Word: morocco
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...south, Khrushchev's Red rival, Chinese Premier Chou Enlai, was also talking peace as he interrupted his current tour of Africa to visit his only pals in Europe-the Communists of Premier Enver Hoxha's Albania. In an interview on French television, taped while Chou was in Morocco, he came up with what, for him, was a startling thought: war between East and West is not inevitable. The remark was strictly for capitalist consumption, of course; in Albania, Chou found genuine enthusiasm for his usual militant opposition to the whole idea of Communist coexistence with the West...
...room was soon abuzz and awhir with the sounds of a helicopter, some airplanes and a toy boat. Somewhat more sedately, Caroline opened presents described by a family friend as "girl's toys," plus a bright red fire engine from Lucy Baines Johnson. From King Hassan of Morocco, whom she visited in October, Jackie accepted a century-old stone house in Marrakech, complete with servants' quarters, stables, gardens. She drove to a family Mass at Joseph Kennedy's home, a mile and a half away, later exchanged more gifts. Earlier in the week there had come...
Winding up his visit, the Chinese Communist leader headed for another mixed greeting from Morocco's King Hassan, who maintains diplomatic relations with Peking but is otherwise pro-Western. Chou's major success so far on his tour of North Africa was word that Tunisia, which has no diplomatic ties with either the Communists or the Chinese Nationalists, had decided to give diplomatic recognition to Peking. This week Chou interrupts his safari with a side trip to Albania. In Tirana, Red China's only ideological ally outside Asia, he will get that rare feeling of being...
...decisions thus far, only one has directly involved the U.S.-a complex wrangle in which the U.S. and France argued about the right of French authorities in Morocco to discriminate against U.S. imports, tax U.S. citizens living there, and try U.S. citizens in Moroccan courts. The World Court upheld some of the U.S. claims, rejected others. In other decisions the court has ruled that...
...that produces textbooks and school supplies. It controls one company producing TV programs and owns another. It owns a bank. It operates all 1,217 news kiosks in Paris' Métro, railroad stations and airports. And it has branches in Argentina, Belgium, Brazil, Britain, Canada, Egypt, Monaco, Morocco, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey...