Word: faithful
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Called on the U.S.S.R. to make good on its promise of "the reunification of Germany by free elections," agreed upon at the Geneva Conference in 1955. "I assure you that this act of simple justice and of good faith need not lead to any increased jeopardy of your nation...
...State of the Union message, the President moved vigorously to restore a measure of the U.S.'s pre-Sputnik confidence-without its pre-Sputnik complacency. And thus, in his letter to Bulganin, he redefined the meaning of the world competition and lifted the free world's faith in its cause. At home and abroad, the President moved notably in the second week of the new year to give those who called for it a touch of the style of command he once summed up: "Only strength can cooperate; weakness can only...
...could deny that Sir Hugh's bright-eyed approach has created new hope in Cyprus. "You never know," mused one British official last week. "Perhaps it's just exactly the kind of faith that is needed...
Reward did not come too soon. Max had poured a lot of sweat and faith into his old chicken coop; he borrowed heavily from family and friends, got help from another hi-fi lover, Space Surgeon Colonel Paul Stapp (TIME, Sept. 12, 1955), who lent him much of his big collection of LP records, is now a stockholder. Rothman traded radio time for food and furniture, and Sima, an amateur artist, illustrated the monthly programs. In return for job printing, the Alamogordo newspaper got free newscasts. To pay for delivery of a fifth child, Max installed FM equipment...
...ideas, however, forcefully pulled the Stassen-Dulles feud into the Congressional repertoire. Calling for peace waged at the conference table, Johnson, who invited "all men of all nations" to its chairs, outbid the President. Eisen-hower simply held the door open to talks, but required credentials of good faith for those who want to pass the threshold. It will indeed be a novel spectacle, though not one unwelcome to Senator Bricker, if the Senate tries to assume a forceful role in foreign policy decisions...