Word: network
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...weekdays, Saturdays, Sundays and nights-in that office." (Within minutes, MacArthur got a telephoned order from Dulles: "Go home at once, boy. Your home front is crumbling.") Admiring Dulles' love for uncluttered action, MacArthur also acquired Dulles' conviction that the best hope for peace lay in a network of anti-Communist alliances that the Communists could clearly understand-with each nation involved being a free and willing partner...
...major power struggle to merge the nation's Eastern railroads into two massive networks built around the Pennsylvania and the New York Central broke into the open last week. Forcing the fight was the announcement that directors of the Norfolk & Western Railway and the Nickel Plate Railroad had agreed to merge. Since the Pennsylvania Railroad owns about 33% of the Norfolk & Western, railroaders saw the move as a step toward a giant Pennsy network...
...part of what has happened is brainwashing-sometimes subtle, oftener crude. The political prisons now hold 6,000, and a recent visitor to the jails on the Isle of Pines reports: "They're stacked in like sacks of sugar." The government silenced opposition newspapers, put together a network that includes four of Havana's six television stations and 128 of Cuba's 149 radio stations. The policy line is clearly proSoviet, U.S. SABOTAGED THE SUMMIT! headlined the official daily Revolution. KHRUSHCHEV STILL YEARNS FOR PEACE, says La Calle. Yet, though not free to criticize home-grown Communists...
...years, jazz as such was suppressed by the Nazis as "art/remder Niggerjazz"; in Frankfurt a few musicians used to rent boats and row back into the swampland along the Rhine to hold their jam sessions. Postwar jazz in Germany was fostered by U.S. Army bands and the Armed Forces Network, and there are now about 50 professional German combos and roughly 1,000 amateur jazz bands, many of them on high school and college campuses. Other amateurs play in abandoned bomb shelters or in the "jazz-houses" erected by German cities to keep youngsters off the streets. What has happened...
...chains, which the charwoman was to have taken with her to the Caucasus. Artist Labzin turned out to be a hardened criminal in Soviet eyes; he had two previous convictions for "underground printing of religious literature,'' which had been distributed all over Russia by a well-organized network...