Word: indonesianness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...throw bricks at property or people. Do not cause damage," lectured Indonesia's President Sukarno to a group of university students. It seemed a strange note to strike, in view of the fact that four times in the past three months Sukarno had permitted Indonesian mobs to storm USIS offices in Djakarta, Surabaya and Medan, smashing windows, ripping down American flags, burning thousands of books...
First the Communist workers in foreign-owned plants rally and riot, demanding that the management be thrown out and the factory given to the workers. Then Sukarno steps in to take over the management on behalf of the Indonesian government to "protect" the plants and estates from the angry workers. Formal nationalization is apt to follow. The Dutch, Belgians and British have all been victims of the Sukarno Method in recent years...
...beer can and the throwaway plate. Immediately after each stoning, looting or burning, the used embassy would be put in the trash and a fresh one installed in its place. The question is how to build into the Disposable Embassy enough destructive satisfaction to leave a typical Indonesian or Hungarian feeling that he had really done a good day's work against...
...existing U.N. troupe, if they were allowed to take over Nationalist China's role. For the present, not a single U.N. member, Afro-Asian or other, paid any attention to Peking's challenge, and even such "neutralists" as Tito and Nasser were opposed to the Chinese-Indonesian game. The General Assembly was more interested in achieving some resolution of the U.N.'s continuing financial crisis. At week's end, Subandrio agreed to accept $100 million in aid from Peking plus "military experience"-presumably Mao's guerrilla-warfare manual of arms. A joint communique also attacked...
...along to make auto-headlight glass from sugar and to substitute sugar for the fats in soap detergents; sugar dissolves easily, does not cause water pollution. And, quite beyond these uses, sugar has one major value that no nation dare ignore: from the rum and cachaza of Brazil to Indonesian Arak, it is the universal base for alcoholic drinks. In Peru, where a drop in the U.S. import quota has caused a 220,000-ton sugar surplus, W. R. Grace & Co. intends to solve a national economic crisis in an ingenious way: Grace will use the excess to make, under...