Word: nuclear
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Soviet Union last week reached long-expected agreement on a treaty to ban all weapons from outer space. President Johnson called the international pact, which must yet be approved by the United Nations and ratified by individual governments, "the most important arms-control development since the 1963 treaty limiting nuclear tests. This treaty has historic significance for the new age of space exploration." Peace on earth will be more difficult to attain. Even as the space-treaty was announced, Russia and thef U.S. appeared headed toward what; could be a new round in the nuclear, arms race...
...spending their money in the wrong place. The open, vulnerable end of that C faces Red China and, if Sino-Soviet relations continue to deteriorate as fast as they have been, Russian military men are bound to grow more nervous at the increasing power of China's nuclear arsenal...
...Ph.D. advisor and mentor, Nobel laureate P. W. Bridgman '04, made some of the same combinations. "He showed me that you can be both, that physics can be a basis for philosophy," Holton recalls. Holton's own field is an area of physics which has relatively fewer researchers than nuclear physics, and it attracted him because of its inter-disciplinary applications to chemistry and biology...
...considered an adult, responsible member of the international family of nations. It is frustrated because it threw itself so enthusiastically into the drive for European integration, only to have Charles de Gaulle hold up the stop sign. The world's only nation unilaterally to renounce the right to produce nuclear weapons, it is disappointed that it is still feared and mistrusted as a potential nuclear menace. It is tired of being the favorite whipping boy of Russia and the Communist countries, which take every opportunity?as did Premier Aleksei Kosygin last week in France?to attack its policies and raise...
This week Kosygin heads south in the company of Premier Georges Pompidou for a tour of the show places of modern French industry, including the Concorde supersonic-transport plant in Toulouse and the nuclear-research center at Grenoble. By coincidence, his trip will take him through precisely those areas of France where De Gaulle is weakest and the left strongest. If Kosygin keeps on singing his praises, that, at least, will please De Gaulle...