Word: organisms
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...talks of a new, $710 million aid scheme for underdeveloped areas, to be financed partly by private industry. But this project is vague and undefined, and the government has not thrown its full weight behind it. Nor is there assurance that businessmen will go along; significantly, Wirtschaftsdienst, the influential organ of industry, recently complained that Germany's own internal expansion requires all the spare cash available. But, although Konrad Adenauer would be able to protest that another election is coming up, it looked as if the Germans might be hooked for at least some contribution. Reporting the impending Dillon-Anderson...
...resort in New Hampshire, worked as a mail rider packing the post into a gold mine near Cooke City, Mont. He played tinkly-tonk piano in little bins in Greenwich Village, Third Avenue bars, beer halls in Manhattan's German quarter. He took three weeks to learn the organ, played at Keith's Albee in Brooklyn. He also played the piano on a cruise ship that commuted between Miami and Havana. "I was a bad sailor," he says, "and had to throw up after every chorus...
...such a group, which is presently little more than a list of intellectuals endorsing Nixon, becomes a permanent advisory organ in the GOP, it will be the first move by the Republicans recently toward enlisting academic help...
Practically Nothing. De Gaulle himself was still speechifying across France and sounding organ notes about grandeur, strength and determination. He referred with lofty obliqueness to the F.L.N. and their new Communist ties. "Peace is at our door." De Gaulle announced. "Practically nothing stands in our way. But that 'practically nothing' is perhaps, the ambition of a certain group, aided by the totalitarians, who may frustrate the possibilities of peace offered by France...
...proud detail, the Journalist, house organ of the Japan Congress of Journalists (1,700 members), told exactly how pro-Communist Japanese newsmen had helped whip Japanese emotions to riotous frenzy. "Japanese journalists who participated in the great struggle," said the Journalist, "worked through such organizations as labor unions of the press, radio and TV, holding numerous protest shop rallies, advocating petitioning of the Diet or participating directly in the demonstrations...