Word: following
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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West Germany's new policy of establishing diplomatic relations with the east-bloc nations is having amazing success. This week Rumania will become the first Eastern European nation to ex, change ambassadors with Bonn. Hungary and Bulgaria are expected to follow Rumania's example within the next few months, and promising negotiations also are under way with Czechoslova-w rn?1-8 alarms East German Boss Walter Ulbncht, 73, who fears that West German presence in the East might iso ate his own unlovely Stalinist regime Jlbricht has done his best to blunt the Bonn drive. His ambassadors...
...coffee people scared as hell." The I.C.O., for its part, is pleased. So far, some 40,000 small growers have promised to plow under 497 million trees, saving the government more in reduced subsidies than the cost of the program. The I.C.O. hopes other over producing countries will follow Brazil's lead - as well they might. If Brazil could have slashed the $400 million it spent to buy and store last year's surplus, the country would certainly be getting more out of the $700 million it earned on the beans it did sell abroad...
...there can be no victory, only an avoidance of defeat. Still, out of a habit that seems a stranger within his skin, he continues the gritty business of contacting comrades, smuggling propaganda into con- voluted Spanish cities where, in T. S. Eliot's phrase, the streets follow like a tedious argument...
Different Road. By contrast with Lurleen and George, Democrat Robert McNair, taking the oath in South Carolina, another state with a history of bitter-end segregation and states'-rights resistance, was determined to follow the road to moderation. South Caro lina, said McNair, has "no time for obsession with either black power or white backlash. With the opportunities that are before us, this is not the time, and South Carolina is not the place, for those who are preoccupied with extremism or petty frustration...
This portion of the act, an ugly monument to Congressional suspicion of scholarship, should follow the way of the disclaimer. Requiring young people whose education is supposed to be vital to the national defense to prove they are law-abiding and loyal can only lead to mutual distrust. If the government can't demonstrate some faith in students, they are not likely to show much confidence in return...