Word: indo
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...world stage it was a fretful and disappointing week for the U.S. and the other free nations. The disheartening events reached round the globe, from the conference rooms at Geneva to the battlefields of Indo-China, to the Pentagon and State Department in Washington, and back to the Palais-Bourbon in Paris...
...spring, the most critical situation in domestic or international affairs was the struggle for Indo-China. Considering the prospect of U.S. intervention, the CRIMSON said on April...
...should send troops into Indo China if it can wage a war of containment and not a total war, John K. Fairbank '29, professor of History, told a Reunion symposium yesterday...
Last week, in the uproar that followed, Marc Jacquet, Under Secretary for the Indo-China States, who had in the past slipped reports to Servan-Schreiber, resigned, and there was a shakeup in the French military high command (see FOREIGN NEWS). But last week L'Express was out again-and its circulation shot up by 13,000-to 115,000-and is still rising. Said Editor Servan-Schreiber happily: "The government really did us the best turn they possibly could...
...where many newspapers are helped by hidden government or party subsidies and many are corrupt, L'Express is a postwar journalistic oddity. Confident, alert Editor Servan-Schreiber got the weekly off to a fast start a year ago by printing in its second issue a parliamentary report on Indo-China that the shaky government had asked other papers not to print. L'Express grew steadily, now runs some of the leading writers in France. Editor Servan-Schreiber is a friendly critic of U.S. foreign policy, bridles at being called a "neutralist," and says his basic political idea...