Word: saragat
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...reduced his sentence to 3½ years. After the decision was handed down, the losing Italian prosecutor walked over to Minichiello, patted him on the back, and admonished him to "be a good boy from now on." A two-year general amnesty granted most Italian prisoners by President Giuseppe Saragat last May automatically reduced that 3½year stretch to 18 months, which was almost exactly the amount of time that Minichiello had already served. Thus, this week he will walk out of Rome's Queen of Heaven Prison a free...
...Dame. President Nixon decided to fly to Paris almost as soon as he learned of De Gaulle's death; in a message to Pompidou, he noted that "greatness knows no national boundaries." Other mourners included Soviet President Nikolai Podgorny, India's Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, President Giuseppe Saragat of Italy, Archbishop Makarios of Cyprus and Britain's Prime Minister Edward Heath...
...firmness. Wherever he went, he also talked as the peacemaker, probing especially for ideas on how to maintain the precarious ceasefire in the Middle East and how to get U.N.-mediated negotiations going. All of the leaders Nixon visited, including Pope Paul, Italy's President Giuseppe Saragat, Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito, Spain's General Francisco Franco and Britain's Prime Minister Edward Heath, applauded the effort and urged its continuation -though Nasser's death and the Jordanian war make the prospect for progress more tenuous than ever (see THE WORLD...
Dick and Pat will spend two nights in Belgrade with President Tito, lunch with Queen Elizabeth, and briefly visit Prime Minister Edward Heath outside London. They will see Pope Paul VI at the Vatican, spend a night with Italian President Giuseppe Saragat, visit Spain's Francisco Franco in Madrid. Before flying home, the Nixons will seek grave sites of ancestors in the Irish countryside southwest of Dublin. Perhaps the biggest symbolic point of the trip is that it takes the President in and near the ancient regions where Western culture has its roots, and where U.S. security interests...
...American congressional campaigns. An axiom of U.S. politics dictates that Presidents enhance their party's chances in such an election by asserting their leadership with a maximum of panoply and publicity. For no compelling diplomatic reasons, Nixon will stop in Rome to see Italian President Giuseppe Saragat and Pope Paul, and will later visit Ireland. He and Pat, after all, are of Irish blood. That makes two out of the three traditional ethnic I's-Italy, Ireland and Israel-that many traveling American politicians like to cultivate as election days approach. If it were not so diplomatically complicated...