Word: pakistan
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Southeast Asia Treaty Organization at its tenth anniversary conference. Summarily rejecting a call by French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville for a "political solution"-in other words, neutralism-in South Viet Nam, the seven other SEATO powers (U.S., Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand and Pakistan) vowed that "the defeat of the Communist campaign is essential not only to the security of South Viet Nam but to that of Southeast Asia." They called on SEATO members to "remain prepared if necessary to take further concrete steps." That was a long way from any concrete SEATO help...
Meyer, 44 years old, is an economist who has lived and worked in the Middle East and is now studying the North African region. The associate director of the Center for Middle Easters Studies, he earlier was director of research for the Harvard Pakistan Project. He was born in Hawarden, lowa, and has been on the Faculty since...
Major South East and South Asia Languages not taught at Harvard (in millions): Assamese/India (7), Bengali/India and Pakistan (86), Burmese (16), Cebuano/Phillippines (7), Gujarati/India (22), Hindi/India (165), Javanese/Indonesia (42), Kannada/India (20), Malay (72), Malayalam/India (17), Marathi/India (34), Nepali/Nepal, India (9), Oriya/India (9), Punjabi/India, Pakistan (26), Pushtu/Afghanistan (12), Rajasthani/India (17), Siamese (21), Sinhalese/Ceylon (8), Sudanese/Indonesia (13), Tagalog/Philippines (12), Tamil/India, Ceylon (37), Telegu/India (41), Urdu/Pakistan, India (55), and Vietnamese (26), Total...
Finally jolted by the seriousness of the situation, India and Pakistan agreed to discuss the problem in New Delhi this week. Yet there was little hope that either nation would make any real attempt to guarantee the rights of religious minorities-a measure that both governments have consistently promised since independence...
...live peacefully together is one of Nehru's old comrades-in-arms, Sheik Mohammed Abdullah, the Lion of Kashmir. Despite Kashmir's overwhelmingly Moslem population, Sheik Abdullah believed that it was in his border state's best interest to accede to India rather than to Pakistan after the 1947 partition, and he won Nehru's solemn promise that the people of Kashmir would be permitted free elections to determine their own future-accession to Pakistan or India, or independence...