if Red China sticks to its longstanding position that no country may have diplomats in both Peking and Taipei (a view repeated last week by barnstorming Red Premier Chou En-lai in Mali), De Gaulle would be acutely embarrassed and the onus will be on the Communists; 2) if Peking accepts a "two-China" policy, it would be a major Red switch that weakens phony Red claims to Formosa; 3) a two-China policy would also ease U.S. diplomatic problems...