Word: sato
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...last week, as Dong Won Lee and Japanese Foreign Minister Etsusaburo Shiina conferred on a draft treaty, it was clear that the long and bitter relationship was yielding to a more conciliatory mood-or, as the Japanese put it, moodo. Though Japan's Prime Minister, Eisaku Sato, made it very clear that Japan and South Korea were not entering into an anti-Communist pact, both countries unquestionably had been pushed together by Red China's explosion of a nuclear device...
...people v. 361 in the U.S. The country also lacks housing, roads and schools to match its amazing industry. As Japan shifts more money and manpower into such comparatively nonproductive amenities as these, its overall growth rate is expected to slow down still more, just as Prime Minister Sato wants. Government planners are aiming at 8% for this year, a rate at which they hope to control inflation. Even at 8%, the Japanese economy will still be expanding faster than that of any other industrial nation...
Fugu chefs pass strict examinations before they are licensed to practice their risky art, but no Japanese politician would dare prohibit fugu, or even its dangerous entrails. Many of them, including Premier Eisaku Sato, are passionate fugu lovers...
...their joint communique, the President insisted that Red China's "expansionist pressures against its neighbors endanger the peace of Asia." But Sato politely said that Japan would continue to deal with the Communist Chinese "in such matters as trade on the basis of the principle of separation of political matters from economic matters." Moreover, Sato never did volunteer any further help to the U.S. in its commitments in Southeast Asia...
...National Press Club speech, Sato offered his own oblique explanation of why the U.S. commitment in Asia had become so troublesome. "In Asia there in an Asian way, a blend that results from the interplay of Asia's historical, geographic and other forces, and which defies full comprehension when seen through the rational eyes of Western people," said Sato. "A spirit of tolerance and harmony, in particular, is essential in dealing with the problems of Asia. The establishment of peace and freedom in this area requires enormous effort, wisdom and time...