Word: freer
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Whatever the Soviet motives, Moscow has unquestionably made some key concessions to the West in order to get the conference launched. Among other things, Moscow has finally agreed that the tentative agenda should include two major objectives of the West: a freer flow of people and ideas among all European nations, and the exchange of military observers between Eastern and Western Europe, as well as advance warnings about military movements...
Bracken said he views his opportunity at the Harvard office as the beginning of a freer exchange of information and personnel between admissions departments at Ivy League schools...
Brandt, in fact, will urge Brezhnev to facilitate a freer flow of people, ideas and information throughout Europe. The West German leader regards a Soviet concession on this issue, which would unquestionably influence the attitudes of other East bloc nations, as essential to the success of the European Security Conference in Helsinki. The Russians view the conference as a sort of World War II wrapup, affirming the "inviolability" of all borders that were redrawn to Soviet advantage at war's end. They have shown little interest in Brandt's broader aims, fearing that Communist ideology may be "contaminated...
Nixon is ideologically committed to the freer markets of Phase III, but politically he is under intense fire. His economic chief, George Shultz, still defends a policy of casual controls and promises that price relief is just around the corner. He expects food prices to peak in early summer and ease downward for the rest of the year. But another Nixon adviser, Arthur Burns, chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, is urging tighter controls. Nixon may be tempted to impose a freeze before Congress forces...
...would rather rely on the First Amendment [than shield laws]," Peter Jay '62, a correspondent for The Washington Post, said. Although recent court decisions have eroded the rights of the press, the U.S. still has a "far freer press than any other country in the world," he said...