Word: mutually
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Kemper's call was as effective as Souza Dantas' timely report on U.S. export prospects in Brazil. At week's end the Export-Import Bank announced that to "serve the mutual interests of trade and of the economies of the two countries," terms of the credit would be relaxed to permit Brazil to pay its debt over 7½ years. For his part, Souza Dantas said that half of Brazil's dollar earnings in excess of $1 billion (last year's total earnings: $765 million) would also be applied to reducing the debt...
...promise that after the "elections," all three regimes would "examine the possibility" of association with the French Union, would settle French interests on the basis of "equality and mutual interest," and "collaborators" with the French would not be prosecuted...
...great allies of the West spent the week in mutual recriminations. In the U.S., the charge was made that Britain had let the West down. The British retorted that only British steadiness and wisdom had saved the allies from hasty, dangerous and useless action. Even London's Economist observed: "If American opinion has the impression that Mr. Dulles' boldness is always being curbed by Britain's timidity, it is largely his fault for starting off with big talk and then coming down to less big doing...
...China do that? China cannot be one of the powers of the thermonuclear age without thermonuclear weapons. Will Russia let Red China build them? The possibilities of cleavage may not happen in Mao's generation, for what binds two sets of international gangsters together is a mutual advantage greater than the friction which might drive them apart. The possibilities of split are there. The difficulty is that those who talk most about exploiting the frictions (e.g., Britain's Bevanites) believe that the way to separate China and Russia is to woo China. The likelier method is to increase...
...this method. Until then he apparently had some difficulty with getting his work done, so much difficulty in fact that he was forced to leave college in the spring of 1946. There is some question about whether he actually flunked out or left by some sort of mutual agreement with the college. Those who knew him say his grades that first year were almost all D's and E's. Apparently they were not so bad that the college gave up on him, however, because he was readmitted in the fall...