Word: resignations
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Nehru was dumfounded. It was he who was used to banging tables and making peremptory refusals. Taking a different tack, he accurately said that he was as much at fault as Menon and vaguely threatened to resign. Always before, such a threat had been sufficient to make the opposition crumble with piteous cries of 'Tanditji, don't leave us alone!" This time, one of the leaders said: "If you continue to follow Menon's policies, we are prepared to contemplate that possibility." Nehru was beaten and Menon thrown out of the Cabinet. Joining him in his exit...
...succeeds John J. Conway, who will resign in June to return to his native Canada. Gill has been Allston Burr Senior Tutor of Leverett since...
...moment the music stops, Conductor Igor Markevitch cuts loose. For quick relief from artistic discipline, he unlimbers his tongue. Occasionally his cutting comments have helped cost him a job. "Paris musicians," he announced, "are a Mafia." Markevitch played several variations on the same theme, and was forced to resign from Paris' Lamoureux Orchestra a year ago. Last week, in Tel Aviv, where he appeared as guest conductor of the Israel Philharmonic, he sounded off at the drop of a question. This time he casually blasted his baton-wielding colleagues...
Though it was obvious that Menon was through, he still refused to resign. Finally, Nehru abruptly took over the Defense portfolio, which now makes him Prime Minister, Foreign Minister, Defense Minister and Chairman of Commissions for Planning, Atomic Energy and Scientific and Industrial Research. As adviser on military matters, Nehru will probably rely on former Commander in Chief, General K. S. Thimayya, 56, a bluff, hearty, polo-playing officer with unrivaled popularity among the soldiers, who resigned from the Indian army in 1959 because of clashes with Menon. The present army chief of staff, General Pran N. Thapar...
...resentful talk of a Kishi dynasty, it soon died down, and before long the country took it for granted that eventually Sato would become Prime Minister too. When the wild, leftist-backed riots that forced Dwight Eisenhower to cancel his visit to Japan in 1960 also forced Kishi to resign prematurely, the job went to Trade Minister Hayato Ikeda...