Word: mutuals
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Everyone will agree on the importance of collaboration with Russia-now and in the future. It won't be worth a hoot, however, unless it is based on mutual respect and made to work both ways. I have sat at innumerable Russian banquets and become gradually nauseated by Russian food, vodka and protestations of friendship. Each person high in public life proposes a toast a little sweeter than the preceding one on Soviet-British-American friendship. It is amazing how those toasts go down past the tongues in the cheeks. After the banquets we send the Soviets another thousand...
After the Times and Trib were out, Times Editor Catledge phoned the Trib's Maxwell to congratulate him on his fast finish after his slow start. Joked Maxwell: "It's a mutual-admiration society. We've been agreeing with each other that w.e're the two greatest editors in the country...
...several possible plans now under consideration might provide an adequate insurance program. The University could negotiate a contract with a private insurance company or a special policy with Blue Cross, correcting the deficiencies in that program. Or the University could undertake a self-supporting mutual insurance plan of its own without outside financial arrangements. In any event, only proposals meeting the standards of adequate coverage would be considered. Economy for the student should then be the determining factor in the decision. Hygiene officials estimate that such a program might be instituted at a cost of only...
...They want to preserve their freedom and independence. However, patriotism alone is not enough. Small nations cannot easily be self-confident when they are next door to Communist China. Its almost unlimited manpower would easily dominate, and could quickly engulf the entire area were it not restrained by the mutual-security structure which has been erected. But that structure will not hold if it be words alone. Essential ingredients are the deterrent power of the U.S. and willingness to use that power in response to a military challenge. The Chinese Communists seem determined to make such a challenge...
...R.A.F. bases at Shaibah and Habbaniya. If Britain could build a new "little NATO,"the bases could safely be turned over to it. The planes and men would remain largely British. But they would be there not by imposition of a "colonial" power, but as partners in mutual defense. Thus, the West would gain more solid bastion in the shifting political sands of the Middle East...