Word: organizes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...than something like the Moscow University Herald (which, one hazards, regarded 600 annual purges as regrettable faux par that had no place in a sober chronicle of the passing days). Yes, yes, the Crimson is much more than this; as it is easy to see, it is no official organ for anything...
Basil Kingsley Martin has been stirring such steam-heated passion since he became the Statesman's editor in 1931. He made it Britain's leading organ of dissent, with a circulation of 80,038-nearly twice that of its competitor, the Spectator (42,453). Now, after an uncharacteristically mild valedictory ("Thirty years at an office desk seems long enough"), Kingsley Martin, 63, is taking a new title-editorial director-and a new assignment as the Statesman's roving foreign correspondent. His chosen successor as editor: Assistant Editor John Freeman...
Communist Conservatives. Back in Havana, Fidel Castro's house organ reacted to the week's events with predictable howls of "Yankee military intervention." charged that the U.S. naval patrol was the first step in a U.S. attack on Cuba and "a grave threat to world peace." Yet there were hints that Castro might have to moderate his tone before long. Soviet Russia is increasingly-and obviously-worried about its newest satellite. In Havana, Soviet Ambassador Sergei M. Kudryavstev passed the word that Moscow is not entirely pleased with Castro's systematic alienation of Latin America...
...with deep humility that at least some of us in the Episcopal Church would apologize for the article published in the Living Church (not an official organ of the church) and reprinted as "news" in TIME, Oct. 31. This article's content is a travesty upon our church, but thank God the church in Springfield, Mo. cannot represent all of us! For every one of them, there are ten unlike them...
...with favor, other countries, from both the Western alliance and the Soviet bloc, might hasten to join. As the recent General Assembly showed, the neutral nations have considerable respect for the U.N. and conversely, suspicions about either of the great power blocs. If the "Peace Corps" were a U.N. organ, three problems would be alleviated: (1) youth from all nations could join a single organization, (2) neutral countries would accept a U.N. delegation of youth without undue suspicion, and (3) the establishment of a U.N. corps would leave the Soviets with a choice of either joining in and thus surrendering...