Word: non-communist
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...political and diplomatic levels, the verdict will take longer to determine. The Versailles summit of leaders of the non-Communist world's seven mightiest industrial powers,* the eighth in a series devoted to economic issues, produced no new strategy to deal with worldwide recession, and nobody had seriously expected it to do so. But the seven did come to some understandings that make a start-in some cases, a small one-toward bridging divergent positions. The two key decisions...
...conversation with Chirac, Reagan described the meeting of the allied leaders at Versailles as a "historic summit." Indeed, the problems faced by the industrialized West are momentous. From nation to nation, the non-Communist industrial world is mired in its worst economic slump since the 1930s, one marked by heavy unemployment almost everywhere and in most countries (though no longer in the U.S.) by rapid inflation as well. All parties agree that in the interdependent world economy, the major trading nations should keep their economic policies from clashing lest they delay recovery or even make the downturn worse. But preliminary...
...from 3 million to 5 million bbl. per day. But now that the price of oil has begun to stabilize, at least temporarily, some industry analysts expect oilmen to begin replenishing their storage tanks. Energy Expert Lawrence Goldstein of the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation estimates that by autumn the non-Communist world's oil needs from OPEC will reach about 20 million bbl. per day. At present, however, the cartel's producers are pumping less than 17.5 million bbl. out of the ground...
...first antiwar groups he mentions are the "Maoist Progressive Labor Party," the "Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party," and the "Moscow-oriented Communist Party," three groups about as influential in the struggle as "past winners, Pillsbury Bake-Off" and the Kiwanis Club. "All the Communist groups worked on increasingly close terms with the non-Communist radicals who made up the ever-swelling constituency of what had only recently become known as the New Left or the Movement," he says...
...anchor of the whole non-Communist world," he said nearly in despair, "and because of righteous indignation this anchor is slithering in the mud." His fear was that in 1976 a new President would see his election as vindication of the antiwar, neo-isolationist position. This must not happen: "My survival depends on it," he said...