Word: inlanders
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Appeal for Austerity. So intense is the pressure, that Quadros last week felt compelled to pass up the champagne inauguration of the U.S. embassy building in his new inland capital of Brasilia. Coming after Quadros had personally promised the wife of U.S. Ambassador John Moors Cabot that he would be there, the undiplomatic failure to show up was interpreted by many as one more Quadros snub to the U.S. But the President, explained his supporters, was putting the finishing touches on a new and dramatic appeal to Brazilians to accept austerity...
...metacanine beast. If you walk in hurriedly, you are instantly outdoors again in a huge courtyard, having passed through a small hall with flooring that is a mixture of Pennsylvania linoleum and Spanish tile. The courtyard is full of rosebushes, boxwoods, a grape arbor, and mirrors on an inland wall that reflect the sea. A statue of St. Francis stands in the center in a filled-in pond that once, in another era, brimmed with gallons of champagne. At one end is a playpen big enough for a growing mastiff, but it only contains one tiny Kerr...
Chief speaker at next week's 53rd annual meeting of the Harvard Club of Boston: articulate Clarence B. Randall, '12, retired board chairman of Inland Steel Co. and Ike's special assistant for foreign economic policy. His topic: "A Harvard Man Leaves the Government...
...Among the members: Union Presidents George Meany (A.F.L.-C.I.O.), Walter Reuther (Auto Workers), David McDonald (Steel workers), David Dubinsky (Ladies' Garment Workers); Company Chief Executives Thomas Watson Jr. (IBM), Henry Ford II (Ford Motor), J. Spencer Love (Burlington Industries), Joseph Block (Inland Steel); President Clark Kerr of the University of California...
...great victory-or would like people to think he has-Fidel Castro turned his guns from the sea and ended the mythical "Yankee invasion" scare. Calling for "a quest of peace" with the new Kennedy Administration, he turned his attention inland last week, and for good reason. There is a very real foe to fight at home. It is the underground rebellion, operating in Cuba's hills and cities, infiltrating the army and government agencies, doing more damage to the new dictatorship in six months than Castro had managed against the old in a year...